Palmer v. Chicago & Alton Railroad

121 S.W. 1087, 142 Mo. App. 633, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 281
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 1087 (Palmer v. Chicago & Alton 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
Palmer v. Chicago & Alton Railroad, 121 S.W. 1087, 142 Mo. App. 633, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 281 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiff is a negro boy who sues by his next friend for a personal injury received in a collision of a locomotive .of the defendant company with a buggy in which plaintiff was driving. The accident happened on the night of September 9, 1905, after mid[640]*640night, and at a crossing which is near but east of the abandoned station of Larrabee. This plaintiff Avorked on a farm five or six miles northeast of Larrabee. One Saturday evening he and another negro boy drove from the farm where plaintiff lived to the town of Sturgeon, seven or eight miles southwest of Larrabee and about tAvelve miles southwest of where plaintiff lived. He visited his father and mother in Sturgeon, attended a social gathering at a church and perhaps loitered about a saloon. He may have been intoxicated, but much of the evidence looks like he was not. He and his companion started for home about midnight in a buggy drawn by a team. Behind them were two white men, farmers in the vicinity, of the names of Devert and Palmer. A third negro boy accompanied the men in the buggy, riding a horse belonging to one of them'. The occupants of the second vehicle had nothing to do with plaintiff and his companion, but the members of the two parties seem to have been acquainted, and to have passed a few words now and then when the buggies happened to come close enough to each other for conversation to occur. Plaintiff Palmer and his companion were in advance of the other buggy and continued to be. They drove along about seven miles until they drew near Larrabee station and near to the crossing of the road they were on and the railroad at a point some distance east of the station. The country about there is level, and the railroad track runs due east and west. The wagon road on which plaintiff was driving proceeds in a northeasterly direction until it is one hundred and fifty yards south of the railroad crossing, and there branches, one fork leading to the north and another, a wagon road, going eastwardly. At this point one of the men in the rear buggy, R. L. Palmer, got out and mounted his horse to travel east alone, his companion, Devert, intending to go on north in the buggy. The third negro boy, avIio had been riding the horse, relinquished the animal to its owner [641]*641Palmer and got into the buggy with Devert. This white man Palmer should not be confused with the plaintiff. What is material about the incident at the fork of the road is that the white man Palmer testified he there heard a rumble, thought of the approach of a train and warned Devert to look out for it as he (Devert) drove on toward the crossing. Palmer said he could not see the train. There was a hedge along the west side of that part of the country road extending to the right of way, and it is conceded this hedge would obstruct the view of a person driving northward until he entered the right of way; but the evidence tends to sIioav the view Avas unobstructed by the hedge from thence to the track, a distance of forty-seven feet, and that after getting on the right of way, no obstruction of vision intervened to the west of the crossing,- ex- • cept a wing fence three or four feet high and some cattle chutes one hundred and sixty yards further Avest. Plaintiff testified when he reached the right of way he rose to his feet, looked out of the buggy, still standing until the horses reached the track, drove the team in a walk to the track, Avhen the engine struck the buggy, hurled it and plaintiff one.hundred feet or more up the track and killed his companion. The horses were found hitched to the wagon pole further north on the wagon road. He testified that though he was looking to the west he neither saw nor heard the approaching train- and never knew what hit him. The neglect alleged was failure to sound crossing signals. The top of the buggy was up and the curtains dovm, the night was wild and very dark, it was raining hard and a strong Avind was blowing from the north which drove the rain into the faces of the occupants of the buggy. The railroad track was two feet above the surrounding country, it was upgrade from the crossing towards Larrabee, and ordinarily a train coming from [642]*642the west would be visible from the crossing for a long distance. When the witness Palmer heard the rumble of the train he judged it was a half-mile west, and another witness said that from observations he had made, a train might be seen from the crossing clear to Clark, five miles away, and from the edge of the right of way would be visible to a person sitting in a buggy twelve hundred and seventy-five feet away, or at the water tank. The train was a short one, consisting of an engine, tender and caboose, and was running, the engineer said, at a speed of thirty-five miles an hour. He testified there was a lighted headlight on the front of the engine, but there was testimony tending to prove the contrary. The engineer said the night was so dark he could not see further than the front of his engine, did not see the buggy or team, hear the collision, or become aware he had struck anything until he found portions of the buggy on the front of the engine when he reached Mexico, twenty miles from the place of the accident. The evidence tended strongly to prove no bell was rung or whistle sounded as the engine approached the crossing, and it is conceded the finding of the jury for plaintiff settled this issue of. fact. The company operating the road at the time of the accident was the Chicago & Alton Railway Company; but this action was instituted against the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, it being alleged the latter, on September 10, 1905, was the lessor to the Chicago & Alton Railway Company of the railroad track and right of way mentioned; that on or about March 8, 1906, said two railroad companies were consolidated pursuant to the provisions and requirements of the laws of the State of Illinois, and all their capital stocks, corporate rights, franchises, immunities and privileges of every kind passed by the consolidation and merger to the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, the defendant herein, which since said date is and has been the owner and possessor of all the railroad property and operat[643]*643ing the same, and has become and is liable for the debts and liabilities' of both the companies. There was evidence to prove those statements. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The defendant requested the court to direct a verdict in its favor at the conclusion of the evidence, and for the refusal of this and certain other rulings on requests for instructions, says the judgment in plaintiff’s favor given pursuant to the verdict of the jury, ought to be reversed.

1. A persuasive argument has been made against plaintiff’s right to a verdict, on the theory that the evidence proves his own negligence contributed to the accident, which argument is to be considered in connection with plaintiff’s right to the benefit of all inferences the jury properly might draw regarding the facts. [Montgomery v. Railroad, 181 Mo. 504.] If we acept plaintiff’s testimony, he was perfectly careful as he approached the track, both in respect of looking and of listening for a train; but counsel say his testimony must be disregarded because circumstances show it cannot be true; that therefore the question is for the court. [Sanguinette v. Railroad, 196 Mo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 1087, 142 Mo. App. 633, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-chicago-alton-railroad-moctapp-1909.