Logan v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

254 S.W. 705, 300 Mo. 611, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 274
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 705 (Logan v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy 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
Logan v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 254 S.W. 705, 300 Mo. 611, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 274 (Mo. 1923).

Opinions

I. Suit to recover damages for death of plaintiff's husband, John Logan, who was run over by a passenger train of defendant railroad company, in charge of defendant Paradise, on December 25, 1920, and who died from the effect of his injuries on December 28, 1920. The accident happened at the crossing of Maple Avenue and Collier Street in the city of Hannibal. The deceased was traveling north on Maple Avenue, and the train was going west over the railway tracks in Collier Street, an east-and-west street, which intersected Maple Avenue, a north-and-south street, at right angles. *Page 618

The charges of negligence in the petition are; That the automatic alarm bell at said crossing was inefficient and out of repair. That it would ring when no train was approaching, and would not ring or give warning when trains were approaching said crossing. That the train was operated at dangerous and unlawful rate of speed, to-wit, at the rate of about twenty-five miles per hour. That the whistle was not sounded at least eighty rods from said crossing, and the bell on said locomotive was not kept ringing until said locomotive had crossed over said Maple Avenue, and that defendant negligently failed to give any timely warning of the approach of said train. That said train was also run at a rate of speed in excess of six miles per hour, in violation of an ordinance of the city of Hannibal. That the deceased, as he approached and passed over said crossing, was unaware of the approaching train, and oblivious to the impending danger, which the railroad employees in charge of said train knew or could have known in the exercise of ordinary care. That said employees negligently failed to keep a lookout for automobiles moving over said crossing, or if they saw, negligently failed to stop or attempt to stop or check the speed of said train, when they saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen, the decedent and the automobile in which he was riding in a position of peril, and by the exercise of due care could have stopped or checked said train in time to have avoided striking and fatally injuring deceased. That said injuries were the direct result of the aforesaid negligence of the defendant company, and of defendant company's employees, including defendant Paradise, as engineer of said train. The prayer of the petition was for $10,000 damages and for costs.

The answer was a general denial and contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff's deceased husband, in that he drove immediately in front of a rapidly-moving railroad train, without looking or listening for the approach of trains on said track, when by looking he could *Page 619 have seen, or by listening he could have heard, the approach of said train in time to have avoided the collision complained of.

The reply was a general denial.

The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $10,000, from which defendants appealed to this court. The accident happened in broad daylight just after the noon hour on Christmas day, 1920. For many years, the deceased John Logan operated a shoe factory at the southwest corner of Maple Avenue and Collier Street. Collier Street ran west from the Union Station in Hannibal, and the railroad tracks at the time of the injury and for many years before ran from the Union Station in and along Collier Street westward to and beyond Maple Avenue, which was a north-and-south street, about eleven blocks due west from said Union Station. Besides one main line of track, there were three other tracks running across Maple Avenue, a side-track and a spur-track north of the main track, and a spur-track south of the main track. Collier Street was sixty feet wide from property line to property line, and Maple Avenue was fifty feet wide. North of Collier Street Maple Avenue was formally dedicated by plat as a public street, but south of Collier Street, while it does not seem to have been formally dedicated, a space fifty feet wide running south for many years was left open and used as an extension of Maple Avenue. The shoe factory at which deceased was manager was located on the southwest corner of Maple Avenue and Collier Street. His office was on the first floor immediately on the southwest corner of Collier Street and Maple Avenue. The front wall of his office was on the south line of Collier Street, and the east wall was on the west line of Maple Avenue. The entrance to his office was on the Maple Avenue side about nine feet south of the corner. The main part of the shoe factory building extended south several hundred feet on the west side of Maple Avenue, and was back about *Page 620 ten or twelve feet from the west line of the street. The shoe factory was a one-story building. On the east side of Maple Avenue, opposite the shoe factory, was the Hannibal Rubber Company's building, which was a three-story structure. Its west wall was on the east line of Maple Avenue, and its north wall was about fifteen feet south of the south line of Collier Street. The Garner Wood Coal Company had a large frame building at the northeast corner, and the Hannibal Car Wheel Foundry Company had their building at the northwest corner of Collier Street and Maple Avenue. At the time of the accident, there was a box car standing on the spur-track, south of the main track, about fifty feet east of the east line of Maple Avenue. The south line of this box car was about even with the south line of Collier Street. About a block further east across Eleventh Street, there was a coal car standing on this spur-track, and also according to plaintiff's evidence, other cars still further east on said spur-track. The south rail of the main track, on which the train was running, is nineteen or twenty feet from the north wall of the shoe factory, and thirty-five feet from the north wall of the Hannibal Rubber Company's building. The crossing at which the injury occurred was near the central business portion of the city, and was a very busy crossing and much used by vehicles and pedestrians. The city by ordinance required the erection of an automatic electric bell or flagman at this crossing. The crossing was especially much used during the noon hour about the time the train passed, there being a number of factories in the immediate neighborhood employing large numbers of people.

The engineer, Paradise, in charge of the train, testified for defendant: That when he took out this train, there were "usually people walking — a whole track of people from the International Factory coming out, and, of course, I have to be careful."

Plaintiff's evidence tended to show: That on the day of his injury the decedent had his Ford coupe parked on the west side of Maple Avenue, right at the entrance *Page 621 to his office. There was no glass opposite the driver's seat in this coupe, but there were windows in the doors and also glass in front. It was an old coupe, in poor mechanical condition, and could not run over five miles an hour northward over this crossing. It was impossible to go over the crossing in this coupe "on high," "you have to use the low speed." The temperature was about twenty-five degrees above zero, and the car was hard to warm up. The grade approaching the crossing to within two feet of the south rail of the main track from the south for about forty feet was about a ten per cent rise or up-grade.

An ordinance of the city of Hannibal was introduced requiring the placing of an automatic electric bell at this crossing by the defendant railroad company "to give due and timely notice to all persons of the approach of trains." Such a bell had been installed in Collier Street near the southeast corner of Maple Avenue and Collier Street for some time prior to the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 705, 300 Mo. 611, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-mo-1923.