Peters v. Wabash Railway Co.

42 S.W.2d 588, 328 Mo. 924, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 588 (Peters v. Wabash 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
Peters v. Wabash Railway Co., 42 S.W.2d 588, 328 Mo. 924, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 458 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

This suit was brought under the Federal Employers' Liability Act to recover for the death of plaintiff's decedent, James Cornelius Peters, who was killed on the night of December 1, 1925, while in defendant's employ as a switchman in defendant's freight yards in St. Louis. At the time of his death Peters was a member of a switching crew engaged in making up a "drag" of freight cars to be taken to another part of the city and put into a train. He was caught and crushed between one of the cars and an adjacent loading platform. Plaintiff obtained a judgment for $30, 000, from which defendant appealed. The case comes to the writer on reassignment.

The petition charges one sole ground of negligence, viz., violation of the Federal statute commonly known as the Safety Appliance Act. [Act of March 2, 1893, 27 Statutes at Large, 531, chap. 196, as amended by Act of March 2, 1903, 32 Statutes at Large, 943, chap. 976; 45 U.S.C.A., sec. 2.] It alleges that defendant, in violation of the act, was using in interstate commerce cars not equipped with automatic couplers, coupling by impact, and that plaintiff's decedent was killed as the direct result of such violation while attempting to effect a coupling. No point is made on this appeal as to the petition, *Page 930 nor as to the sufficiency of the evidence to make a submissible case, so far as concerns the interstate character of defendant, and of the work at which Peters was employed when killed; nor is it contended that there was not a sufficient showing of the violation of the Safety Appliance Act charged. The only point urged by appellant, so far as concerns the question of liability, is that under the evidence it conclusively appears that the violation of said act was not the proximate cause of Peters' death. In the view we take of the case we need state only the facts bearing upon that issue.

The freight yard in which the accident occurred is immediately south of Carr Street. At the west side of the yard is the freight station, and immediately east of that building is track 6, upon which were the cars the movements of which are here involved. Track 6 extends in a general southerly direction from Carr Street, but curves to the southeast. Immediately east of and near track 6 is a narrow wooden loading platform about four or four and a half feet high, extending in the same direction along and curving with track 6. East of the platform are other tracks. The north end of the platform is about at the south side of Carr Street. The clearance between the side of a car on track 6 and the platform, except at and near the north end, is slight. At the point where Peters' body was found the middle of the car would approach to within about eight inches of the platform, and the clearance between the platform and the "door shoe" of the car was only about four and a half inches. Owing to the curve, however, there would be more space between car and platform at the ends of the car, evidently enough that Peters could stand and move therein, since he was caught by the middle of the car, the end of which had apparently passed him without injury. A witness testified that "at the ends of the cars all along the platform there is a fair clearance."

The crew of which Peters was a member consisted of himself, Michael Keating, foreman, and one McGrath, with Roy Bridegroom, engineer, and Carr, fireman, of the switch engine. At the time in question, about eleven P.M., they were, as above stated, making up a drag of freight cars, and had placed ten or eleven cars on track 6. These were coupled together, and the north end of the northernmost car, a Wabash car, was about five feet north of the north end of the loading platform. The engine, with four cars attached, backed down on track 6, in order to add two of the four to the string then on track 6. The engine was headed north with its tender and the four attached cars south of it. The southernmost of these four cars was a Kansas City Southern car, and the purpose was to effect a coupling between that car and the Wabash car above mentioned, then to push the string of cars far enough south so that the cars to be left would clear Carr Street, then to take away the two cars next *Page 931 to the engine, leaving the remainder on track 6 while some further switching movements were made and another car or two procured to complete the drag.

Only two witnesses to the circumstances of the accident, Keating and Bridegroom, were called, both by plaintiff. Defendant offered no evidence, standing upon its demurrer. According to the testimony of these witnesses, Peters, who was styled "field man," had the duty of seeing that the coupling was effected between the Wabash car and the K.C.S. car, and he had charge of and directed the movement of the engine and cars attached thereto, the engineer obeying his directions. These directions were given by Peters by lantern signals received from him by Keating and by the latter relayed to the engineer who, from his position in the cab, could not see Peters. In the discharge of his duty Peters stationed himself at the north end of the Wabash car and gave a "back up" signal, which was relayed to and obeyed by the engineer. The coupling failed to "make" and Peters thereupon gave a stop signal, which was obeyed. The impact caused the string of cars not attached to the engine to move five to eight feet southward. Peters again went to the north end of the Wabash car and like signals were again given and obeyed. The coupling again failed to make. At this impact the string of cars not attached to the engine was moved ten to fifteen feet. [These distances were estimated, not measured.] After this second unsuccessful attempt the north end of the Wabash car was ten to eighteen feet south of the north end of the platform. Peters again went to the north end of the Wabash car, it being his duty, according to Keating, "to keep working at it" until he effected the coupling. He again gave the back-up signal, which was obeyed, and on this third attempt the coupling evidently "made." Immediately after the cars came together Peters, then on the ground at or between the ends of those two cars, gave a "kick" signal, which was relayed to the engineer, who then kicked or pushed the whole string of cars some fifty or sixty feet farther south. The engine and the two cars next to it were then uncoupled by Keating and taken away, and some ten minutes later Peters was found dead, crushed between the platform and the side of the K.C.S. car about midway of its length, his face toward and his right arm upon the platform and his lantern on the platform about a foot from his hand. The point at which his body was found was twenty-three steps, estimated at about thirty inches per step. [57½ feet] from the north end of the platform. There were indications on the boards of the platform that he had "slid along" or had been dragged along the platform eight or ten feet which would make the point where he was caught by the "door shoe" of the car which was against his back, about forty-seven feet south of the north end of the platform and some thirty feet or more *Page 932 south of where he stood when he gave the kick signal, unless we assume, as suggested by respondent, that he was "jogged along" for some distance when the cars were "kicked in" before any marks showed on the platform, — which would be conjecture as there was no evidence to that effect. How he got to that point, if he did, before being caught does not appear.

Keating testified in answer to a question that he did notknow whether or not the coupling "made" on the third attempt, but that it did make is, we think, the only possible conclusion to be drawn from plaintiff's evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 588, 328 Mo. 924, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-wabash-railway-co-mo-1931.