Phillips v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

111 S.W. 109, 211 Mo. 419, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 109 (Phillips v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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
Phillips v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 111 S.W. 109, 211 Mo. 419, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 106 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

CRAVES, J.

— This is an action by the widow to recover the sum of $5,000; for the alleged negligent killing of her husband, James B. Phillips, who died April 11, 1904. The trial court having given a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, the plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit, with leave, and after unsuccessful motion to set aside the nonsuit so taken, perfected her appeal to this court.

Phillips, the deceased, was an employee of defendant in its Auditor’s department. As such employee [425]*425there had been taken ont of his wages a small monthly hospital fee, which entitled him to be admitted and treated in a certain hospital system alleged upon the one hand to be maintained by the defendant for that purpose, and upon the other hand to be a separate and distinct corporation from the defendant, and maintained by certain employees of defendant, and not by the defendant itself. Shortly prior to his death Phillips had been furnished a pass by the defendant over its line from St. Louis to Springfield and return, and using such employee’s pass he went from St. Louis to Springfield to take treatment for his ailments in the hospital there, which was a part of the hospital system above mentioned. For a time he was treated and on a certain morning took passage upon one of defendant’s trains at Springfield bound for St. Louis, his home. This train arrived about seven o’clock that evening and deceased left the train unharmed. About nine o’clock of the same evening a man, partially undressed and in condition to retire for the night, was lying across one of the many street car lines of the city and was run over and killed by a passing car. Some two weeks later the body was exhumed and identified as that of James B. Phillips. Plaintiff had no knowledge of the peculiar and untimely death until about the latter date. The claim is that Phillips was mentally unbalanced, which fact was known to defendant, and that defendant was remiss in duty in not notifying his family of his departure from the Springfield hospital before Ms arrival in St. Louis, and further in turning loose upon the streets of said city, unattended, a man in that known mental and helpless condition.

There are several peculiarly interesting questions, which, together with the incident facts, will be duly noted.

[426]*426I. Plaintiff having been cast npon her proof rather than npon the pleadings, the legal questions involved must be entwined with all pertinent facts shown. In such case the facts proven by her are established facts for the purposes of this review. At the threshold of the inquiry is the relationship between defendant and “The Employees’ Hospital Association of the Frisco Line,” a corporation, separately incorporated by the leading officials of defendant. The hospital at which plaintiff’s husband was treated, was part and parcel of the hospital system managed by the association above named. Defendant contends that it is in no sense responsible for the negligent acts, if such there were, of “The Employees’ Hospital Association of the Frisco Line;” that it is a- distinct corporate entity, not under control of defendant, and that it is responsible for its own acts of negligence. This relationship between the defendant and the Hospital Association is important on the question of excluding certain evidence, in additon to the point now in review. The charter of this association was in evidence. By article one thereof the corporation is named. Articles two, three and four read thus:

“Article II. The purpose for which this association is formed is the support of a benevolent and charitable undertaking in this: To provide medical and surgical treatment and care for the employees of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, and of its associated companies, who may be injured or disabled by accident or sickness while in such employ, ' and in the line of duty, to such extent only and under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed from time to time by the trustees hereinafter provided for; and to furnish such employees with additional privileges and benefits, not inconsistent or interfering with the main object of the association as may from time to time be directed by the said trustees; and to that end [427]*427may purchase, acquire, erect and maintain, suitable buildings, with necessary land and appurtenances for hospital and other purposes within the purview of these articles; and to sell, convey, encumber and transfer any such property whenever said trustees shall direct.

Article III. All the powers of the association ■and of any corporation into which it may be merged, shall be vested in and exercised by five trustees, who shall manage and conduct the business and control all its property; the names and residences of those who shall be trustees until their successors shall be chosen as hereinafter provided, are as follows:

B. F. Yoakum, of St. Louis, State of Missouri.

L. F. Parker, of St. Louis, State of Missouri.

A. J. Davidson, of St. Louis, State of Missouri.
C. C. Mills, of Monett, State of Missouri.

Chas. Huffschmitt, of St. Louis, State of Missouri.

“Their successors shall be chosen at such time and in such manner as may be provided by the bylaws, which the trustees shall adopt for the government of the affairs of the association, and which they shall make for the government of the affairs of the association and which they may amend as shall seem best to them.

“Article IY. The association shall not engage in business for pecuniary profit in any form, and shall not have any capital stock; the funds necessary for carrying out its purpose shall be raised in such manner as may be provided by the by-laws.”

Article five provides the place of business for the corporation and article six provides the term of fifty years as the life of the corporation. By the rules adopted and promulgated by B. F. Yoakum, president of the board of trustees, it is provided, among other •things, as follows:

“Rules and Regulations. It being contemplated [428]*428that, for the consideration of the contribution paid monthly by the members of the Employees’ Hospital Association of the Frisco Line, a home and medical attention for the sick and injured of said association will be provided, in accordance with the following rules and regulations, it is directed:

“1. Medical relief will only be furnished at the hospital of the association, except as hereinafter designated.

“2. Only those who have become sick or injured while in the employ of the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad System, and in the line of their duty, will be entitled to gratuitous treatment. Those suffering from any complaint which existed, or the cause of which existed, before the party last entered the employ of the railroad company, will not be entitled to treatment.

“3. Employees of the railroad system taken sick or injured while at any point on the line of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, on temporary lay-off, are entitled to treatment; provided, said sickness was contracted while in course of his employment prior to such lay-off, and provided further, that they have become liable for dues for the month during which their sickness originated or injury occurred. . . .

“5.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 109, 211 Mo. 419, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-mo-1908.