Lavender v. Illinois Central Railroad

219 S.W.2d 353, 358 Mo. 1160, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1949
DocketNo. 41084.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 219 S.W.2d 353 (Lavender v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Lavender v. Illinois Central Railroad, 219 S.W.2d 353, 358 Mo. 1160, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 572 (Mo. 1949).

Opinion

*1163 [354]

CONKLING, J.

Plaintiff, administrator of the estate of Charles Lee Hunter, a former employee of defendant, had a judgment for $15,000 upon the verdict of a jury in an action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act for damages for the alleged wrongful death of Hunter. The trial court thereafter sustained defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Judgment was then entered for defendant. Plaintiff appealed and asks that his judgment be reinstated.

Hunter, a negro dining car waiter regularly employed by defendant, died about 30 hours after being shot while in defendant’s dining ear with a revolver held by another of defendant’s dining car waiters, one MeCampbell. The unfortunate occurrence happened as defendant’s interstate train number 9’was leaving Chicago, Illinois, for the" State of Florida, about 11:30 P. M., on March 28, 1942.

It. was the theory of plaintiff’s petition that defendant was negligent, in that, (1) its dining car crew negligently carried loaded pistols into the dining car and negligently caused a loaded pistol.to be discharged while Hunter was nearby, (2) that defendant’s dining ear crew negligently pushed and shoved each other in a scuffle and negligently caused a loaded pistol to be discharged, and (3) that defendant negligently failed to furnish Hunter with a reasonably safe place to work in that defendant negligently permitted waiters to carry loaded pistols into the dining ear and to scuffle, wrestle, push and shove each [355] other while Hunter was working nearby. Plaintiff submitted the above theories to the jury in his instructions 1 and 2. < .

Deceased was 18 years of age, unmarried and was survived by his parents and brothers. With others of his regular dining car crew (six waiters and four cooks — all negroes) he had worked into Chicago that evening arriving there about 9 P. M., on his regular dining car attached to one of defendant’s trains, “The Sunchaser”. During the short stay in Chicago Hunter had gone with MeCampbell and one Peyton, another waiter of his regular dining car crew, to see some of MeCampbell’s friends. As permitted by defendant those three waiters, about 11:17 P; M., boarded their dining car at the 63rd Street Station as train No. 9 was leaving Chicago. This particular dining car crew were under orders from defendant to leave Chicago on train No. 9, “bed down” in their dining car, “dead-head” to Fulton, Kentucky, arise at 5 A. M., (near Cairo, Illinois) and start serving breakfast at 6 A. M., at Fulton. They were not paid for the time from Chicago back to Fulton. When they reached Chicago this crew left their baggage in the locker room of the dining car. They were under orders from their superintendent that when the train left Chicago on their extra movement they were to remove the tables from the- dining car, place cots on the floor, change clothes and sleep ufltil *1164 5 A. M. Upon arising the cots were to be pnt away, tables replaced and preparations made for serving the morning meal at 6 A. M.

When Hunter, McCampbell and Peyton boarded the train at 63rd Street some of the tables had not.been removed. McCampbell went to the locker room in the dining ear, secured his handbag, brought it into the dining car proper and placed it on a table. Peyton did likewise. The train was moving south. McCampbell stood facing south. Peyton stood directly across the table from him facing north. Hunter was northwest of McCampbell and across the car. McCamp-bell testified Peyton had a gun in his hand. Only McCampbell saw Peyton have a gun. McCampbell took a loaded pistol out of his side overcoat pocket and started to place it in his handbag to put it away. Some of the waiters on the car started playing with each other, slapping and “goosing”, in play. McCampbell testified that Peyton playfully “started pranking with his (gun) and when he hit my hand my gun went off and hit Charles (Hunter)”; that Peyton “started pranking” and either grabbed his (McCampbell’s) gun or pushed it around about two feet so that it was pointing northwest from McCampbell. McCampbell’s gun was accidentally discharged. The bullet struck Hunter in the chest. When he was shot Hunter was some distance away across the dining car sitting on a table and laughing. Hunter had nothing to do with a gun. Neither McCamp-bell nor Peyton had any intention of shooting Hunter, or any one else. McCampbell, Hunter and Peyton were good friends. McCamp-bell never had any quarrel with Hunter, never 'threatened him and felt very kindly toward him. The shooting was not intentional. Hunter was taken off the train as quickly as ambulance and hospital facilities were reached and died March 30, 1942 at Kankakee, Illinois. Hunter did not know McCampbell had a gun. Only the negro dining car crew were in the dining car when Hunter was shot.

It was not any part of McCampbell’s duties “to handle a pistol”. All that the defendant expected of McCampbell that night after he boarded the dining car was to make his toilet, undress and go to bed, and get up at 5 o’clock the.next morning.

As explanatory of carrying a gun, McCampbell testified that early in January, 1942, while working as a dining car waiter for defendant, he had had trouble with one Hubbard, a negro dining car cook employed by defendant and then working regularly on McCampbell’s car; that the trouble arose over a food order; that on that occasion Hubbard pointed a “two-barreled pistol” at him and told him (Mc-Campbell) to get out of the pantry or he (Hubbard) would kill him; that he (McCampbell) after obtaining approval of his immediate superior, Mr. Miller, on January 6, 1942, by letter reported the Hubbard incident to Mr. Patterson, the general dining car superintendent iti Chicago; that Mr. Patterson replied by mail on January 14, 1942 and [356] advised him (McCampbell) that: “I have taken action *1165 which I am sure will prevent anything like this happening again”; McCampbell testified that thereafter, “I had the gun in my bag at all times. I carried it at all times ... in my work bag that I carry my things in”; that “I wouldn’t have had it in my pocket that night but . . . this cook who had threatened me was in another car from me, and several of the boys made remarks he was going to be waiting for me outside. That’s why I put it in my pocket that night ... I never carried it in my pocket. . . . That was the first time I had taken it out of my bag, that particular time”.

Immediately after the letter (of January 6, 1942) from McCamp-bell to Mr. Patterson respecting the trouble with Hubbard, the latter was transferred to another dining ear crew. However, the train (“The Sunehaser”) which that night (March 28, 1942) carried into Chicago the dining car in which deceased and McCampbell regularly worked, by circumstance carried also the dining car in which Hubbard regularly cooked. But Hubbard was not on train No. 9 when Hunter was shot.

McCampbell further testified that over a period of more than a year he had seen waiters have a gun in his dining car; that he had seen other waiters have a pistol four or five times in that period of time; that “it was sort of a practice”; that the waiters sometimes pushed and wrestled when “making down their beds”; that “at any intervals men are subject to play at all times”; that he had seen the steward there when that was going on. The dining car steward, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.2d 353, 358 Mo. 1160, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavender-v-illinois-central-railroad-mo-1949.