Mauerman v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.

41 Mo. App. 348, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 290
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 Mo. App. 348 (Mauerman v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.) 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
Mauerman v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co., 41 Mo. App. 348, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 290 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.

The plaintiff is the surviving parent of Peter Mauerman, who, at the date of the accident hereinafter mentioned, was a minor. She brought this action to recover the value of his services between the date of the accident and the date of his arriving at age, and, upon a trial before a jury, recovered a verdict for one thousand and.twenty-seven dollars. The defendant, appealing, assigns for error that the court overruled its demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence; that it misdirected the jury in its instructions; that the verdict is excessive, and that the court erred in not sustaining the defendant’s motion for new trial.

The place where the accident occurred was in the defendant’s switch-yards in the city of St. Louis. The time of the accident was near midnight. These switch-yards, as shown by the evidence, consist of seventeen or more parallel tracks, with a main or lead track on the western side thereof, which, near the place of the accident, was straight for several hundred feet on either side. The switch-engine, with tender attached, was going southwardly at a slow rate of speed on this lead track, when it struck and ran over plaintiff’s son. A number of streets, running east and west, cross this switch-yard at right angles. The plaintiff’s version of the accident, as detailed by her son, was as follows:

The plaintiff’s son Peter was in the employ of an electric lighting company, which had a contract with the defendant for lighting these yards. The lights were suspended on poles about thirty-five feet above the ground, and it was the duty of plaintiff’s son to see [352]*352that they were kept burning and to renew their carbons from time to time. One of these lights was on the west side of the yard near Marian strefet, and one diagonally across and one block southeast of the yard on Carroll street. The plaintiff’s son testified that he had just renewed the carbon in this western light, and, on descending from the pole, had dropped his pliers on or near defendant’s track. He stepped upon the track, and, in doing so, looked and listened for an approaching engine; not seeing nor hearing any, and not hearing the sound of any bell, he bent down to search for his pliers, and while in that position was struck by the engine, and received the injuriés complained of. The plaintiff also gave in evidence the ordinance of the city of St. Louis, which requires engines moving within the city limits to ring their bells constantly while in motion.

We cannot see how, on this evidence, the court could have nonsuited the plaintiff. Her son was lawfully in the place where he was injured, and, as far as his evidence shows, was guilty of no contributory negligence. Whether his evidence was true or not, was, even in the light of defendant’s evidence, a question for the jury, but, for the purposes of a demurrer to its legal effect, must be presumed to be true.

The defendant’s answer contained the plea of contributory negligence, which was denied by the reply, the reply containing the further averment that .the defendant’s servants could have avoided the injury by using reasonable efforts to stop the engine, after they saw, or by use of ordinary care could have seen, the perilous position of Mauerman.

The defendant’s evidence, a correct epitome of which is set out in the brief of its counsel, was in substance as follows: The engine was moving southwardly, on what was known as the “lead” track, at a speed of less than six miles per hour, on its way to its [353]*353destination, — the ronnd-honse at Lesperance street. There were aboard of it the engineer, the fireman, the foreman of the engine crew, and his two helpers who were standing on the foot-board in front of the engine. The foreman had been ringing the bell of the engine as it approached Miller street, which was distant about three hundred feet north of the point of the accident; but, as the engine passed over Miller street, he ceased ringing the bell and began oiling ‘the engine, as it was his custom to do at that place ; his engineer was likewise so engaged, though not having to leave his- seat while so occupied. The bell continued to sound until the engine reached a point about one hundred and fifty feet north of the accident. There are five switch-frogs between Miller street and the point of the accident, over which the engine ran, making a noise which could be heard for several hundred feet; the headlight of the engine was burning brightly, and the engineer and crew on the front of the engine were looking south along the track in the direction the engine was running. When they reached a point fifteen or twenty feet north of the place where Mauerman was struck, one of the helpers standing on the foot-board in front of the engine discovered an object on the track, the character of which he could not distinguish at the distance, but he immediately signaled the engineer with his lantern to stop. His signal was immediately acted upon by the engineer, and the engine was stopped within thirty feet, but too late to avoid striking Mauerman, who was sitting on the west rail of the track asleep with his head upon his knees, directly beneath and in the shadow of the electric light. None of the men in front of the engine saw Mauerman before the engine got within fifteen or twenty feet of him, and the engineer did not see him until he got the signal from the helper to stop, for the reason, as they testified, that Mauerman was sitting in the shadow produced by the electric light, which was of [354]*354such intensity as to render an object indiscernible until a person entered its orbit, which was about thirty feet in diameter. The track on which appellant’s engine was moving was perfectly straight for a distance of from three hundred to five hundred feet north of the point of the accident, and, if plaintiff had looked, he could have seen the engine, and if he had listened he could have heard it. Plaintiff’s son within an hour before the accident had drunk five Jumbo glasses of beer, each of which had a capacity of one quart, at a saloon situated within a few blocks of the scene of the accident; and he was seen a half hour previous to the accident in a hilarious and half-dr unken mood, his condition being such that one of his associates then cautioned him against attempting to do any more work that night. While convalescing at the defendant’s hospital he told a sister of charity, who was nursing him, that he had been drinking the night of the accident, and had sat down upon the track and fallen asleep, and was struck by the engine. Two or three days after he was brought to the hospital he told the attending physician that he was injured while sitting on the rail of the track and having a stool.

The plaintiff, in opposition to this, introduced evidence-tending to show that, owing to the height of the electric light, there was no shadow; that a person lying on the ground in the center of the alleged shadow could have been seen at a distance of four hundred feet; that the engine, at the rate of speed at which it was running, could have been stopped, and when plaintiff was discovered was actually stopped, within thirty feet, and that the headlight of the engine would have enabled the engineer, if he had been on the lookout, to see an object on the ground for a distance of one hundred feet. This evidence had a tendency to show that the real reason, why Mauerman’s position was not discovered, was that the engineer and fireman were not on the lookout, but were engaged in oiling the engine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Mo. App. 348, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mauerman-v-st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-moctapp-1890.