Murphy v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

183 S.W.2d 829, 353 Mo. 697, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 13, 1944
DocketNo. 38893.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 S.W.2d 829 (Murphy v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe 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
Murphy v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 183 S.W.2d 829, 353 Mo. 697, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 479 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

Mary Louise Murphy had a jury verdict of $15,000.00 for her personal injuries and $10,000.00 for her husband's death against the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railway Company. The trial court, upon a consideration of all the testimony in the case, was of the view that the evidence did not reveal that state of facts and circumstances from which the jury could or should be permitted to infer and find liability against the railroad under the Kansas last clear chance doctrine. Accordingly the court sustained the railroad's motion for a new trial on the assigned grounds that it had erred in refusing demurrers to the evidence.

Mrs. Murphy contends, on this appeal, that the cause should be remanded and the jury's verdict reinstated because there [830] was no evidence from which she could be found guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and there was substantial evidence that the railroad had but failed to use a last clear chance to slacken the speed of its train after she and her husband were or could have been seen upon the railroad's track in a position of helpless and inescapable peril and was, therefore, guilty of negligence under the law of Kansas.

The collision out of which this litigation grew occurred at the intersection of the Santa Fe's tracks and a public road at Edgerton, Kansas, on July 1, 1942 in the daytime. The road and the tracks intersect at an angle of sixty-one degrees and ten minutes but the tracks were spoken of as though they ran north and south and the road as though it ran east and west. Mary Louise Murphy, her husband, Glenn Murphy, and her brother-in-law, Pat Murphy, and his wife, Nadine, were riding in Glenn's 1941 Chevrolet business coupe on their way to the home of the Murphys' father and mother. Mary Louise was driving. Nadine sat nearest her in the seat and Pat sat on the right side in the seat while Glenn sat on the raised floor on a rug back of the seat. The automobile was in excellent mechanical condition and Mrs. Murphy was an experienced driver. There was a large window in the door of the car and a smaller window just to the rear of the seat and Mrs. Murphy said that because of the angle of the crossing and the manner in which they sat in the car it was necessary for her to look over her right shoulder and through the smaller window to see down the railroad track to the south. She and all the occupants of the car were familiar with the surroundings and she considered the *Page 701 crossing "dangerous." She stopped the car about twenty-five feet from the west or main line track, which was about forty feet north of the railroad station, and remained stopped for four or five minutes while a freight train passed on the east track. As the caboose of the freight train passed over the crossing she put the car in low gear and started forward, shifting into second gear about fifteen feet from the west track, and proceeded at a speed of five or six miles an hour. As she proceeded forward she looked to the north on a clear and unobstructed track and immediately turned her attention to the other direction and looked south through the small car window; and, she says she continued to look south until she actually saw the train approaching from that direction. She says that as she proceeded towards the tracks, looking south, her view of the tracks to the south was first obstructed by the station. As she continued on her view of the tracks to the south was obstructed by a bay window on the front of the station and as she continued on still farther her view of the tracks to the south was obstructed by a water tank 318 feet south of the center line of the crossing. When she could and did see the train it was 100 to 150 feet south of the water tank. The bumper of the automobile, at least the right side of it, was then over the first rail of the track and that was the first time she could see the train. She immediately "slammed on" the brakes and the car stopped almost instantly, "about in the middle between the two tracks," two or three feet over. She shifted the car from second gear to neutral and into reverse but before she could back off the car was struck by a northbound train. The Murphy brothers were killed and she became unconscious after the car was struck.

The train was the second section of the Santa Fe's No. 8 passenger train consisting of two baggage cars and four express cars loaded with auxiliary airplane tanks. West of Edgerton there had been a service application of the brakes and the speed of the train had been reduced to eighty miles an hour for an eighty mile an hour curve. The next curve was a seventy or a seventy-five mile an hour curve and there had been a second service application of the brakes and the train had been steadied at seventy miles an hour and continued at that speed from the time Mrs. Murphy saw it until it struck the car at the crossing. One of the appellant's expert witnesses, a retired Santa Fe engineer who was familiar with that track and crossing, answering a hypothetical question testified that in 300 feet (the approximate distance from the crossing to the water tank) the speed of the train could have been cut in half or reduced from seventy-five miles an hour to about thirty-five miles an hour. Another expert witness testified that in 350 feet at seventy miles a hour the speed of the train could have been reduced to twenty-five or thirty miles an hour and that "it should take about six or six and a half seconds to slow that train down to *Page 702 reach that crossing" rather than the three to [831] three and a half seconds it would take at a speed of seventy miles an hour.

To demonstrate that Mrs. Murphy could and would have backed the automobile off the track within the 300 or the 350 feet had the speed of the train been slackened by an emergency application of the brakes, as her expert witnesses said it could, a service manager of a Chevrolet company made certain tests. He placed a 1941 Chevrolet business coupe upon the track at Edgerton so that the bumper would extend to the inner rail and by a stop watch backed it clear of the tracks in "two to two and a half seconds."

[1] It is assumed, for the purpose of this opinion, that the evidence in this case demonstrates liability on the part of the railroad under the Kansas last clear chance doctrine (Leinbach v. Pickwick-Grey-hound Lines, 138 Kan. 50, 23 P.2d 449, 92 A.L.R. 1; Trower v. M.-K.T.R. Co., 347 Mo. 900, 149 S.W.2d 792; Sing v. St. Louis-S.F. Ry. Co. (Mo.), 30 S.W.2d 37) unless it also appears from the evidence that she was guilty of contributory negligence within the meaning of the law of Kansas. Bazzell v. Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co., 133 Kan. 483, 300 P. 1108; Caylor v. St. Louis-S.F. Ry. Co., 332 Mo. 851, 59 S.W.2d 661. It is assumed that the appellant was not guilty of contributory negligence in not stopping and making certain that a train was not approaching before she drove upon the crossing. Compare Eubank v. Kansas City Ter. Ry. Co., 346 Mo. 436,142 S.W.2d 19; McMahon v. J. P. Ry. Co., 96 Kan. 271, 150 P. 566; Torgeson v. M.-K.-T. Ry. Co., 124 Kan. 798, 262 P. 564 and Wehe v.

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183 S.W.2d 829, 353 Mo. 697, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-mo-1944.