Mayfield v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.

85 S.W.2d 116, 337 Mo. 79, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 9, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 85 S.W.2d 116 (Mayfield v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.) 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
Mayfield v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 85 S.W.2d 116, 337 Mo. 79, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 536 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This case, coming recently to the writer, is an action for damages under the wrongful death statute. The action was brought by an administrator for the benefit of the next of kin of the deceased, Benjamin Logan Mayfield. The petition contained charges of both primary and humanitarian negligence. The jury *Page 83 returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $10,000 and from the judgment entered thereon defendant has appealed.

[1] Defendant contends that its demurrer to the evidence, at the close of the case, should have been sustained because plaintiff failed to make a case for the jury of either primary or humanitarian negligence. Since on ruling this question, plaintiff is entitled to have the evidence considered from the viewpoint most favorable to him and to have all reasonable inferences, from the facts shown, drawn in his favor, our statement of facts will be made on that basis. [Hardin v. Illinois Central Railroad Co.,334 Mo. 1169, 70 S.W.2d 1075, and cases cited.] So considering the evidence, we find that it tends to show that Benjamin Logan Mayfield was a special agent of the Burlington Railway whose duties required him to be at night in its Twelfth Street yards in Kansas City. Mayfield was killed there about one-fifteen A.M., on July 8, 1929, by a transfer movement of defendant, Kansas City Southern Railway Company. These yards mentioned extend in a northerly and southerly direction between Twelfth and Sixteenth streets, and consisted of a series of six tracks numbered from two to seven, inclusive. On the night in question a Burlington train, No. 75, consisting of an engine, a car and a caboose, in the order named, entered the yards from the north and proceeded southward on track five, closely followed at an interval estimated variously at forty to fifty feet (Daume, Burlington brakeman), sixty to eighty feet (Organ, Burlington switch foreman), and about 125 feet (Roberts, defendant's switchman), by a transfer movement of the Kansas City Southern consisting of two cars and an engine. The engine on Burlington train No. 75 was on the south pulling the car and the caboose, the latter being on the north or rear end. This caboose was lighted at the rear or north end by the cupola light, by two side markers and a white lantern, and the interior was also lighted, with the rear door open, so that the light therefrom shone northward onto the track. Defendant's transfer, following this lighted caboose, consisted of two refrigerator cars on the south shoved by the engine on the north, so that a Southern freight car was immediately behind and following the caboose. Both movements were proceeding at a speed estimated at from three, or four to six miles per hour. Defendant's engine was "drifting," i.e., proceeding with the power off, and made no noise to indicate its approach.

Defendant's locomotive pushing the two large refrigerator cars, each fifteen feet high and forty feet long, came behind Burlington train No. 75 only a few blocks before reaching the yards. Defendant's crew, consisting of an engineer and a fireman, switch foreman and two switchmen, had brought these refrigerator cars from the Southern yards which lay north of the Burlington exchange yard. The movement of these trains down track five was customary and *Page 84 in the usual course of business in those yards. The night was dark, without a moon, but clear. There were no permanent lights in the Burlington yards. On track four, the next track to the east of said track five, there was another Burlington train, No. 83, of about twenty freight cars which had been pulled in from the south or Sixteenth Street end of said track. These twenty cars were on track four when the Burlington train, and the Southern transfer following it, came down south on track five. The Burlington train No. 75 stopped a few feet south of the south end of these freight cars on track four. Organ, a Burlington switch foreman, was standing three or four car lengths north of this point between tracks four and five when the two trains came down track five and passed him.

According to plaintiff's evidence, Roberts, one of the Southern switchmen, was sitting on the west side of the south or last refrigerator car (the engineer's side of the train), about eight or nine feet from the end, with his lantern lighted and placed on his right side and Johnson, the Southern switch foreman, was sitting a few feet away between him and the end of the car without any lantern lighted. There was no evidence that any of the Southern employees saw anybody on or approaching the track, except the testimony of Roberts. The Burlington brakeman, Daume, testified that, practically all the time Burlington train No. 75 was proceeding south on track five ahead of the Southern cars, he was standing on the rear platform of the caboose with the door open behind him leading into its lighted interior; that while he did not keep his eyes on the following Southern cars, he was out there to watch them and make sure they did not run into his train. He did not notice anyone on or near the track. He said that he could not see defendant's transfer after it came alongside train No. 83, which was standing on track four. The Southern transfer stopped within ten or fifteen feet of the caboose on the Burlington train ahead of them.

According to Roberts, when the two movements were midway in the yards, a man stepped from the east onto track five, immediately behind the lighted Burlington caboose. Robert's testimony was as follows:

"I saw a man standing there just as the caboose went by. He had a light in his hand. It was a flash light and I saw it flash. . . . He just stepped over on the track. Just when I saw him he stepped on the track. . . . It looked like he was flashing it on the ground. I didn't see him but about ten seconds; maybe not that long; just at a glance I saw it flash. . . . Just a second or two. . . . I couldn't see so awfully plain, but I knew it was a man. . . . I glanced up there and saw him. I supposed he would get away. . . . I just glanced up and saw him and looked away. . . . I saw him and glanced back west." *Page 85

Roberts also said that thereafter he felt the car run over something and "remarked about it to Johnson." He said "it felt like we might have run over a piece of wood, a big piece of wood. It made the car rock. . . . It was just about where I seen that man."

Mayfield's body was found after defendant's engine was detached and backed away from the cars it brought in. Organ, who was checking the cars of Burlington train No. 83, discovered the body about the same time it was seen by defendant's crew. The Burlington men, who were plaintiff's witnesses, testified that there was no light on the end of the lead car of defendant's transfer. An investigation of the wheels of both engines and the cars showed that the Burlington train had not run over anyone but that defendant's transfer had. Walsh, a Burlington car inspector, said that he was inspecting train No. 83 when train No. 75 passed him; that he crossed behind No. 75 not seeing defendant's transfer, but just as he got across heard its brakes grinding behind him, turned and saw it; that before he crossed he had already worked to the southern end of the train he was inspecting; that he crossed to inspect No. 75; and that a short time before he had finished with train No. 83 he passed Mayfield, who was looking at stock in that train.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W.2d 116, 337 Mo. 79, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayfield-v-kansas-city-southern-railway-co-mo-1935.