Sells v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.

181 S.W. 106, 266 Mo. 155, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 2, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 106 (Sells v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co.) 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
Sells v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 181 S.W. 106, 266 Mo. 155, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 119 (Mo. 1915).

Opinions

WOODSON, J.

The respondent instituted this suit in the circuit court of Carroll county under the second section of the Damage Act, to recover the sum of $10,000, damages sustained by her through the alleged unlawful and negligent conduct of the appellant in killing her husband, John Sells, an employee of the company.

The petition was in the usual form, alleging that the appellant road was an intrastate carrier, and the answer contained a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence and an assumption of risk.

The trial before the court and jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the respondent for the sum of $8,000‘.

In due time and in proper form the appellant appealed the cause to this court.

The appellant’s evidence tended to show the following facts:

That while the pleadings did not disclose the fact, yet the evidence showed that the appellant was an interstate railroad, and was actually engaged in the transportation of interstate commerce at the very instant the husband of respondent was struck and killed by appellant’s Train No. 6>, which was bound from Kansas City, Missouri, to Chicago, Illinois; nor was there any evidence introduced to the contrary. [162]*162In.fact the evidence of both parties conclusively shows that the road was an interstate carrier.

John Sells and the respondent were, at the time of the injury, husband and wife, and he was about twenty-two years of age and possessed of all of his faculties. He was an employee of the appellant as a night watchman or track walker in the vicinity in which he was killed. It was his duty to walk over the track of appellant after each train passed, to see that it and the roadbed were all right before the next train came; and he had been engaged in that work for a period of about eight months before the date of his death, which was on the night of October 15, 1911. He usually went on duty about seven-thirty o’clock in the evening and remained until daylight the next morning. His home was at Dean Lake, the first station on appellant’s road east of the town of Bosworth. '

On October 15, 1911, about seven-thirty p. m., he left his home at Dean Lake, taking with him a bucket containing his midnight lunch. He was not seen alive again. There was no eye-witness to the accident that resulted in his death. The following morning his body was found at what is known as the “Kirker Crossing.” This crossing is about two miles northeast of Bosworth and about four or four and one-half miles west of Dean Lake. The Kirker Crossing is a public wagon road crossing running north and south across defendant’s railroad tracks, which runs in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction. The body of plaintiff’s husband, when found, was lying about six feet north of the railroad track and about fifteen or twenty feet wes;fc of the wagon track. His hat was lying fifteen or twenty feet northeast of his body; his dinner bucket, about twenty feet east of him and north of his hat. It was the custom of plaintiff’s husband to carry with him two lanterns — one white, the other red. These he had with him when he left home the evening of the 15th to go on duty. The following morning, when his body was [163]*163found, the white lantern was sitting on the cattle guard a little west of the center and leaning against the wing fence. The red one was sitting at the end of the cattle guard, right at the end of the wing fence. An examination of deceased showed that his skull was broken on the right side of the head near the temple and his left hip was bruised.

Deceased was familiar with the different trains passing over defendant’s railroad, as well as with the time cards and schedules of the trains. In fact, he had a time card of his own which familiarized him with the running time of the trains.

Just west of the road crossing were the cattle guards and wing fences. The wing fence had recently been painted white. It had rained somewhat the night previous. An examination of the fence the next morning when the body of deceased was found, showed footprints of mud on the bottom boards, while white paint corresponding in color and appearance with the paint on the fence was found on the seat of deceased’s trousers, indicating that he had been sitting on the wing fence.

From the Kirker Crossing where the body of deceased was found the railroad track west, for a distance of about one thousand feet, was straight and the view unobstructed.

Train No. 6, the one which struck and killed deceased, was an east-bound passenger train running from Kansas City to Chicago. Its Kansas City leaving-time was seven-thirty p. m. and it left Kansas City on or about schedule time on the evening of the 15th. Between Kansas City and Kirker Crossing it had lost considerable time. If it had been running on schedule time, it would have passed Bosworth at ten-fifteen, but on the night in question it did not pass Bosworth until 11:49; and Kirker Crossing at 11:52 or 11:53.

At or near Sheffield, which, in fact, is at the eastern edge of Kansas City, something went wrong with [164]*164the electric headlight on the engine. The employees in charge of the train being unable to repair it, placed a railroad lantern in the headlight cage, in front of the reflector, which, some of the evidence for the appellant tended to show, illuminated the track some forty or fifty feet, while most of that for the respondent tended to show that it did not illuminate the track but for a few feet, and two or three of her witnesses testified that the lantern was not burning at the time of the injury. A number of the coach lights were burning all the time and their light reflected out of the windows. The train was also provided with markers at the rear end, being red and green lights, which projected out six or eight inches.from the coaches.

Upon the other hand the engineer, brakeman and conductor all testified that the lantern was continuously in the headlight cage and burning until the train reached Ft. Madison, Iowa. Not only that, but the night operators at Bosworth, Dean Lake and Marceline all testified to the fact that the lantern was in the headlight cage and burning as the train passed through these several stations.

At Floyd, a station on defendant’s road, Montrose and Clancy, conductor and engineer, respectively, in charge of the train, wired to the dispatcher’s office:

4‘Headlight on Engine 557 out of order; running with a lantern for headlight. ’ ’

The appellant’s evidence tended to show that the engine bell was ringing when the Kirker Crossing was reached and crossed and had been since the train left Kansas City. That engine was equippel with an automatic bell, provided with air-bell power and when set to ringing, it continues to ring until the air valve is shut off.

The evidence tended to show that a person at the Kirker Crossing seated on the wing fence could have seen the light from the lantern in the headlight cage [165]*165or the approaching train as far as the track was straight — a quarter of a mile west.

A person who was seated on the wing fence, as indicated by the mud prints and disturbed paint, in a leaning or stooping posture, would be struck on the head by the pilot on the engine.

The evidence for the respondent was substantially as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 106, 266 Mo. 155, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sells-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railway-co-mo-1915.