Reedy v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad

347 S.W.2d 111
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 8, 1961
DocketNo. 48014
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 347 S.W.2d 111 (Reedy v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas 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
Reedy v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, 347 S.W.2d 111 (Mo. 1961).

Opinion

STORCKMAN, Judge.

The plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $17,000 against the defendant railroad company for the alleged wrongful death of her husband which resulted from injuries received when a truck driven by him was struck at a crossing by one of the defendant’s railroad trains. The fireman of the locomotive was also joined as a defendant, but the jury found in his favor. The defendant railroad company is the only party which appealed. The parties will be designated as they were in the trial court, but the term defendant as here used will refer to the railroad company alone unless otherwise indicated.

In her petition the plaintiff charged both primary and humanitarian negligence. She sought to go to the jury on both theories, but the court refused plaintiff’s primary negligence instruction, and the case was submitted on humanitarian negligence alone. The pi'incipal points upon which the defendant relies are: (1) that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict in defendant’s favor at the close of all the evidence because the plaintiff failed to make a submissible case of humanitarian negligence, (2) that the action of the jury in returning a verdict for the defendant fireman absolves the defendant from liability because it could be liable only if the fireman were negligent, and (3) that the court erred in giving plaintiff’s verdict-directing instruction.

As a result of a pretrial conference, certain facts were stipulated by the parties. Among other things, it was agreed that on October 27, 1958, at about 7:00 a. m., the plaintiff’s husband, Walter Guy Reedy, was driving his 1956 Ford truck in an east-wardly direction on the main street of Harwood, Missouri, where the street crosses three railroad tracks of the defendant; that the tracks run in a northeast and southwest direction, and the angle in the southwestern portion of the street and railroad intersection is approximately 60 degrees; that the west set of rails is known as the house track, the middle one as the passing track, and the one farthest east is the main line track; that as the Reedy truck was passing over the main line its right rear portion was struck by an unscheduled troop train being operated northeastwardly by employees of the defendant company including the defendant fireman Eldon Ray Garvey; and that as a result of the collision Mr. Reedy received injuries which caused his death on February 11, 1959. It [113]*113was further stipulated that Mr. Reedy was alone in the truck; that the speed of the truck when it was 100 feet west of the railroad crossing was 10 to 12 miles per hour; that the truck was 18 feet long; that the day was clear and dry and the sun was shining; and that there was a wooden crossarm warning sign near the crossing facing in a westerly direction bearing the words (as shown by plaintiff’s photographic exhibits) “Railroad Crossing — Look Out For The Cars”.

Pursuant to the pretrial agreement o'f the parties, plats prepared by them and pictures they had taken were inspected and marked as exhibits prior to the trial and were introduced in evidence without objection. The plats, plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 and defendant’s Exhibits 1 and 2, were drawn to the same scale and portrayed the various objects, their distances and dimensions in the vicinity of the crossing, particularly in the southwestern angle of the intersection which was on Mr. Reedy’s right and fireman Garvey’s left as they approached the crossing. All of the witnesses agreed that there were boxcars standing on the house track as alleged by the plaintiff in her petition, but plaintiff’s witnesses were indefinite as to their number and location.

Along the west side of the railroad tracks, south of the crossing, there were fixed objects which partially obstructed the view of a motorist approaching the crossing from the west as well as the view of a fireman on a locomotive coming from the south. There is little or no dispute with respect to the nature of these objects and their location. They will be referred to generally since the evidence tends to show that the principal objects obstructing the view of the parties were boxcars standing on the house track. First, there is a sidewalk about SS feet south of the center of the main street crossing. Where the sidewalk crosses a ditch or drain, about 75 feet west of the railroad tracks, there is a foot bridge with railings about 4 feet high. Next, on the south, there is a truck ramp or hoist which is elevated only slightly above the ground surface. Then there is a grain loader 8 feet high and a coal house 9 feet high. There is another crossing, referred to in evidence as the south crossing, 363 feet south of the main street crossing. Just south of this second crossing, there is a small building 8 feet high. One of the more important buildings is a truck evacuator which is 18 feet high and located 437 feet south of the main street crossing and 50 feet west of the house track. In this area there is also a storage building 10 feet high and a poultry house 9 feet high. Extending between 609 and 681 feet south of the main crossing, and 35 feet from the house track, is Gammon’s Grain Elevator which ranges from 20 to 35 feet in height. In addition to the objects mentioned, there are several utility poles, a tree, and some brush in the vicinity of the foot bridge over the ditch.

The defendant’s evidence with regard to the number and location of the boxcars was more favorable to the plaintiff as affording an opportunity to discover Mr. Reedy’s peril than the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses; the plaintiff resorted to it in undertaking to establish an extension of the zone of peril and a submissible case. There was a total of five boxcars, all located on the house track, two of which were south of Gammon’s Elevator and could not have played any part in obstructing the view of the parties. The second pair of boxcars were on the house track opposite the unloading building or the truck evacuator. These boxcars occupied the portion of the house track approximately 400 to 490 feet south of the main crossing. The fifth boxcar was also on the house track and its north end was about 78 feet south of the center line of the crossing. The position of this boxcar, M-K-T 97099, is shown by the photographs which are plaintiff’s Exhibits E and 13 and defendant’s Exhibits A-10, A-ll and A-12. There were no cars on the passing track.

[114]*114The train in question was running north-■eastwardly on the main line at a speed of 45 to 50 miles per hour. It consisted of a 3-unit Diesel locomotive and 14 cars of passenger equipment. The engineer seated on the right side of the cab of the locomotive was not in a position to see the Reedy truck until it came from behind the last boxcar and was upon the house track. The fireman, Eldon R. Garvey, seated on the left side of the cab, at an eye level of 13 to 14 feet above the ground, saw the Reedy truck on three occasions. The first time was “for a split second” through the space between Gammon’s Elevator and the pair of boxcars at the truck evacuator at which time the truck was on the main street at or near the west side of a bridge or culvert approximately 120 feet west of the east rail of the main line track. The street at the place in question is surfaced with gravel. The elevation at the bridge is about three and one-half feet lower than that of the main line crossing. The bridge or culvert is practically covered with gravel and is over the same ditch or drain that the foot bridge spans, but there are no railings on the road bridge. The second time fireman Garvey saw the Reedy truck was through the opening between the pair of boxcars and the fifth or last boxcar.

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Related

Hardy v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company
406 S.W.2d 653 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1966)
Bunch v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company
386 S.W.2d 40 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1965)
Allinson ex rel. Allinson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad
347 S.W.2d 902 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reedy-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railroad-mo-1961.