Siberell v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

9 S.W.2d 912, 320 Mo. 916, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 819
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 9 S.W.2d 912 (Siberell v. St. Louis-San Francisco 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
Siberell v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 9 S.W.2d 912, 320 Mo. 916, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 819 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*922 ATWOOD, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment against the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company and in favor of Fiannie Williams, administratrix of the estate of Henry Williams, deceased, for fifteen thousand dollars on account of the death of said deceased, alleged to have resulted from negligence of said railway company. The deceased was an engineer on said railway company’s passenger train number 876, northbound from Hoxie, Arkansas, to Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and was killed when the engine was derailed and *923 overturned, at, a switch about 350 feet south of defendant’s railway station at Advance, Missouri. The deceased left surviving him his widow, Avho commenced this action as the aboA-e-named administratrix, and three minor children. After judgment Avas rendered herein and AA'hile this appeal Avas pending said administratrix died, her death Avas suggested to this court, and Horace Siberell, administrator de boms non of the estate of Henry Williams, deceased, was- substituted as party respondent.

The suit was brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act for the benefit of the Avidow and the three minor children. It was plaintiff’s contention and the eA'idenee tended to show that the engine driven by deceased Avas- derailed and overturned by the lodgment in the frog of said SAvitch of a part of a dragging brake beam or brake rod Avhieh had dropped doAvn and Avas finally torn from the brake rigging of car numbered 32805 in defendant’s northbound freight train numbered 848 AA'hieh a feAv hours previous had passed over this track. Plaintiff Avent to the jury on three assignments of negligence, to-Avit: first, that the brake beam or brake rod Avas dragging, and that the cvcav of the freight train in the exercise of ordinary care could have discoA’ered it in time to haA'e remedied it; second, that the train creAV violated a rule of the raihvay company then in force AA'hieh required trainmen to “know that the ears in their train are in good order before starting, and inspect them Avhencver they have an opportunity to do so;” and third, that the brake beam or brake rod was dragging between BroAvnwoocI and Advance, and that defendant and its agents and servants kneAv of this fact and could have prevented it from catching and becoming fastened in the frog. Defendant’s ansAver Avas a general denial. At the close of plaintiff’s ease defendant, interposed ,a demurrer to the evidence, AA'hieh Avas OA'erruled. At the close of the Avhole case defendant requested a peremptory instruction, AA'hieh Avas refused.

Appellant first, contends that its demurrer to the evidence should haA'e been sustained and the peremptory instruction given. It is said that “under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act negligence is an affirmative fact AA'hieh plaintiff must establish;” that “the fact that the brake rod found wedged in the frog came from a ear in the freight train rests AA'holly on conjecture and speculation;” and that “there was no substantial evidence of negligence on defendant’s part proximately resulting in the death of the deceased.”

We do not. agree that the fact that the brake rod found wedged in the-frog came from a car in defendant’s freight train rests wholly on conjecture and speculation. Three witnesses, one of them being defendant's station agent at BrownAvood, testified that as this freight *924 train, numbered 848, containing this ear, numbered 32805, passed defendant’s station at Brown wood which was about three miles south of Advance, they heard a noise beneath a freight ear near the rear of the train such as a dragging brake beam or brake rod would make, and some o£ them saw an object beneath the ear from which the noise came which looked like a dragging brake beam or brake rod. As the train approached Advance it consisted of an engine, tender, caboose, and about twenty-nine freight cars, these cars averaging forty feet in length. The train stopped with the engine headed north about two thousand feet south of the depot at Advance. The location of the frog- of the switch in which a part of a brake beam or brake rod was found lodged immediately after the wreck a few hours later was variously estimated at one hundred feet to three hundred fifty feet south of this depot. The conductor of this freight train testified that car numbered 32805 was the seventh car from the rear of the train, so it is apparent that when this train started to leave Advance the car in question had not yet passed over this switch. This conductor further testified that as his train pulled out of Advance lie stood twenty-five or thirty feet south of the depot and inspected every ear, including the car in question, as the train passed, and that no brake beam or brake rod was dragging from any car. The evidence thus shows that a brake beam or brake rod was dragging from a car located about where freight car numbered 32805 was located in this train and that immediately after this car passed over the frog and switch in question no brake beam or brake rod was dragging therefrom. Car numbered 32805 was set out at Nash, about nineteen miles north of Advance, and the evidence further discloses that at that time it had no dragging brake beam or brake rod. The next day defendant sent its car inspector to Nash to inspect this car, and he testified that a brake beam or brake rod and other parts of the brake rigging had been newly broken from, tlie car and were missing. The equipment that was missing generally corresponded with the broken portion found lodged in the frog of the switch and other parts attached thereto or found on the ground near by. After the wreck marks were discovered on the ties from Brownwood nearly to the scene of the, wreck, such as a dragging brake beam or brake rod would make. We think the record presents substantial evidence, amply sufficient to go to the jury, from which the jury might well have concluded without guess or conjecture that the part found lodged in the frog of the switch wras a part of a brake beam or brake rod that was dragging from car numbered 32805 when it left Brown-wood.

We also think that the record presents substantial evidence proper to go to the jury tending to show that negligence of defendant was *925 the proximate cause of deceased's death. As above stated, plaintiff pleaded the existence of a rule of the railway company which required the trainmen to “know that the ears in their train are in good order before starting, and inspect them whenever they have opportunity to do so.” This rule was admitted in evidence and shown to he then in force. The train was stopped at a water tank about one-half mile south of Brownwood. One of the train crew testified that it was there inspected and no dragging brake beam or brake rod was reported. The train was next stopped at Brownwood for about ten minutes, hut during that time it was not inspected, although if any one of the crow had even stood at the station and caught the caboose after the other cars had passed by him he would certainly bare noticed what was seen and heard by other witnesses at the station, namely, an object like a brake beam or brake rod dragging from a freight ear near the rear of the train. Instead of doing this, however, the entire crew rode out of Brownwood on the engine or no farther back than the middle of the train.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W.2d 912, 320 Mo. 916, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siberell-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1928.