Laughlin v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

129 S.W. 1006, 144 Mo. App. 185, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 342
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 1006 (Laughlin v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laughlin v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 129 S.W. 1006, 144 Mo. App. 185, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 342 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This suit is prosecuted by the widow of Charles B. Laughlin, deceased, to recover ■damages for the death of her husband which she alleges was caused by the negligence of defendant. A trial to a jury resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of five thousand dollars. Later, a remittitur of five hundred dollars was filed by plaintiff in the circuit court and judgment was entered in her favor for forty-five hundred dollars. An appeal was allowed defendant to this court. We transferred the case to the Supreme Court on jurisdictional grounds, but that court re-transferred it, and the cause is before us for determination.

Laughlin was hilled in the forenoon of November 5, 1903, on a switch track at defendant’s station in Seneca by being struck by a loaded freight car which defendant was switching to the place on a team track where it was to be unloaded. We find the pleadings sufficiently present the issues we shall discuss in passing on the demurrer to the evidence which defendant argues should have been given. The learned' trial judge refused the demurrer and sent the case to the jury on the theory that while the peril which resulted in the death of the unfortunate man was created by the cooperation of his own negligence with negligence of defendant, the evidence disclosed facts and circumstances from which the jury might reasonably conclude that the servants of defendant in charge of the car and train to which it belonged should have discovered the peril in time to have saved the endangered man had they been in the exercise of reasonable care, and that they negligently failed to perform the duty imposed on them [189]*189under the “humanitarian doctrine” and by such negligence caused the death. .

The questions for our determination presented by the demurrer to the evidence are, first: Does the evidence, when considered in the light most favorable to plaintiff, disclose negligence of defendant as a proximate cause of the deadly peril of the decedent? Second: Does such evidence disclose negligence in law of the decedent as a proximate and contributing cause of that peril, and, third, Should- these questions be answered in the affirmative (and we think they should be so answered), does the evidence reasonably justify the conclusion that the negligent acts which produced the peril were followed by the negligent breach by defendant of a humanitarian duty it owed the decedent?

Pertinent facts disclosed by the evidence thus may be stated: Laughlin was the local manager at Seneca of the business of a St. Louis concern which operated a grain elevator at that place and was inspecting a car of corn that had just been set in on the elevator track. The buildings comprising the elevator plant were about eighty feet north of defendant’s main line, which “passes” through Seneca in an easterly and westerly direction. A switch track for the service of the elevator ran along the south line of these buildings so close to them that a grain car set by the elevator would be too close for a person to pass between the car and the building. Consequently, when Laughlin inspected the grain in the car, he had to enter from the south door and in going from his office to the car, necessarily had to cross the elevator track which was part of the main switch track maintained by defendant on the north side of its main line. This switch track was about eighteen hundred feet long and each end was joined to the main line. The elevator was about eight hundred feet from the east end. At a point just west of the southwest corner of the elevator another switch track called the cut-off track diverged from the main switch, track and ran [190]*190southeasterly by reverse curves to a junction with the main line.- The connection with the main line was about four hundred feet wrest of the junction of the main switch track with the main line. We shall call that part of the main switch track east of the cut-off switch the elevator track and that part west of that point, the house track, though as we have shown, the two form but one continuous track. In its whole course this track passes a warehouse, a flouring mill and another elevator, but it crosses no public street or alley. The subjoined plat fairly presents the main features of the locality under consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 1006, 144 Mo. App. 185, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laughlin-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1910.