O'Donnell v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad

26 S.W.2d 929, 324 Mo. 1097, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 929 (O'Donnell v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad) 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
O'Donnell v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 26 S.W.2d 929, 324 Mo. 1097, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 423 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

This is an action under the Federal Employer's Liability Act (45 U.S.C.A. secs. 51-59) brought by Louise O'Donnell, administratrix of the estate of Thomas O'Donnell, deceased, for damages sustained by her, as widow, and by their minor daughter, Louise O'Donnell, as a result of said decedent's being run over and killed by a freight car in the defendant's yards at East St. Louis, Illinois, during a switching operation. The verdict was for plaintiff for $22,000, apportioned $17,500 to the widow and $4500 to the daughter. On motion for a new trial the court enforced a remittitur of $2500 to be taken wholly off the child's share. From the judgment on the verdict as thus reduced the defendant has appealed, assigning error in the giving and refusal of instructions, especially the refusal of demurrers to the evidence at the close of the plaintiff's case and the whole case. Complaint is made also of the size of the judgment.

The deceased was a car inspector. The casualty happened on July 19, 1925, about 6:30 P.M. in broad daylight. The locus in quo was a part of the appellant's yards where tracks 11 and 12 are located. These lie parallel east and west, about eight feet apart. Track 11 is south of track 12, and both curve to the south at their east end into a lead track which runs north and south and feeds these and other tracks.

A freight train known as No. 92, consisting of about thirty-five cars, an engine and tender, was standing on track 11, headed east and ready to leave for points outside the State of Illinois. The deceased and plaintiff's sole eyewitness, Watt, another inspector, had just completed a light inspection of the train and were standing at the head thereof near the engine tender. They were on the north side of the train between tracks 11 and 12. It was the deceased's duty to record the number of the engine and to note the time of departure; and also to observe whether the air brakes were functioning as the cars moved past him while the train was pulling out. The brake cylinders and plungers were attached high up to the bottoms of the cars about midway of their length. To see them it was necessary either to stoop or kneel, or else to step back about as far as the next track, seven or eight feet, whence they would be in view to an average man standing erect.

Another freight train known as No. 90 had been made up on track 12. A switch engine headed in from the east and pulled two cars therefrom back toward the lead track, stopping at a point which left clearance for No. 92 to get out. This put the west end of these two cars on track 12 about fifty or sixty feet east of the point where the deceased was standing near track 11. The switch engine was to pull them on out over the lead track after No. 92 had gone. Just after the switch engine and two cars passed, going *Page 1103 east, the witness Watt left the deceased and walked about seventy-five feet due north, crossing over track 12, to a drinking fountain near the corner of the yard office. No. 92 started to move out when he had travelled about half that distance. When Watt got to the drinking fountain he leaned over to take a drink. At that same time, Williams, a member of the switching crew attached to the switch engine, also came to the fountain. As he was leaning over and drinking he suddenly exclaimed "Oh, my God, I believe Tom got hit."

Watt and Williams rushed back and found the body of O'Donnell lying between the rails of track 12 with the legs and the lower part of the trunk south of the south rail. The two south wheels of the truck of a freight car had passed over his lower waist or hips. He died in a very short time. The way the casualty happened was that while he was standing close to track 12 the switch engine and two cars which had theretofore taken a position fifty or sixty feet eastward, again moved westward without a lookout and without any signal or warning, and struck him. Watt testified there was a custom in the appellant's yard requiring any standing engine to sound a warning bell before moving; and also to keep a field man or lookout at the forward end of moving cars. Once Watt said it was one or two minutes from the time he left O'Donnell until the latter was hit; another time he said No. 92 started to pull out a minute or two after he left O'Donnell and that about two-thirds of the thirty-five-car train had passed before the accident.

This witness was cross-examined vigorously on the proposition as to whether he did or could remember if the switch engine rang the bell before moving west and striking the deceased. He was sure the warning signal had not been given, and said also the engine bell on train ninety-two was not sounded and that there were no other switch engines working close at hand. He admitted he was not paying particular attention to the switch engine, but added he was where he could have heard the bell if it had been rung, and would naturally notice. Appellant argues if it was the custom and practice to sound the bell during switching operations the failure to ring it is the only thing that would have attracted the witness's particular attention, and since he says he was not paying particular attention that means the bell was rung.

It was also shown that when the witness gave a written statement to the railroad's representative after the accident he made this answer to one question: "I don't know whether or not the engine bell was sounded before the movement was made which resulted in his death. Had it been, I or any one else would not likely have heard it on account of the noise from No. 92 and the yard engine working there." Respondent's counsel further brought *Page 1104 out the point that the position selected by the deceased for inspection of the train after it pulled out was not a good one, because the train would have to go around a curve from the east end of track 11 to the lead track in such manner that he would not be in sight of the enginemen and could not give a stop signal if he found anything wrong. The witness further admitted the main or principal duty of field men or lookouts at the forward end of moving cars is to line up the switches.

The respondent also offered in evidence a rule book of the appellant railroad company issued in 1917, which the witness Watt said was used by yard switch crews (but not by inspectors) in 1925 at the time of the casualty. From this book rule 30 was read to the jury, as follows:

"The bell will be rung when an engine is about to move; while moving through tunnels; along the streets of towns and cities; approaching and passing public road crossings at grade, stations and trains on adjacent track."

Mrs. O'Donnell testified the deceased was fifty-one years old when he was killed, that she was forty-five and in good health, and their daughter sixteen. He had worked for the appellant between eight and nine years and his average wages were $160 per month, all of which was used for the support of the family. They also had an income of $40 to $45 per month from taking in roomers, but this was devoted to making $50 monthly payments on their home. According to the American Table of Mortality O'Donnell's life expectancy was 20.26 years.

All the members of the engine and switch crews which figured in the casualty testified for appellant. The foreman and two switchmen stated there was no custom in the yard to have a lookout posted at the front of moving cars, while making up a train. So, likewise, said D.C. Taliaferro, the yardmaster; R.E. Patterson, assistant general yardmaster, and H.R. Cole, engine foreman.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 929, 324 Mo. 1097, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odonnell-v-baltimore-ohio-railroad-mo-1930.