Sevedge v. Railroad Company

53 S.W.2d 284, 331 Mo. 312, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 651
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 284 (Sevedge v. Railroad Company) 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
Sevedge v. Railroad Company, 53 S.W.2d 284, 331 Mo. 312, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 651 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*315 ATWOOD, C. J.

This ease fell to the writer on reassignment after having been argued and submitted once in division and twice in banc. It is an action for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by respondent, George L. Sevedge, in a collision with a passenger train operated by the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, as lessee, over the tracks of the Kansas City, St. Louis & Chicago Railroad Company. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $12,500, from which defendants have appealed.

It appears from the evidence that plaintiff and one John Lewis were driving north in an automobile on Arlington Avenue which crossed defendants’ railroad track .in a rather thickly populated *316 community about half way between Independence, -Missouri, and Kansas City, Missouri. The highway ran north and south and the railroad extended in a southeasterly and northwesterly direction. Bast of this crossing and at a distance variously estimated from 200 to 1000 feet the railroad track curved to the south. West of the crossing it curved to the north. A street car track crossed under the railroad track about seventy-five feet southeast of the Arlington Avenue railroad crossing, and then crossed Arlington Avenue about 100 feet south of the Arlington Avenue railroad crossing. Plaintiff and his companion drove from the northwest into Arlington Avenue about seventy-five feet south of the railroad crossing and started north toward the crossing. The railroad track was on a high grade at that point and the highway approach from the south was steep. ' Plaintiff and his companion testified that the morning was foggy and they could see only a short distance on the railroad track. They said they stopped when they got about fifteen feet from the track and looked both ways but could see no train; that they then started over the railroad crossing and were struck by a train coming from the southeast. Plaintiff’s companion who was driving the car thus described what happened:

r‘ Q. Tell what happened on the crossing there where you were hit ? A. As I drove up on the crossing I noticed the plank was loose. I drove very slow, had my ear in low, and I got my right front wheel over the north rail, and something grabbed my steering wheel, and took me down the track there, and when I got my ear stopped, I was about two feet or three feet off the plank, at the side of the crossing.
“Q. You started down the track which direction? A. To the west. And then I threw my car in neutral and looked, and I saw there was a board right out on the south side of the north rail and my wheel was right in between there. I reversed my car, backed up, and started to go ahead and had my car, the front wheel, just across the north track when the train came along and took me down, and that is the last, gentlemen, I can tell you until they had me in the hospital. ’ ’

This witness further testified that his automobile was moving ¿bout three or four miles an hour as he approached the crossing and he could have stopped within two or three feet; that it was fifteen or twenty seconds from the time they got on the track until the train struck them. Plaintiff testified to substantially the same facts. He said that he observed the obstruction in the crossing; that the boards made a rattling sound; and the front wheels of the automobile commenced shaking and turned to the left om the track. Another witness testified that the boards at the crossing were loose and shaky and one board was missing. An automatic signal bell at the "Crossing was designed to start ringing when a westbound train was within 2100 *317 feet and continue ringing until the train had passed over the crossing. The testimony was conflicting as to whether this bell was ringing prior to the collision and whether any signal was sounded by the approaching train.

Plaintiff’s specifications of defendants’ negligence were failure to give statutory signals; failure to construct and maintain crossing as required by law; permitting automatic bell to become and remain out of order so that it would not ring or warn; running said train at a high, unlawful, careless, negligent and dangerous rate of speed; and failure to slacken, stop or warn plaintiff under the humanitarian rule.

Defendants went to trial on separate answers each consisting of a general denial, plea of contributory negligence and plea to the jurisdiction.

Appellants assign error in the giving of instruction number 3, requested by plaintiff. This instruction is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if the jury find and believe from the evidence that on or about the 2nd day of June, 1921, plaintiff was riding in the automobile referred to in evidence upon Arlington Avenue in Jackson County, Missouri, where said Arlington Avenue intersects and crosses over the right of way, roadbed and railroad tracks of defendants at what is known as the Arlington Avenue crossing in Jackson County, Missouri, and that the same was a public and much used highway and that at said time and place defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company was operating a locomotive and train of cars upon said right of way, roadbed and railroad tracks, if you so find, and that as the same approached and struck plaintiff and said automobile it was not under reasonable control but was running at a high, excessive and dangerous rate of speed, if so, and that plaintiff was in imminent danger and peril from the approach of said locomotive and train of cars and th° proximity of danger arising from the speed and approach thereof, if so, and that the plaintiff did not realize said facts in time to escape therefrom by his own efforts and prevent being struck, if so, and that the defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company bv and through its agents, servants and employees in charge of said locomotive and train of cars could by using ordinary care have known all of the aforesaid facts, if you find such to he the facts, in ti-me thereafter by the use of ordinary care and the means at hand to have sounded an alarm of danger and warned plaintiff of the foresaid imminent peril, if any, and the proximity of danger from such locomotive and train of cars so approaching him, if so, and thereby have brought to plaintiff a realization of the imminence of such peril, if any, and that bv such warning plaintiff could have escaped and averted his said injuries, if so, and that defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company *318 failed to cause any danger alarm to be sounded and failed to warn plaintiff of the proximity of danger, if any, and thereby and by such failure, if any, defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company was guilty of negligence, if any, and as a direct result of such negligence, if any, plaintiff was struck and thereby injured, if so, then your verdict must be for plaintiff and against both defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company and defendant Kansas City, St. Louis & Chicago Railroad Company, and this is the law under this instruction even though you should further find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff was negligent in getting into the position he was in at said time.”

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 284, 331 Mo. 312, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sevedge-v-railroad-company-mo-1932.