Lyter v. Hines

224 S.W. 841, 205 Mo. App. 429, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 121
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 20, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 841 (Lyter v. Hines) 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
Lyter v. Hines, 224 S.W. 841, 205 Mo. App. 429, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 121 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

Plaintiff sued to recover for personal injuries to himself and destruction of his automobile caused by collision with a locomotive engine on a public crossing in Bloomfield. The cause was iried to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $3000, from which judgment defendant appealed.

Plaintiff charges that defendant was negligent in the operation of the train in failing to keep a lookout on and over the street crossing, and in failing to ring the bell or sound the whistle as required, and in running the train at an excessive rate of speed of form 25 to 40 miles an hour in violation of a city ordinance. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.

Plaintiff was injured and his automobile destroyed when he attempted to cross what is designated in the record as the mill or switch track running some distance south from the main track near the depot in Bloomfield. Prairie street, on which plaintiff was injured, runs east and west and intersects the mill track at right angles. *433 The mill track extends south from the main track some half a mile, but deflects a little southeast about six hundred feet south of the Prairie street crossing. The crossing is a short distance east and south of the depot. The mill track is laid in a valley so that one coming from the east to the west on Prairie street, as was plaintiff, independent of other obstructions, will not be able to see a train south of the crossing until the crest of the ridge is reached, which point is 164 feet east of the center of the track at the crossing. Between the 164 feet point and the crossing are two buildings. Twenty-five or thirty feet south of the main traveled part of Prairie street, and six or eight feet from the east rail of the track is a' grain warehouse about eighty feet long, thirty feet wide and twenty-five feet high. About thirty feet east of the warehouse, *and about twenty feet' south of the street there is a small building about eighteen or twenty- feet square. Between the warehouse and the small building, but near the southeast comer of the warehouse there was a clump of two or three small trees. At the time of plaintiff’s injury, November 25,1918, there were some com stalks to the’ south of Prairie street and between the 164 foot point and the crossing. Plaintiff at the time of his injury-was engaged in driving a Ford service car, with all the curtans up except the front curtain on the right, and the wind shield was down. Plaintiff says, however, that he could see through the windows in the curtains as well as if he had had the top down. Plaintiff met the 10' :20 a. m. train and secured a passenger for Dexter. This passenger stopped for' a few minutes up town in Bloomfield, and plaintiff was returning to the depot to meet the 11:10 train. “I started back to meet the 11:10, and after I made the turn on Prairie street going west, when I came to where I could see the railroad track — I knew the Campbell train was in — I looked as far as I could see up the track and I couldn’t see no train- or hear any train or see the smoke of it, I judge I was driving at about eight' or ten miles an hour and I was right *434 on the track when I was struck.” Plaintiff .says that he was 164 feet from the crossing-at the time he looked south for a train. That then he could see down to where the track made a slight curvé to the southeast, which point is about 600 feet south of the crossing.

After passing the 164 foot point plaintiff did not again look for a train. On cross-examination he stated: “I didn’t look, and I’ll tell you why. I didn’t see no train within six hundred feet • of that track, and I only had about a hundred and sixty feet to go, and I could run that at eight miles an hour before a train' could come down there six hundred feet, and I "knew they were not allowed to run over eight miles an hour,- I mean I understood they were not allowed to run over eight miles an hour. I think that scales there in right on the ridge; I think that is about half way, I don’t know. When I got there I looked off up the railroad and I didn’t see anything or hear anything. So I drove right on and attempted to cross. That’s all I did. Of course I didn’t look any more.” Ben Unger, a witness for plaintiff, was working two or three hundred yards from the mill track, and south and west of the crossing, and he says that he did not hear the whistle or bell sounded. “I did not hear that train sound the whistle, and I did not hear it ring the bell; if it did I didn’t notice it at all. In fact I never thought anything about the train going down.” This witness says that when the train passed him it was running about twenty-five miles an hour. He fixes this point at about two hundred yards south of the crossing, and himself at two or three hundred yards west of the. train when it passed him. He also stated that he did not mean to say that the bell did not ring. “I don’t know but what the bell rang and the whistle blew, but I didn’t pay any attention to it. This witness also stated that he paid no attention of the speed of the train, after it passed him, and did not know what speed it was running when it approached the crossing. Sam McRoy, a witness for plaintiff, was about the crest of the ridge east of the crossing at the time of the collision, and he says that *435 he did not hear the train whistle, and didn’t pay any attention to the bell ringing. On cross-examination this witness said: “I didn’t say the bell did not ring, I mean I didn’t pay any attention to it if it rang. I didn’t pay any attention to the whistle either. I .don’t say it didn’t ring, '! said I didn’t hear it. I wasn’t studying about anything of that kind.” J. M. Williams, produced by plaintiff, was about fifty yards north of the crossing as we understand, and he says that he did not see plaintiff approaching the crossing, but did see the train approaching, and heard it whistle about two hundred yards south of the crossing, but was not positive about the bell. Allen, the city marshal, called by plaintiff, stated that if one were watching closely there was a space of about thirty feet between the two buildings where an approaching train could be seen. There is a thirty or forty foot space between the two buildings. There wasn’t any corn in there. He could have seen it if he had looked through there.” Plaintiff was recalled and stated that he thought the com was high enough to prevent him from seeing the train as he passed over the ridge. .

For the defendant the engineer, fireman, and also the brakeman, who was at the time in the engine cab, testified that the whistle was sounded about six hundred feet south of the crossing, and the bell rung continually from that point to the crossing. James Teeters, a carpenter, was on the engine at the time of the collision and he says hat the whistle was blown, and to the best of his recollection the bell was rung. The train crew placed the speed of the train at seven or eight miles an hour. Teeters placed the speed at twelve or fifteen miles.. M. C. Ray was on a load of com just west of the crossing and waited for the train to pass. He says that the whistle' was blown, and that the bell was rung. W. Gr. Hopkins was about one hundred feet south of the crossing, and had been walking south on the mill track, and got off the track as this train approached him. He says that the whistle was blown, and attracted his attention, ‘ ‘ and I stopped and waited until it passed

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Related

Wallace v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Co.
257 S.W. 507 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 841, 205 Mo. App. 429, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyter-v-hines-moctapp-1920.