Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Steel

1929 OK 556, 284 P. 21, 141 Okla. 133, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 17, 1929
Docket18332
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1929 OK 556 (Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Steel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Steel, 1929 OK 556, 284 P. 21, 141 Okla. 133, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 14 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

BENNETT, C.

This is an action against Missouri Pacific Railroad Company for damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff below, Mrs. J. W. Steel. The parties will be referred to in the same order in which they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff's petition alleges that defendant’s track runs north and south through Nowata and is intersected by a public highway running east and west near the south limits of said city, at which point there was an artificial grade several feet above the level of the highway; that the highway approaches to, and on each side of, the intersection, were short, abrupt and steep, and that the right of way on each side of the track takes a sharp, steep curve downward and that the crossing was in an unsafe and dangerous condition; that on May 29, 1925, plaintiff and her husband were proceeding along said highway from the east and over said railroad crossing, and that because of the dangerous and unsafe condition thereof, their automobile was thrown from under the control of the driver and caused to turn over, whereby plaintiff suffered serious and permanent injuries to the bones, muscles and ligaments of her back, causing severe and continuous pain since that time, and partial paralysis of the lower extremity; that the plaintiff has incurred obligations for medical and hospital care and attention, etc.

To this petition defendant filed general denial and a plea that J. W. Steel, plaintiff’s husband, was guilty of negligence in driving on said crossing, and that the ear was not in good mechanical condition, by reason whereof plaintiff’s hurt, if any, arose from, or was contributed to by, such negligence.

The cause was tried to a jury which rendered its verdict for plaintiff for $1,800, from which defendant appeals.

Nine grounds for reversal are set up in the motion for new trial. The petition in error contains ten grounds. The argument and brief, however, are confined to four contentions, which we shall consider in their order.

1. The first contention is that the verdict and judgment are contrary to the evidence, contrary to law and not supported thereby, and that the court should have sustained defendant’s demurrer to the evidence of the plaintiff at the time plaintiff rested, and that the court should have granted the defendant’s request for peremptory instruction to the jury to find for the defendant.

PIa4nt’-.T test’fied. in substance, that she and her husband crossed said intersection at about 8 o’clock in the evening; that it was dark, but the lights of the car were burning; the crossing was just south of the city limits of Nowata; that her husband was driving a Ford touring car and that the speed of same was not over 15 miles per hour; • that she and her husband, the only occupants of the car, were on the front seat and the car and tires were in good condition, and had been used for a little over a year; that just as they went over the railroad track, the car bounced and she was thrown *135 forward out of tlie scat and over on the arm of her husband, and throwing the steering wheel out of balance; that her husband was using both hands upon the steering-wheel at the time and that the impact caused her to bounce forward over and between the steering wheel and the windshield, and this caused her husband to lose control of the car which turned over on the west side of the railroad and on the south side of the intersecting highway. Asked as to her location at the time the car turned over, she said she was between the steering wheel and the windshield and could not get out; that her husband got out and some minutes thereafter people came to their rescue and lifted her out; that they took her out and laid her on the ground; that her back was hurt; her ear was out and there were many bruises about her body, but the major injuries were in the back; she was taken from this place to the office of Dr. John R. Collins, who gave her first aid; thence she was taken to Nowata Hospital where she stayed until Tuesday or Wednesday afternoon of the next week; that she was under the doctor’s care there constantly and from that place she was carried to Tulsa where she was treated by Dr. C. S. Summers and also an osteopath. Dr. F. G. Gard; remained in Tulsa until the 11th of June; thence by rail to Springfield, Mo., and the rest of the way to Bolivar in a Ford: traveled on a sleeper because she could not. sit up, and was in bed while on the train, and thereafter was constantly under the care of physicians for about four months. Was not able to sit up all day until sometime in December following the injury, and has not been fully able to attend to household duties since that time; confined to her bed about eight weeks; that this condition was due to the injury received at the time of turning over of the car; that she is not now able to do all of her household tasks; that before the accident she was feeling well and doing her household duties without difficulty ; that she had theretofore had the care of doctors, but not for a year prior to the injury ; that she is 55 years old; that she has suffered more or less constantly from the injury to the back; that this was her first trip over the road to Nowata.

Several neighbors testified that before the injury complained of, plaintiff was able to do her household work and appeared to be in good health, but that afterwards she wa« not ab’e to do her work or to undergo any considerable exertion without very great fatigue.

Dr. M. E. Guthrie testified that he was a graduate of a recognized school of ostepaths and had been practicing since 1912. Upon examination of plaintiff found that the spine was badly injured; the tenth and eleventh and twelfth dorsal vertebrae were twisted to the right and posterior. The first, second and third lumbar below that were twisted to the left and anterior. There was considerable discoloration of tissues, the ligaments badly strained, and partial paralysis of the lower extremity. The patient was unable to arise without help and the neck, muscles and tissues were much congested; that plaintiff was not able to sit up at all. There was discoloration on both sides of the backbone in the lumbar region at and near the place of the twisted vertebrae; and a small injury over one of the eyes. At the time of trial plaintiff is able to do part of her work at home, but is not able to walk any great distance; that plaintiff was able to get up and walk around the room about the middle of September. The injury complained of will be more or less permanent. The paralysis cleared up in September following the injury, but the trouble from the twist ed vertebrae would tend to increase and is more pronounced at the date of trial than it was six months prior.

Mr. O. T. Babb; lives at Nowata, county surveyor since statehood; was familiar with the crossing; the ground came up tolerably level until just before it entered the railroad, and then it went up pretty sharp, and then it was deeper on the west side, as there was quite a little elevation on the west side of the track and you went, down a pretty steep grade (indicating) on the west side of of the track.

“Q. In your judgment. Mr. Babb, about how many feet would it be from the top of the track to the level of the ground at the west edge of the railroad right of way; that is, I mean, about how high perpendicularly? A. Well, I would judge between eight and ten feet; something like that. * * * Q. Do you know whether or not the dirt on the grade came right up to the edge of the boards on that crossing? A. Yes, sir. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 556, 284 P. 21, 141 Okla. 133, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-r-co-v-steel-okla-1929.