Simpson v. Terminal Railroad

357 S.W.2d 65, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 701
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 14, 1962
DocketNo. 48687
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 357 S.W.2d 65 (Simpson v. Terminal 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
Simpson v. Terminal Railroad, 357 S.W.2d 65, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 701 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Respondent claimed $75,000 as damages for alleged personal injuries which he averred he received when an automobile in which he claimed he was a passenger was struck by appellant’s unattended flatcar. We shall hereinafter refer to the parties as they were designated in the trial court. After the jury found for defendant, plaintiff was granted a new trial on the grounds that the trial court erroneously admitted and refused to strike the testimony of defendant’s witness Carpenter. The question on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in admitting that testimony.

It was defendant’s trial theory that plaintiff and the three other persons who allegedly were in the automobile at the time it was struck had staged a fake accident; that the automobile in question was stopped on a railroad track and was struck at a time when no one was in it; that plaintiff and his companions or others with their knowledge caused and permitted defendant’s heavily loaded flatcar to leave the place on an industrial siding where it had been spotted and to roll downgrade into the side of the automobile; and that thereafter plaintiff and two of his companions reentered the automobile (the driver claimed to have been thrown from the automobile and he remained on the ground) and were there when the police arrived.

There was evidence, considered favorably from the standpoint of defendant, justifying this statement. In the afternoon of July 15, 1959, defendant spotted a loaded flatcar on a spur track which served an industrial plant located a short distance south of Penrose Street in St. Louis. That track ran from the plant downgrade north across Penrose. Members of the train crew spotted the flatcar about 130 feet south of Penrose and placed a large wooden block and a railroad spike under the wheels of the car and placed a derail on top of one of the rails at a point about 10 or 15 feet north of the flatcar’s north end. A derail is a heavy metal safety device which auto[66]*66matically derails and thereby stops a railroad car when the flange of one of its wheels runs against the derail.

During the evening of July 15 plaintiff, who at the time was an off-duty switch-man employed by another railroad, went to Floyd Allen’s tavern on North Fourteenth. About nine o’clock plaintiff and Allen went to Clemens’ place located at Penrose and Grove. There they met and talked with Clemens and one Jett and drank beer. About midnight those four went to a restaurant for awhile and departed in Clemens’ car intending to return to where Allen’s automobile was parked. Clemens drove his automobile east on Penrose. Defendant’s unattended flatcar, traveling about eight miles per hour and weighing as loaded more than 135,000 pounds, struck the automobile’s right side and shoved it north-wardly down the track for some 67 feet where the automobile struck a bumping post (which was at the end of an adjoining stub track) and came to rest west of the track. (The flatcar was “picked up” by a subsequently pursuing engine miles farther on.) No authorized person caused the flatcar to move from its stationary position on the siding or removed the derail. The automobile was stationary on the railroad track when struck, contrary to the testimony of plaintiff and of two of the other occupants of the automobile (the fourth did not testify) to the effect that the automobile was traveling from 15 to 25 m. p. h. when struck.

Plaintiff’s evidence was that the force of the collision caused the left front door to open and that the driver, Clemens, was thrown out and that plaintiff and the other ■ two remained in the automobile during the time it was pushed northwardly and until a police officer arrived some five to ten minutes later.

The police department received a call at 2:01 a. m. on July 16 advising it of the collision. The caller refused to identify himself as often happens when accidents are reported by telephone. The first police officer to arrive reached the accident scene at 2:05 a. m. He found Clemens seated on the north sidewalk of Penrose just west of the track in question. He found the automobile where it had stopped west of the track with its left front door open. No one was in the driver’s seat, one was seated in the 'right front seat, and plaintiff and another were in the back seat. The officer saw no other person at the scene when he arrived. None of the four men, who according to plaintiff’s evidence were in the automobile at the time it was struck, had the appearance of having been in an accident in that none had any dirt or dust on his clothing, no one’s hair was mussed, none bore external marks of injury. Clemens, who allegedly was thrown out, presumably onto the track in front of the moving vehicles, had no visible cuts or scratches, nor was he apparently bleeding (contrary to plaintiff’s witness Allen who testified that he saw bruises, scratches and cuts on Clemens and saw blood running from his nose and mouth). There was medical testimony that it was unlikely that all four occupants of the automobile struck by the flatcar in the manner described would have escaped without a visible scratch.

Plaintiff and Allen testified that they knew that Clemens had been thrown out but they remained seated with the other occupant in the automobile for at least four or five minutes and made no attempt to help or assist or inquire about their companion although they were conscious at all times and although when the police officer arrived they left the automobile under their own power.

The area surrounding the accident point was exclusively an industrial district.

. Over plaintiff’s objection, defendant’s witness, Ernest Carpenter, testified that he was a night watchman at a carton company located on the north side of Penrose some 300 to 400 feet east of the spur track; that about two o’clock in the morning of July 16, 1959, he heard a loud crash and a screeching noise; that he went from the [67]*67office into the factory and checked it; that he then walked to the south door which opened onto a parking lot which abutted the north side of Penrose; that he saw three men walking fast in the middle of the street going west; that he observed them turn right and go north onto the railroad track in question and out of his view; that as the men passed he heard one of them say, “Hurry, hurry.” Another said, “What’s going on out there ? ” Another, “Gd-, it is all your fault,” and then one of them said, “How in the hell did I know what that * * About five minutes after they had passed, Carpenter heard the sirens of an approaching police car. He thought probably it was three or four minutes from the time he heard the crash until he saw the men walk by the factory. It was a fair inference from his testimony that the noise of the crash which he said came from outside the factory was the noise made when the flatcar struck the automobile.

As heretofore noted, defendant’s theory was that the accident was staged and faked and that no one was in the automobile when it was struck. Defendant submitted an instruction authorizing a verdict for it if the jury found that the automobile was placed at the crossing, that the flatcar was then permitted to roll free, and that plaintiff was not in the automobile when it was struck and carried down the track. There is no contention that defendant’s evidence was not sufficient to support that submission. As noted, plaintiff’s contention is that the trial court erred in admitting and refusing to strike the above testimony of witness Carpenter.

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Bluebook (online)
357 S.W.2d 65, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-terminal-railroad-mo-1962.