Penney ex rel. Ramey v. St. Joseph Stock Yards Co.

111 S.W. 79, 212 Mo. 309, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 19, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 79 (Penney ex rel. Ramey v. St. Joseph Stock Yards 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
Penney ex rel. Ramey v. St. Joseph Stock Yards Co., 111 S.W. 79, 212 Mo. 309, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 140 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

— This is an action by tbe plaintiffs, who are minors, by tbeir next friend, against tbe Stock Yards Company for the alleged negligent killing of their father, Rnfns Penney, on December 4th, 1904, at St. Joseph, Missouri. The Stock Yards Company is a corporation organized under article 8, chapter 42, Revised Statutes 1889, now chapter 12, article 9, Revised Statutes 1899, entitled Manufacturing and Business Companies, in 1896. Among other purposes of this corporation as set out in its letters was ‘ ‘ The operation of terminal lines of railway” in connection with its stock yards and packing houses in the city of St. Joseph.

The evidence tended to prove that at the time of the injury complained of, the defendant owned a number of miles of railroad tracks at the city of St. Joseph and large terminals therein and large pens and yards for the receiving and handling of live stock, and maintained a roundhouse, and at the time of the killing of plaintiffs’ father continuously operated six locomotive engines and employed the necessary crews to operate the same, and did the necessary switching for the six principal railroads converging at St. Joseph in connection with the said stock yards. Each engine had a switching crew of three men besides the engineer and fireman. The hog pens were about six hundred feet long south-and-north. Along side of the hog pens was a large platform about twelve feet wide and running the full length of the said hog pen. This platform or “dock,” as it was called, was about on a level with the floor of a stock car, and was used for unloading cars. Gates that were fastened to the posts of the hog pens, swung round from the dock and were adjusted to the car doors, and in this way a narrow enclosure or passage way was formed, so that the hogs could be driven [315]*315from the car across the dock into the hog pens. Along side of and immediately east of this dock was a railroad track of the defendant, upon which the cars were set to be unloaded. The space between the dock and the cars when standing on this track was about six to ten inches. The petition alleged the appointment of the next friend to institute and prosecute this suit for the plaintiff minors; also the incorporation of the defendant, and that at the time of his death Rufus P. P'enney was unmarried and left no widow surviving him; that the defendant in its railroad business used and operated locomotive engines and trains and that each of said engines and trains maintained a train crew, each of said crewsi being composed of an engineer, a fireman and two switchmen; that defendant had large docks in and about its yards, constructed and used for the purpose of unloading live stock from railroad cars into its said stock yards, and alongside of said docks are railroad tracks used for the purpose of transporting cars to, alongside of and flush with said docks. That on and prior to the 6th of December, 1904, the father of the plaintiffs, said Rufus P. Penney, was in the employ of the defendant in the capacity of a switchman in one of its said train crews. The petition further states that at all times there were large numbers of men engaged about the docks of the said company in unloading live stock from the ears on the tracks alongside of said docks, and it was the duty of the train crew, of which their father was switchman, to run or cause to he. run cars loaded with live stock upon the tracks alongside of said docks to be unloaded and to remove from said tracks cars that had been unloaded by the employees engaged in unloading the same; that at all times there were large numbers of cars along the side of said docks, and in the performance of his duties it was the duty of their father to ascertain before moving a car on the tracks by said docks whether or not men were engaged at work on or about the cars or docks, [316]*316who were liable to be injured by the moving of said cars, and if it was desired to couple cars together to ascertain before moving said cars whether or not any persons were in a position of danger, and whether or not in case said cars were moved in coupling the same, any person was liable to be injured; that it was the duty of the engineer to permit the cars and his engine to which the same were attached to remain stationary until he received a signal to move said cars, from the foreman of the switching crew or some member of the said crew in which plaintiffs ’ father was working, and it was the duty of said foreman not to give said signal until said foreman was notified so to do by plaintiffs’ father. The petition then states that on the 6th of December, 1904, while the father of plaintiffs was engaged in performing his duties- as switchman as aforesaid for defendant, one of defendant’s steam engines was standing attached to- a number of cars alongside of one of said docks, and at said time and while said switching crew were about to- and were preparing to-couple or attach said cars to other cars- alongside of said dock, which said cars were about six or seven feet from the cars to- which said steam engine was attached, their said father, in the performance of his duties and while in the exercise of due care, walked alongside of said cars to which said steam engine was attached and on the side thereof opposite to the said dock and to the end of the cars to which said steam engine was attached and walked across the railroad tracks between said cars to the said docks where he could obtain a full view of said docks for the purpose of ascertaining and learning, as it was his duty to do, whether or not any person in or about said train or cars or docks- was in a position of danger, or where he would likely or probably be injured by the movement of said engine and cars attached thereto, for the purpose of coupling said train to said other cars, and while their said father was so looking in accordance with his duty so to do, the en[317]*317gineer in charge of the engine attached to said cars suddenly and without warning to their said father and without any signal to do so from their father or the foreman of said switching crew, carelessly and negligently moved or caused to he moved the cars and engine rapidily toward, upon, against and over their father; that at the said time their father was close to or leaning against said docks, and while in said position and place, said engine and cars were negligently and carelessly by the engineer and employees of the defendant in charge thereof, moved upon, against and over him without any warning or signal from him or any other person authorized to give said signal, and thereby their said father was caught between one of said cars and said dock, which was only about seven inches from the side of the car, and was so bruised, maimed and crushed that he died immediately from the effects thereof. Plaintiffs state further that the engineer and other employees of defendant in charge of said engine before moving the same, by the exercise of ordinary care on their part, could easily have seen and known the position of peril and danger their father was in and by the exercise of ordinary care could have avoided injuring him, but said engineer and the other employees in charge of said engine, carelessly and negligently moved said engine and cars upon and over him. There was a prayer for judgement for five' thousand dollars for damages resulting from the death of their father.

The defendant in its answer admits its incorporation but denies that it was engaged in operating or carrying on a general railroad or terminal business.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 79, 212 Mo. 309, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penney-ex-rel-ramey-v-st-joseph-stock-yards-co-mo-1908.