Rollinson v. Lusk

217 S.W. 328, 203 Mo. App. 31, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 157
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 6, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 328 (Rollinson v. Lusk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rollinson v. Lusk, 217 S.W. 328, 203 Mo. App. 31, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 157 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BECKER, J.

Plaintiff instituted her suit in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis against the receivers of the defendant railroad company to recover damages for the death of her minor daughter, Dorothy Rollinson, the petition alleging that said daughter had been negligently killed at the railroad crossing of Knox avenue, a street in the city of St. Louis, on August 25, 1916, by a train operated by defendants.

Of the pleadings it is sufficient to state that the petition as one for simple negligence in the alleged violation of a speed ordinance of the city of St. Louis, which limits-the running of steam railroad engines and trains within the limits of said city, over, along or across any crossing or intersecting improved street, avenue or road, to a rate of twenty miles per hour. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory *36 negligence on the part of the deceased. The reply was a general denial. It will be noted that under the pleadings the case proceeds as one for simple negligence and that the humanitarian doctrine is not involved in the case.

It appears that Dorothy Rollinson, on the day in question, lacked five days being eighteen years of age; was in good health, and had no trouble whatever with her eye sight or hearing, and was a girl of intelligence. She lived but a block or two from what is known as the Knox avenue crossing of the defendants’ railroad, Knox avenue being a street running north and south. At this point three separate set of tracks, running parallel with each other, cross Knox avenue. They run oh a gradual curve from the northeast to the southwest. The south track is the eastbound main track, the middle track is the westbound main track, and the north track is' a switch track. On the west side of Knox avenue and south of the said tracks there was a store building from the corner of which a board fence ran north parallel with the street for a short distance and then turned west in the general direction of that of the railroad tracks. There was a concrete sidewalk on the west side of Knox avenue in front of the said store building, running almost to the railroad tracks. Crossing gates were maintained by the defendants at this crossing, one of such gates being situated north of the tracks, and the other south thereof. The base or support of the south crossing gate was distant about twelve feet from the south rail of the eastbound main track. On the morning in question the south crossing gate was out of order and was standing in a raised position.

Dorothy Rollinson, her sister and their mother, a widow, lived within a block or so of the Knox avenue crossing. On this particular morning Dorothy left the house shortly before eight o’clock and proceeded north along the sidewalk on the west side of Knox avenue to the crossing’ of the Frisco tracks. At this time a freight *37 train, or drag, consisting of some fourteen or fifteen cars, was moving on the westbound main track, and either while Dorothy was crossing the eastbound main track or just after she had crossed over the north rail of said track and stood waiting for the freight train to pass, an eastbound passenger train, known as the fast mail or Meteor, consisting of a locomotive and eight or nine heavy steel coaches, approached on the south track and struck and injured her so she died in a few hours. It appears that a person walking north on the west side of Knox avenue, just after passing the fence corner above referred to, would have a view to the west along the railroad tracks of from three to six hundred feet, and that the range of view along the tracks to the west would be increased as one approached nearer the track.

The case was tried to a jury who returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants in the sum of $6750, and from a judgment rendered thereon the defendants in due course appeal.

I.

Let us first determine whether the case should have been submitted to the jury.

The measure of precaution to be observed by one about to cross a railroad track depends upon the circumstances and surroundings. .[Schmidt v. Ry. Co., 191 Mo. 215. 90 S. W. 136.] And while the traveler is not excused from the use of some care to avoid injury, even while endeavoring to cross railroad tracks at a crossing supplied with gates and a flagman, yet where, as here, gates are maintained and the gate is open, it is a fact which a traveler may properly take into consideration and upon which he may place some reliance. [Wack v. Ry. Co., 175 Mo. App., 111, 157 S. W. 1070; Yonkers v. Ry. Co., 182 Mo. App. 588, 168 S. W. 307.]

One of defendants’ witnesses stated on cross-examination that he had been a witness at the cor'oner’s inquest held over the body of the deceased, and stated: *38 “I remember testifying before the coroner that I saw her turn and look to the west. At that time she was standing just over the north rail. She made a motion like she was looking. When 1 saw her turn and look west is when I heard the last whistle of the slow order, and the train at that time was about three hundred yards west of the crossing. From where I was sitting I could see this train coming around the curve. When that whistle was blown, and she turned and looked in that direction, I should think she didn’t seem to notice any train in that direction. She then turned around and almost faced me.”

“Don’t know whether I testified before the coroner that when the engineer got within fifty or one hundred feet of her he sounded four or five blasts of the whistle, but suppose if I said it I just estimated it; I was east of the crossing. The engine was not any closer to her than fifty or one hundred feet when the sharp blasts were given; if anything, it was farther than that. I didn’t hear any whistle given between the long whistle three hundred yards west of the crossing and the short, sharp warning whistle. I noticed the gates at the time, and the gate on the south side was about half way up when my train and the other train were both going by the crossing.”

If the testimony of this breakman is to be believed the deceased was standing just north of the north rail of the eastbound track when the last whistle of the “slow order signal” was sounded, which whistle was. blown, according to his testimony, when the passenger train was about “three hundred yards west of the crossing.” And according to his admission he had testified at the inquest that when the “slow order signal” was sounded, “saw the deceased turn and look west.” There is testimony, which when taken in the light most favorable to plaintiff, made it impossible for the deceased to have seen the approaching train at that distanqe. And after that time, according to the brakeman, no further warning of the approach of this train *39 was given until the locomotive thereof was within fifty to one hundred feet of her, if the testimony he admitted he gave before the coroner is correct, or within one hundred to two hundred feet' of her, taking his evidence at the trial; and furthermore, as to whether the deceased could have heard the passenger train as it approached, we must note that the brakeman testified: ‘ The train was making the usual noise that a passenger train makes, but I couldn’t hear it because I was on the freight train,” and that plaintiff stood within a few feet of the same freight train.

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Related

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241 S.W. 457 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1922)
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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 328, 203 Mo. App. 31, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollinson-v-lusk-moctapp-1920.