Perkins v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.

49 S.W.2d 103, 329 Mo. 1190, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 712
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 103 (Perkins v. Kansas City Southern 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
Perkins v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 49 S.W.2d 103, 329 Mo. 1190, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 712 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*1195 ATWOOD, J.

Respondent is the sole surviving parent of Russell Perkins who W'as an unmarried minor between twenty and twenty-one years old when killed in a collision with one of appellant’s trains while he was driving an automobile south on U. S. Highway 71 at the crossing of the highway and appellant’s main track at Tipton Ford, Missouri. This is an action for damages on account of his death. The jury returned a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was sustained on the ground of error in certain instructions given at defendant’s request. Defendant thereupon appealed from the court’s order and judgment.

Plaintiff alleged in her petition that as her son approached the railroad crossing from the north he was prevented from obtaining a view of defendant’s main track southeast of the crossing by trees, a loading shed, a garage, a filling station and certain bunk or work cars along the north side of defendant’s right of way; that the electric bell and wig-wag signal maintained by defendant at the crossing to warn travelers on the highway of approaching trains was silent and motionless, though her son was unaware that it was in a defective condition; that the crossing in the highway maintained by defendant where two of its tracks immediately north of its main track passed over the highway was rough and “full of ruts or holes from four to five or six inches in depth below the level of the rails;” that with a knowledge of all these circumstances and conditions defendant, while plaintiff’s son was approaching said crossing in a careful and prudent manner, ran its train over said public business crossing “in a careless and negligent manner, i. e. without maintaining a look-out ahead for persons which they knew, or should have known, would or might be upon such crossing at such time and place, and by running said train at an excessive, reckless and dangerous rate of speed to-wit: a speed of sixty (60) miles per hour, and by not constantly ringing the bell on the locomotive drawing such train *1196 for at least a quarter of a mile before reaching said crossing, and by not sounding the steam whistle upon said locomotive at intervals for a distance of a quarter of a mile before reaching said crossing.” Plaintiff further pleaded negligence under the humanitarian rule, and alleged that “by reason of the combined acts of negligence of the defendant as aforesaid, her said minor son was struck and killed.” The only grounds of negligence covered by instructions given on request of plaintiff were, failure to ring the bell and sound the whistle under the circumstances and conditions in evidence, and defendant’s operation of its train “at a high, dangerous and excessive rate of speed, towards and across the public highway mentioned in evidence, under the facts and'circumstances detailed in evidence.”

Defendant’s answer was a general denial, a general allegation that the said Russell Perkins’ death was directly occasioned by his own carelessness and negligence, followed by fifteen specifications thereof, and a plea that plaintiff’s petition contained two causes of action which should be separately stated.

The evidence showed that Highway 71 ran south through Joplin, Tipton Ford and Neosho, and was a much traveled public road. Russell P'erkms was a traveling salesman and on the morning of this accident was driving from Joplin to Neosho, as he had been doing at regular intervals for the previous six months. He left Joplin about nine-thirty and was killed shortly after ten o’clock. Defendant’s tracks ran in a somewhat southeasterly and northwesterly direction through the small community of Tipton Ford, and for some distance before turning south and crossing defendant’s tracks Highway 71 ran practically parallel with defendant’s right of way. For a short distance before making this curve to the south the highway bore away from defendant’s right of way leaving a triangular piece of ground between the railroad right of way and the highway along the north side of which, adjoining the highway, were a half dozen or more shade trees thirty to fifty feet apart. The apex of the curve where the highway turned south was about 180 feet north of the railroad crossing. Slightly south of this curve and on the east side of the highway was a square front building used as a restaurant and garage with a gasoline pump in front. A dwelling house stood back from the highway slightly north and east of this building. Defendant’s north or house track ivas forty-four feet south of this garage. Across the highway to the west was a storage building about nine feet north of defendant’s house track, and immediately West of this building was a berry packing shed. The railroad track that a traveler on the highway coming from the north would first encounter was defendant’s business or house track. On the morning of the accident two work cars were located just west of the highway on the house ■track, and immediately east of the highway on the same track were five more work cars extending east for a distance of about 200 feet. *1197 There was a stack of cross ties in the vicinity, and further east on the same side of the right of way were two spreading shade trees and two bunk cars. Just south of the house track was the passing track, and south of this was the main track upon which Perkins was struck. The highway was paved to a width of eighteen feet with concrete except that part between the north rail of the house track and the south rail of the main track where the highway consisted of boards and chats which presented a “tolerably rough” surface. About fourteen feet south of the main track and on the east side of the highway was an electrically operated bell and wig-wag signal voluntarily maintained by defendant to warn travelers on the highway of approaching trains. On the morning of the accident defendant’s signal inspector was repairing the wires connecting this signal with the main track. lie testified that on his last inspection the week before he noticed that the insulation on the connecting wires was bad though he said the signal was then working. There was testimony, however, that the signal was not Working on the morning of the accident and had not been working for several days previous. A short distance south of the signal post and on the same side of the highway was a store, and opposite this building on the west side of the highway were a garage and filling station. Both north and south of the tracks were large railroad crossing warning signs. Surveyor Thain, produced as a witness by plaintiff, said that a person standing about the crossing on the south side of the track might see a train approaching on the main track from the southeast approximately at the cattle guards, which spot he located as 2230 feet, or nearly a half mile, east of the crossing. He also testified that the distance along the highway from the north rail of the house track to the north rail of the main track was thirty feet and three inches, and his figures indicate that the distance between the north rail of the main track and the south rail of the house track was approximately twenty-five feet. The only testimony as to visibility of the main track east of the crossing from a point on the highway immediately south of the house track was that of defendant’s civil engineer who said that at a point twenty-five feet north of the center of the main track, which would be seven feet south of the center of the business or house track, one had an unobstructed view down the main track for more than a half mile.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 103, 329 Mo. 1190, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-kansas-city-southern-railway-co-mo-1932.