Kick v. Franklin

137 S.W.2d 512, 345 Mo. 752, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 6, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 512 (Kick v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kick v. Franklin, 137 S.W.2d 512, 345 Mo. 752, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 366 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

*758 DOUGLAS, J.

This is an action for personal injuries received by' respondent in a crossing collision between an automobile driven by him and a train operated by appellants. The collision occurred at a point where a public road crosses the Wabash tracks in Clay County about one mile west of Missouri City. For some distance east of this crossing the railroad runs along the base of a bluff about twenty-five or thirty feet high. There is a state highway running along the top of the bluff parallel with the railroad. The highway and the railroad run generally from east to west. From this highway there is a side road running south in a sharp descent down the side of the *759 bluff. Then it flattens out and. crosses the railroad. Appellant was engaged in some revetment work on the Missouri River, south of the railroad. His home was in Missouri City. To reach his work he drove in his automobile west along the state highway, then turned south on the side road down the side of the bluff, over the tracks to the river. Early one morning the respondent was driving to work. He came down the side road. He stopped his automobile within approximately fifteen feet of the track. Some of respondent’s evidence indicates the place he stopped might have been farther from the track. Not seeing any train he proceeded at a speed of two or three miles an hour to. cross the track. He heard no warning and produced at the trial a number of witnesses who testified none was given. When on the track, his automobile was struck by the locomotive and he was injured. His companion riding with him was killed. Upon the trial below, the jury found for him for $30,000. This is the second appeal of this case. For a more complete statement of the facts the opinion written on the first appeal is referred to. [See Kick v. Franklin, 342 Mo. 715, 117 S. W. (2d) 284.] In that opinion, we held that the plaintiff had made, under the humanitarian doctrine, a submissible case because of defendants’ negligence on the ground of failure to warn. But we reversed the judgment, then for $35,000, on the ground of error because the court also submitted the case to the jury on the charge of negligence in failing to slacken the speed of the train. Upon retrial the case was submitted solely on the failure to warn. Appellants claim such submission was error and that its demurrer at the close of the evidence should have been sustained. Appellants base this contention, as they did on the former appeal, on the grounds that the plaintiff failed to prove that such failure to warn was the proximate cause of the injury. They contend that the court, without requiring precise proof of the necessary facts, erroneously took judicial knowledge of the fact that an effective warning could have been given and acted on in the time available without considering the time necessary “for visualization of the perilous situation, realization of danger, determination upon a cause of action, and for the muscular system to act.” The same general objection now being asserted was decided against the appellants on the former appeal and is the law of the ease unless the decision in that appeal was induced by a mistake of law or of fact so as to cause injustice. [Ducoulombier v. Thompson, 343 Mo. 991, 124 S. W. (2d) 1105; Dunn v. Alton Ry. Co., 340 Mo. 1037, 104 S. W. (2d) 311.] As to the law announced on this contention, we said in our former decision: “Under the facts in the present case, we think it was a question of fact as to whether or not the engineer saw or by the exercise of ordinary care should have seen plaintiff approaching the track and oblivious of his peril, in time to have thereafter sounded a warning of the approach of the train, so plaintiff could have stopped *760 before reaching the path of the overhang of the pilot. A warning could have been sounded ‘in a second or the fraction of one’ (Chawkley v. Wabash Ry. Co. et al., 317 Mo. 782, 297 S. W. 20, l. c. 27), and had a warning been given at any time before plaintiff got so near the path of the overhang that he could not stop, the collision might have been avoided, and such questions were, we think, for the jury. Defendants’ demurrer to the evidence was properly refused.” Appellants quarrel with the use of the quotation from the Chawkley case that a warning could have been sounded in a second or a fraction of one. In that case and in the above decision that statement referred to the time for the mechanical action of blowing the whistle, to be considered with other evidence, and was used arguendo. In addition we now have the testimony of the engineer that his hand was resting on the whistle cord prior to the accident. This the jury may consider while rejecting other testimony of the witness. [Gould v. C., B. & Q. Ry., 315 Mo. 713, 290 S. W. 135.]

The facts now before us are practically the same as those which furnished the basis of our above holding. It is conceded that the evidence on the second trial was substantially the same as that produced at the first trial except that appellants introduced, for the first time, expert testimony on what they describe as the “psychophysical phenomena of reaction time.” They say it is this additional testimony that changes the picture. Their expert testified as to the minimum time it would take, in his opinion, for the engineer to visualize and appreciate respondent’s peril, determine to sound a warning and commence to act, for the sound to reach respondent’s ears, for respondent to hear the warning, appreciate the danger and decide to stop or turn aside his car. Because of this testimony appellants argue that the factual situation now differs from what it was on the first appeal so as to require a finding as a matter of law that there was not sufficient time for an effective warning and therefore no submissible case. We cannot agree with this argument. We decided on the first appeal that whether an effective warning could be given under the circumstances of this case was a fact to be determined by the jury. This additional evidence merely goes to controvert the evidence under which the jury might find such fact and is all to be considered by the jury. The jury were fully and precisely instructed to consider this evidence before finding the fact in question. This is a close case. We have already decided it is a submissible one and under our decisions, finding no mistake of fact or law, we are bound by that decision on this appeal.

Appellants assert errors in the instructions. They first attack the giving of respondent’s Instruction No. I which was as follows: “The Court instructs the jury that all alleged grounds of recovery other than as hereinafter submitted in this instruction are by the Court withdrawn from your consideration; and if you *761 believe from tbe evidence that plaintiff Frank Kick was not guilty of any act or omission which was the sole cause of said collision and alleged injuries, and that at said time and place defendants by their engineer Buhalt operated said westbound train on said north tracks, if so, and that said crossing at and long prior to said time was habitually and greatly used by vehicles and the general public with the knowledge and acquiescence of the Wabash Railway Company, the defendants, and said engineer, if so, and that as said train approached and neared said crossing said automobile and plaintiff were moving toward said tracks and immediately coming into and were in a position of imminent peril and danger

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 512, 345 Mo. 752, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kick-v-franklin-mo-1940.