Pryor v. Payne

263 S.W. 982, 304 Mo. 560, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 263 S.W. 982 (Pryor v. Payne) 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
Pryor v. Payne, 263 S.W. 982, 304 Mo. 560, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 540 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

Suit for damages for the death of husband. Plaintiff's husband, W.A. Pryor, was struck by a freight train on the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway, while being operated by Walker D. Hines, Director General, on the 23rd day of November, 1919, about two o'clock in the afternoon. He died from his injuries two days afterwards. The accident occurred at the crossing of said railroad with a public highway about a mile east of the town of Ritchie in Newton County.

The petition states, in effect, that when the train was about one hundred and sixty rods distant, and the deceased had just stepped on the railroad track at said crossing, his legs gave way beneath him, becoming numb and useless, leaving him helpless on the railroad track, *Page 566 in imminent peril from the approaching train; that defendant's servants operated said train in a careless manner, approaching and passing over said crossing at a speed of twenty or twenty-five miles per hour, without maintaining a lookout ahead, and without giving any signals to travelers on or approaching the crossing, as required by law; that said servants saw, or by the exercise of reasonable care could have seen, the deceased on said crossing in such helpless condition in sufficient time by the exercise of ordinary care to have slowed down and stopped the train without striking him; but that said servants in charge of said locomotive and train negligently, with undiminished speed, ran said train against the deceased, so wounding him that he died on the 25th day of November, 1919. Plaintiff prays judgment for the sum of $10,000 damages and costs.

The answer was filed by John Barton Payne, Agent of United States Railway Administration, and contained a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.

The plaintiff's evidence tended to show: The deceased at the time of his death was past seventy-two years of age. On November 23, 1919, he left the home of his step-son, W.H. Alburty, about two o'clock P.M. with Alburty, accompanied by Ed Reber, a neighbor, and Alburty's little son, seven or eight years of age, to see some cattle which Alburty owned and kept in a pasture about a half mile south of his home. Alburty's home was on the public highway, which ran north and south over the crossing in question, and about a quarter of a mile north of this crossing. When they got about 207 feet south of the crossing, the deceased stopped in the road and said, "You men go on, I have had all the walking I care about." Reber and Alburty and his little son then went on south down the road about 336 feet, and then east about 534 feet, to where the cattle were in the pasture, stayed there a couple of minutes, and then returned west. After they had proceeded west seventyfive *Page 567 or one hundred feet, they saw the freight train coming from the west, and the engine was then about 200 or 250 feet east of the crossing. They continued to walk in an ordinary leisurely way west to the public road, and then turned north and walked to the point where they had left Pryor. They saw nothing of him. They then proceeded north to the railroad crossing. They first observed Pryor's hat and pipe lying in the middle of the public road, about three feet north of the north rail. The hat lay with the crown up, apparently uninjured. They next saw Pryor lying about twenty feet north of the north rail and northeast of the crossing. Pryor was lying partly on his left side and left arm, he was below the level of the track about three or four feet, the track there being evidently on a fill of that height. He was lying generally east and west, and his knees were drawn up toward his body, and his head was lying in a kind of a twist to the right. The railroad embankment had a place scraped off of it about two feet long and wide, about eleven feet from the north rail. The deceased was found in this condition by Alburty and Reber within four or five minutes after they first saw the freight train one hundred fifty or two hundred feet east of the crossing. As soon as they saw him, they immediately approached him, and when they got up to him, he said, "I am done for for all time to come." Alburty then testified, after deceased made this remark, as follows: "I asked him, `What had happened, that you are here in this kind of shape'? And he said, `The train struck me; while crossing the track my legs gave way and I couldn't get off in time.' I said, `Did you see the train?' He said, `Yes, the train was over half way to Ritchie. I had worlds of time to have made it, if my legs hadn't given way'. "Q. What was said, if anything, next? A. He asked us to lift him up to see if he could stand on his feet, and we did, and he asked us to leave him down. His legs hung in a kind of drawn position towards his body, he did not let them down to *Page 568 the ground at all. Immediately after we placed him back where he had been lying, he spoke of his pains, and we braced him up, and he spoke of his back hurting him so. While he was in that position, he said his back hurt him, and that his arm was perfectly numb, the left arm. That arm was naked and the clothing had been torn away and it was bleeding some." It was about ten minutes after the accident until the deceased was at the home of his step-son, Alburty, where he was taken and put to bed. He was conscious and knew everything at that time, and for about two hours afterwards, when he became unconscious. The accident happened on Sunday, and he died the following Tuesday without regaining consciousness. On the day he was hurt, it was bright, clear and warm, and the railroad track was dry. While standing in the center of the track a half mile west of the crossing Alburty was able to discern a man lying flat on the crossing.

On cross-examination, Alburty said that, when he first went up to Pryor, after the accident, deceased said nothing about numbness in his legs, or not being able to move a muscle. And from what the deceased said to him, he did not know whether deceased was on the track or some little distance from the track, when he first saw the train. When back from the track fifty feet, deceased could have seen the train by looking west towards Ritchie, if the train had been half a mile away at that time. If there weren't crops or something there, he could have seen it to Ritchie. There had been a corn crop there. The right of way is probably fifty feet on each side from the track. He could see the train to Ritchie. Don't think he could have seen a train one-half mile west of the crossing until he was inside of the right of way, on account of the corn field. After he got to that point, about fifty feet from the track, there would be nothing to obstruct his view of the train until after he got on the crossing.

On re-direct examination, Alburty, among other things, testified: Deceased, after he had been raised up *Page 569 and let down where he was injured, next said: "If I had known anything like this would have happened to me, I would not have come." "I told him that I would not have had it happen for anything, and I asked him if his pains seemed to be relieved any, and asked him if he knew what part of the train hit him, and he said, `It was the wooden beam the cow-catcher was bolted to.' He repeated again, that he saw the train and had plenty of time, if his legs hadn't give way under him. I think, at this time, he said they became numb. He told me, after I asked him how far he was from the track when his legs gave way, that he was just in the act of stepping over the south rail of the track. Q. Where was the train at that time, if he said? A. At the time he was crossing the track? Q. Yes, sir. A. He didn't say where the train was."

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hamilton v. Missouri Petroleum Products Co.
438 S.W.2d 197 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1969)
Monical v. Armour and Company
307 S.W.2d 389 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1957)
Conley Ex Rel. Conley v. Berberich
300 S.W.2d 844 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1957)
Lavender v. Kurn
189 S.W.2d 253 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1945)
Thompson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.
69 S.W.2d 936 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
Conduitt v. Trentonton Gas & Electric Co.
31 S.W.2d 21 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
Coy v. D. H. Dean & Marblehead Lime Co.
4 S.W.2d 835 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1928)
Toeneboehn v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.
298 S.W. 795 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)
State Ex Rel. Smith v. Trimble
285 S.W. 729 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1926)
Anderson v. Davis
284 S.W. 439 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1926)
Rosenweig v. Wells
273 S.W. 1071 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 982, 304 Mo. 560, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pryor-v-payne-mo-1924.