McNulty v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

148 S.W. 973, 166 Mo. App. 439
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 973 (McNulty v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad) 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
McNulty v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 148 S.W. 973, 166 Mo. App. 439 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

— This action was originally brought in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, by the father and mother, under the. provisions of section 2864, Revised Statutes 1899, to recover $5000, the penalty given by the section, for the death of their infant daughter. The case was taken on change of venue to the circuit court of St. Louis county. The father died pending the action and it has since been prosecuted by the mother. The accident and the death occurred on the morning of the 15th of May, 1900.

It appears that this was the second trial of this case in the circuit court, there being a verdict for defendant on the former trial, which the trial court set aside for error in instructions given for defendant. Defendant appealed from that to the Supreme Court where the action of the trial court was affirmed and the cause remanded. [See McNulty v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co., 203 Mo. 475, 101 S. W. 1082.]

This second trial was before the court and a jury and there was a verdict in favor of defendant. Judgment followed from which plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court, the amount involved at that time exceeding the jurisdiction of this court. Pending the submission of the cause to the Supreme Court the [444]*444.jurisdictional amount of this court was changed from $4500 to $7500 under Act of the General Assembly, June 12, 1909, page 397, now section 3937, Revised Statutes 1909, and the cause was transferred by the Supreme Court to this court.- It was first submitted to us on printed briefs and argument by respondent and taken as submitted on briefs by appellant. Holding that the trial court erred in giving the ninth instruction, we reversed the judgment and remanded the cause. Counsel for defendant, filing a motion for rehearing and that being sustained, the cause has again been submitted orally and on printed briefs and arguments.

At the instance of plaintiff the court gave seven instructions which appear to be all that were asked by plaintiff.

At the request of defendant the court gave five instructions, numbered from eight to thirteen. The errors assigned are to those numbered nine, ten and eleven. The correctness of instruction No. 9 is the principal point of controversy on this rehearing. We, however, reproduce the three instructions on which error is assigned.

The ninth instruction told the jury that under the pleadings and" evidence plaintiff could not recover on the charge that defendant’s servants failed to look ahead of the engine and tender to see if the movement endangered persons on the crossing and failed to stop or slow up the engine and tender before it struck the child.

The tenth instruction told the jury that before plaintiff could recover in this action “she must establish the fact that defendant was negligent in the respect or respects stated in other instructions, by the proper or greater weight of the testimony.”

The eleventh instruction told the jury that even though they might find from the greater weight of the [445]*445evidence that the bell of the engine which struck the child was not constantly sounded for eighty rods before reaching Theresa avenue crossing, yet if they also found from the evidence that such failure to ring the bell was not a direct and immediate cause producing or contributing to cause the injury and death of plaintiff’s child, their finding should be for defendant on that issue.

Taking up these instructions in inverse order we say:

First: The criticism of the eleventh instruction is that it recognizes the duty of ringing the bell eighty rods from the crossing and until reaching the crossing but does not require the ringing of the bell constantly until the engine passed the crossing, as required by statute, now section 3140, Revised Statutes 1909.

In Pope v. Wabash Railroad Co.,--Mo.--, 146 S. W. 790, it is said: • “The object of a signal is to give warning and if .those on the track knew of the train’s approach without the signal, in time to escape from danger, then failure to give the signal is of no legal importance.” Several cases are cited in support of this, among others McManamee v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co., 135 Mo. 440, l. c. 449, 37 S. W. 119. See, also, Illinois Central R. Co. v. Dupres, 138 Ky. 459, l. c. 462, 128 S. W. 334. Here the failure to keep the 'bell ringing while crossing the street was wholly immaterial, for the child was struck before the engine had passed over the street. Moreover, one of plaintiff’s own instructions-cover this, for it distinctly told the jury that to exempt defendant, it must, among other things, appear from the evidence “that at the time said engine and tender ran upon said crossing the bell on said engine was rung eighty rods from said crossing and kept ringing until such engine crossed said street.”

[446]*446Second: The argument in support of the error assigned to the tenth instruction is practically the same as to the eleventh and for the reasons given above that assignment is not tenable.

Third: This brings us to consideration of the ninth instruction.

It is necessary to a proper consideration of this to notice the testimony more fully than we did in the former opinion.

On the morning of the day of the accident the daughter of appellant, a little girl, eight years and seven months old at the time of the accident, on her way to school, had to cross defendant’s tracks on Theresa avenue in the city of St. Louis. Her mother, the plaintiff, testifying, said of her: “She was a strong, healthy child and a wise one too.” The family had lived during all the life of the little girl within a block of and to the south of the street upon which the railroad tracks were located. “The little girl crossed these tracks every day going to school. . . . She had gone to school for a year and a half and the trains passing pretty much all the time. Told the child to be careful. She was a smart child. Let her go alone; never had thought of the railroad crossing at all.” Theresa avenue runs north and south, the railroad tracks from west to east, crossing the avenue at a right angle. Besides the tracks of the defendant railroad which there cross the avenue are the tracks of' the Wabash, the Missouri Pacific and perhaps others. The Wabash tracks appear to be south of those of the defendant and closer in toward the street pavement. The railroad companies had a watchman at this crossing.

A young lady, who was in sight of the accident but north of the tracks and on the east side of Theresa avenue, testified that she did not see the child when struck; saw her under the tender; tender was in front of engine; first saw the child when she was in the [447]*447middle of the street; saw her hat whirling and next saw her lying in the middle of the road; was a block or a block and a half or two blocks away when she saw the hat whirling. A lady companion of this witness testified that when she first noticed the child' she saw her lying in the road.

A teamster, witness for plaintiff, testified that he was within a conple of hundred feet of the little girl when she was killed; saw the engine “come and shoot right by and pick her up and drag her right along.” The child was carried some distance. At the time the engine shot across the street and caught the child, the watchman was waving his flag “to beat the band. . . . The engine ran about 150 feet east of Theresa avenue before it stopped.”

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Related

Gray v. Wabash Railroad
162 S.W. 672 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)
Battles v. United Railways Co. of St Louis
161 S.W. 614 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 973, 166 Mo. App. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnulty-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1912.