Krause v. Pitcairn

167 S.W.2d 74, 350 Mo. 339, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1942
DocketNo. 36578.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 167 S.W.2d 74 (Krause v. Pitcairn) 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
Krause v. Pitcairn, 167 S.W.2d 74, 350 Mo. 339, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 402 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Appellants, as receivers of the Wabash Railway Company, appeal from a $10,000 judgment for respondent. Respondent's husband, Paul Krause, was killed instantly when appellants' west bound train struck his automobile at a public highway grade intersection. Respondent's case was submitted on charges, in the alternative, that appellants negligently failed to warn of the approach or to slacken the speed of the train involved under the humanitarian doctrine. Primary negligence also had been pleaded. Appellants present issues covering the submissibility of respondent's case, the giving and refusing of instructions and the admission of certain evidence. The case is pending on rehearing and reaches the writer upon reassignment.

Taking the substantive facts most favorable to respondent, we adduce the following:

The accident occurred September 19, 1937, a clear, dry, sunshiny day, about 10:30 A.M., at Schaeffer's crossing about four miles west of Wentzville, St. Charles county, Missouri. The railroad track extends east and west and, for practical purposes, the highway, a gravel all-weather road, extends north and south. The railroad track was straight and practically level for more than a mile east of the crossing. An elevation of the ground east of the crossing and immediately south of the railroad right-of-way interfered with the *Page 345 view of west-bound trainmen of the highway south of the crossing and of north-bound highway travelers of trains east of the crossing. The highway, from a point approximately one hundred feet south of the intersection, slopes upward, rising from six to ten feet in that distance. Mr. Krause's 1932 model Ford "pick-up" truck was ten to eleven feet long and, to the top of the cab, seven feet in height. He was proceeding north along the highway and his eyes were about four-and-a-half feet above the ground. The height of the bottom of the engineer's (on the north) and the fireman's (on the south) seats in the cab of the locomotive from the track was given as between nine and ten feet, the respective lines of vision being some higher. The distance from the front of the locomotive to their respective positions was forty feet. The boiler of the locomotive interfered with the vision to the south of the engineer on the seat. There was testimony that the engineer's angle of vision would not permit him to see the center of the track nearer than two hundred feet ahead or the opposite (south) rail of the track (the width between rails being four feet eight inches) nearer than two hundred sixty to two hundred eighty feet ahead. The locomotive did not interfere with the view of the fireman to the south while on his seat. There was testimony from which a jury could find that a line of unobstructed vision nine feet above the track and five hundred feet east of the crossing would include an object six feet in height forty feet south of the south rail and in the center of the highway and, from one of appellants' witnesses, that the engineer on the north side of the locomotive, [75] as well as the fireman on the south side of the locomotive, when the locomotive was eight hundred feet east of the crossing, could see an object five and a half feet in height twenty five feet south of the south rail and in the center of the highway. From the points given, the approach of a west bound locomotive to the crossing would result in extending the vision to the south along the highway for the fireman and contracting it for the engineer.

Wesley Sherman had followed Krause for a quarter of a mile or more on the morning in question. He testified that Krause approached the incline, one hundred feet south of the crossing, at about ten or fifteen miles per hour; that the incline caused Krause to slacken speed to as slow as five miles an hour at a point, estimated by the witness, "thirty to forty feet from the track"; that Krause apparently did not see the train, changed gears and increased the speed of his automobile as he continued north, moving "anywhere from five to eight miles per hour," "I couldn't be positive about that," at the time he was struck by the train. Witness was estimating Krause's speed, but from his testimony Krause did not slacken his speed from the time he started to increase it on the incline up to the instant of impact. Mr. Sherman heard the approach of the train and saw the smoke therefrom when it was a quarter or half mile from the crossing. He never *Page 346 saw the train until he was within one hundred feet of the track. He stopped his truck. He heard a "little blast or whistle" when the train was possibly one hundred feet away; or, at another place in his testimony, "it was just before it hit the man." He heard no bell. The train "was running, I would say, about fifty or sixty miles an hour, anyway"; and started to "slowing down" about one hundred feet west of the crossing.

Other witnesses testified they heard neither bell nor whistle.

When the two front wheels of Krause's truck were "in the middle space between the rails", the front or the left-front part of the pilot struck the automobile on its east, or right, side, from the photographs offered in evidence (which show the bumper of the automobile intact) and the testimony, someplace apparently in the vicinity of the front wheel, the damage to the truck showing on the front five or six feet of the right side. Krause's truck, found about one hundred fifty feet west of the crossing, was in second gear.

Appellants established on cross-examining respondent, that Krause's truck was in good repair and the brakes were "all right." Mr. Sexauer, who had driven the truck sometime previously, was of opinion that in the circumstances it would take ten to twelve feet for it to stop. Mr. Sherman thought it could be stopped in two or three feet "if he had good brakes."

L.J. Bouque was the engineer and James Simcoe the fireman of the train. They put its speed at seventy miles an hour. Neither saw the approach of Krause's truck. The truck never came within the line of vision of the engineer. The fireman, having started to fire the locomotive sometime prior to Krause reaching a position of imminent peril, had been busy firing for several seconds and was "just getting up to get on the seat box" when he felt the impact. When he got to the cab window and looked back, he saw the wrecked truck. There was a crossing three-fourths of a mile east of Schaeffer's crossing but no crossing to the west for a distance of some two miles or more at Foristell. They testified as much traffic approaches highway-railroad, grade intersections from the fireman's as from the engineer's side of the locomotive.

[1] Are appellants to be exonerated under our humanitarian doctrine by reason of the fact the engineer could not see and the fireman, although he could have timely seen had he looked, was engaged in firing the locomotive and did not discover the peril of Krause in time to avoid the collision? We think not. This, aside from any issue involving the credibility of appellants' witnesses Bougue and Simcoe.

We have said it is the duty of trainmen to maintain a lookout for persons approaching or on public highway grade intersections with railroads. Womack v. Missouri Pac. Rd. Co. (Div. 1, 1935),337 Mo. 1160, 1166, 88 S.W.2d 368, 371[2]; Hencke v. St. Louis H. Rd. Co. (Div. I, 1934), 335 Mo. 393, 397[1],72 S.W.2d 798, *Page 347 799[3]; Hilton v. Terminal Rd. Assn. (Div. I, 1940), 345 Mo.

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167 S.W.2d 74, 350 Mo. 339, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krause-v-pitcairn-mo-1942.