Pritt v. Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis

224 S.W.2d 119, 359 Mo. 896, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 686
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 14, 1949
DocketNo. 41344.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 224 S.W.2d 119 (Pritt v. Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis) 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
Pritt v. Terminal Railroad Assn. of St. Louis, 224 S.W.2d 119, 359 Mo. 896, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 686 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

Grace M. Pritt recovered a judgment against Terminal Railroad Association of St. Louis, a corporation, in the sum of $15,000 for the death of Alvin Pritt, her husband. Plaintiff submitted her case under the humanitarian doctrine on alleged negligence of defendant in the disjunctive in failing to stop the locomotive involved or to warn Mr. Pritt of its approach. The Terminal Railroad Association appeals, contending that plaintiff did not establish actionable humanitarian negligence; that plaintiff's evidence is perjurious, self-destructive, and without probative force; and other issues which relate to the admission and exclusion of evidence and comments by the court on portions thereof, remarks and arguments of counsel, and the giving and refusal of instructions.

Alvin Pritt died April 3, 1947, when run over by defendant's Diesel locomotive 555 on Eads bridge. It was a clear dry day. Eads bridge, connecting St. Louis, Missouri, and East St. Louis, Illinois, has two decks. The top deck is used for vehicular traffic. The lower deck is used for railroad traffic and defendant operates locomotives and trains thereover.

Two standard gauge (4 feet 8-½ inch) railroad tracks are on the lower deck, one on each side of the bridge. For some reason, not stated, the south track, track 72, is used for westbound traffic and the north track, track 71, is used for eastbound traffic. The accident happened on track 72. Tracks 71 and 72, center to center, are 28-½ feet apart. The west pier is between the two tracks with a 2 foot 10 inch connecting walkway along its east side. The pier is narrower at its west than at its east end. It is 48 feet long east and west, and at its east side is 4 feet 8 inches and at its west side is 5 feet 1-½ inches north of the north rail. Immediately west of the pier is the "M.S." (Main street) signal office, which extends westwardly 26 feet and is 5 feet 5 inches north of the north rail. The pier and the M.S. office extend 74 feet east and west. A crossover switch to track 71 begins about 15-½ feet west of the pier. The waters of the Mississippi river extended to and west along the pier. The bridge is floored along the west approach up to the east side of said pier, including the 4 feet or more between the south rail and the south bridge structure. East of said pier the track is on ties without flooring, but there is a 2 foot walkway along the south side of the bridge to the Illinois approach. *Page 901

The distance between the top of the rail and the bottom of the girders supporting the top deck of the bridge is 18 feet. These girders are 21 inch I-beams, spaced 4, 5, or 6 feet apart.

Diesel locomotive 555 is 44 feet and 5 inches in length and, although its height may vary 2 or 3 inches depending upon its fuel load et cetera, its cab is 14 feet 6-¼ inches above the rail under usual operating conditions.

Repairs to the vehicular deck by the Howard Construction Company had been under way for some time, and forms made of lumber or false work were necessary for the concrete construction along, among other places, the ceiling of the railroad deck in the vicinity of the east side of said pier, which forms, after the concrete had set, were removed. Construction Company employees Foreman Fred Grant, Pritt, and Luther Owen were removing these concrete forms. Scaffolds were used and, according to the testimony favorable to plaintiff, a scaffold extended across track 72 at or just east of the east end of the west pier. They started the afternoon shift at 12:30. Owen was instructed to[121] and ascended the scaffold to remove the lumber constituting the false work. Grant intended to investigate the progress of the work on the Illinois side of the river. He instructed Pritt that his duties were to remain there to watch out for trains and signal to the man on the scaffold so he could protect himself and not get "gassed" and to keep the track clear of boards.

With respect to defendant's charge that the testimony relied upon by plaintiff is self-destructive et cetera, plaintiff admits variations exist in the testimony but claims she made a submissible case. It is not our purpose to develop all the inconsistencies in the testimony. Plaintiff's case rests on her witnesses Grant and Owen.

We mention first, however, there was substantial testimony that one could see along the track for 800 to 1000 feet; that the speed of the locomotive was 12 miles an hour; that it was stopped in 72 feet 5 inches; and that no warning was given by bell or whistle.

Witness Grant testified he left Pritt on the track about 18 to 20 feet west of the east side of said pier when he started across the bridge to check the men on the Illinois side. He testified at different places in the record that he had walked 30 feet, 30 or 40 feet east of the pier, and 60 feet east of where he left Pritt when he saw the locomotive 250 to 300 feet east of where he left Pritt, traveling west. He stopped on the walkway and the locomotive passed. He could not estimate its speed. He testified Owen, on the scaffold, knocked a board (2 x 8 inches by 4 feet) out of the false work with a sledge hammer, and it went "a-flying" over Pritt's head and landed on the track about 8 feet west of Pritt; but he also testified he did not see the board fall; he did not know a board had fallen; he was walking east with his back to the men; and "guessed" he was 30 feet east by the time the board was knocked off. He testified he "seen him *Page 902 [Pritt]," and "saw him standing there" and "he was there until he was killed." However, on cross-examination it developed that Grant was narrating what "Owen told me"; "He saw it"; "Said he did." The last Grant saw of Pritt alive was when Grant started walking east. He did not look back west, and does not know of his own knowledge how the accident happened. Defendant's attempt to impeach witness Grant by showing he had stated he did not know how the accident happened et cetera was terminated thus:

"The Court: That wouldn't be inconsistent with anything Grant said. Grant said he didn't see it.

"Mr. Koenig [plaintiff's counsel]: That is right. * * Grant said he didn't see it. He walked away.

"The Court: He said two or three times that he didn't see it. * * That is not inconsistent with anything he testified to. He said — Grant testified himself he didn't know how it occurred."

Luther Owen testified to the following effect: He never attended school. He was on a scaffold over the track east of the pier removing the false work. He said Pritt was east of the scaffold 6 or 7 feet, toward East St. Louis. (Plaintiff's counsel thought Owen was confused.) He knocked a board off the false work and it went over Pritt toward St. Louis, which would place Pritt west of him; but he also testified the board went over Pritt's head toward East St. Louis. Plaintiff's brief stresses Owen's testimony on rebuttal that Owen saw Pritt on the track "a split second" before the locomotive passed over the spot. Owen did not hear or see the locomotive until it was "right under me." The scaffold had been so erected as not to interfere with train movements, and one could not work comfortably thereon because one had to work in a crouched position. According to Owen, he worked down on one knee and when in that position his height was 44 inches. He testified his body above the bottom of his breast bone, that is, the top 21 inches of his body, was at all times while on the scaffold above the bottom of and between the I-beams supporting the upper deck of the bridge. Owen testified he was facing south and Pritt was within his view when he looked down; that Pritt was picking up or reaching for the board and in "about a split [122]

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.2d 119, 359 Mo. 896, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritt-v-terminal-railroad-assn-of-st-louis-mo-1949.