Lange v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

106 S.W. 660, 208 Mo. 458, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 24, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 660 (Lange v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) 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
Lange v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 106 S.W. 660, 208 Mo. 458, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 256 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Lafayette county, seeking to recover $20,000 damages for personal injuries received by plaintiff, through the alleged negligence of the defendant by running one of its cars upon and over her right leg and so mangling it as to render amputation thereof necessary, just below the knee. There was a trial before the court and jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $5,000'. After taking the proper preliminary steps, the defendant appealed the cause to this court.

There is no question presented here regarding the pleadings, and for that reason they will not be further noticed.

[463]*463The evidence for plaintiff tended to show that plaintiff was a little German girl, nine years and nine months old at the time of her injury, and could not speak English. The injury occurred at a station on defendant’s road, called Emma; that at the station there are two tracks, the main and the switch track, and the latter was three or four hundred feet in length and was north of the main track, and at the point of the injury they were separated about forty feet; that these tracks ran east and west, and a public road, forty feet in width, crossed them at right-angles; that between the two tracks and just west of the public road, and lying along and parallel with the main track, was located a cinder platform, constructed for and used by the patrons of the road, but there was no station house; that this platform was about forty feet long by eight in width. That the plaintiff was struck and injured on the switch track, about sixteen feet west of the public road; that she lived south of the railroad and was attending school on the north side; that school was dismissed about 4:30 p. m., and she was on her way home with twelve or fourteen other school children, all of whom went down to the platform to see their teacher off on a west-bound train, due about that time. That while the children were on the platform an east-bound freight train headed in on the side track, awaiting the passage of the west-bound passenger train; that there was standing on the side track an empty freight car, which was to be placed in the freight train and taken on east; that the entire crew, with probably one exception, saw the children standing on the platform. That after the departure of the passenger train, the freight engine was disconnected from its train and coupled onto the empty car standing in front thereof, which it pushed up beyond the east end of the switch track and some distance beyond that point on to the main track, and then the engine was reversed and ran [464]*464back west on the main track, pulling the empty car, and while thus moving the engine was uncoupled from the car, and it was shunted back west, on the side track to be coupled onto the freight train, and the engine passed faster on down the main line, and thereby performed what is called a “running switch.” That because of the more rapid speed of the engine it reached the platform and stopped there some few seconds before the empty car reached a corresponding position' on the switch track; that when the engine stopped at the platform the children were still standing- thereon, and while thus standing the employees in charge of the engine caused to be discharged therefrom, three or four times, large volumes of steam, which made loud noises and blew dirt and cinders ten to twelve feet from the platform; that the steam struck the children and caused them, including the plaintiff, to go backward toward the side track upon which the empty car was approaching,, as a result of the momentum given it by the flying switch; that while the children were thus moving backward, the fireman was looking at them and laughing; that as the discharge of the steam was repeated the children continued to retreat therefrom, backward, toward the side track, and plaintiff was looking all the time, with a sun bonnet on, at the engine and escaping- steam until she reached and stepped upon the side track, where she was struck by the empty car and injured; that she never looked east or west, nor saw the approaching car which struck her; that the brakeman, who was on .the west end of the car and in charge thereof, saw the plaintiff moving backward toward him, when the car was from sixty to seventy feet from her, and there was nothing to obstruct his view of her, but he made no attempt to stop it until he was within six or eight feet of her, and only then after someone hollowed to him that someone was in danger; that the car was running three dr four miles [465]*465an hour and could have been stopped within three or four feet.

The plaintiff then rested her case, and defendant asked a demurrer to the evidence, which was, by the court, overruled, and defendant duly excepted.

The defendant then introduced evidence which tended to prove that no steam escaped from the engine while it was standing at the platform, nor until it started east, after making the switch, and that what then escaped was necessary in the ordinary operation of the engine; that no steam was emitted for the purpose of frightening the children; that plaintiff was familiar with the station, tracks and the operation of trains at that place; and that she was a girl of average intelligence, and crossed the tracks every day going to school.

The court then gave the following instructions, over the objections and exceptions of defendant, on behalf of the plaintiff, to-wit:

“1. The court instructs the jury that plaintiff’s petition charges her injuries and damages were caused by the following acts of negligence of defendant’s agents operating conjointly or severally, namely, that said agents in charge of said engine unnecessarily and negligently, purposely and wantonly discharged at and about the plaintiff and her companions an excessively large volume of steam, thereby causing her to take fright and flee from said steam and unconsciously to stop upon the side track in front of a detached freight car moving upon a running switch by which she was struck and which ran over and crushed her leg. Also that the defendant negligently used said freight car while equipped with a defective or insufficient brake, rendering it more difficult to he stopped. And you are further instructed that the plaintiff need not prpve all of said acts of negligence, hut that if you find and [466]*466believe from the evidence that her said injury was directly caused by either one of said acts of negligence, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff.

“2. The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence defendant’s brakeman in charge of said car while the same was moving toward her saw the plaintiff on said switch track in front of said car in time to have stopped the same before striking the plaintiff, and that said brakeman paid no further attention to the situation in which she was placed until said car ran so close upon her that it was impossible to stop it in time to prevent the accident, and if you believe from the evidence that said car knocked plaintiff down and she was thereby injured, then the defendant is in law guilty of negligence and your verdict must be for plaintiff.

“3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 660, 208 Mo. 458, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lange-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1907.