Smith v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

20 S.W. 896, 113 Mo. 70, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 19, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 S.W. 896 (Smith v. Missouri Pacific 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
Smith v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 20 S.W. 896, 113 Mo. 70, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 10 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

G-antt, P. J.

This is an action by the plaintiff, as a widow of Samuel S. Q. Smith, for damages resulting to her from his death, occasioned by the alleged negligence of the defendant, in whose service he was employed as locomotive engineer at the time of his death.

The petition is substantially as follows: That, on the night of July 1, 1887, the plaintiff’s husband was running an engine pulling the fast mail train from Kansas City to Sedalia; that it was a dark and rainy night; that it was defendant’s duty to furnish a safe track free from obstructions for the passage of said fast mail train of ears, it being entitled to the right of the track in preference to all other trains, and that it [74]*74was defendant’s duty to keep its main track clear and unobstructed by other cars, to allow this train to travel, safely; that said fast mail train was not required to stop at the station of Lamonte, but it was the duty of plaintiff’s husband to run his train through said town at full speed, and that it was defendant’s duty to keep-its main track open and free from obstruction, and. have no other cars thereon; that on said night, defendant carelessly and negligently caused a train of freight-cars to be placed upon the main track at said station of Lamonte, and permitted it to be standing thereon at the time said fast mail was due at said station; that defendant did not notify Smith that said freight train was upon said track, and neglected to send out any signals or lights or notice thereof; that it was a dark night, and there were no lights to indicate where said freight train stood, or that any freight train was there; that said Smith, without any notice or knowledge that said train was there, run his engine into it, and he was killed.

The answer is a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence, directly causing his death.

The plaintiff’s evidence consisted of her own evidence and Dr. Walker and Mr. Barnett.

The plaintiff simply testified that she was the widow of Samuel Smith, the deceased engineer; that she had one child, a son four years old; that her husband was an engineer in the employment of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company; that he was brought home dead on the second day of July, 1887,. and she was told that he was killed in a wreck of his-engine at Lamonte while pulling a passenger train the night before. This was admitted by defendant. Her husband was earning $120 per month. He was forty-one years old and a stout, healthy man.

[75]*75Dr. Walker testified that he lived at Lamonte. Was a practicing physician. Remembered a wreck at Lamonte on the night of July 1, 1887. Was called to see Smith, the engineer. He only lived about thirty minutes after he reached him. The wreck occurred five hundred yards west of the depot in Lamonte and a few feet west of the west end of the switch. It was a dark rainy night. There are two sidetracks at this • station, one on the south side of the station house or depot, the other on the north side of the depot, both were pretty full of cars at the time of the accident. He was acquainted with the grades of the railroad. He testified it was down grade for three quarters of a mile coming east towards the depot from the west, from a half to three quarters of a mile. A person could see the town from a point about one mile west very distinctly, then as you approach the town, you come to a little sag in the road. You can stand at the point of the wreck and see the elevation, but not the road beyond; from Lamonte you can see places beyond the elevation. He testified that passenger trains, like the one deceased was pulling, usually passed the station without stopping unless they had passengers for the station. He also testified, that, standing at the west end of the switch where the accident occurred, you could have seen an engine with a headlight burning a mile distant and an engineer coming-from the west could have seen the headlight of an engine standing on the track at the switch for a half mile any way. He had lived in Lamonte ten years, about fifty feet from the railroad track and had never seen a freight go through the town at night without a headlight burning.

Mr. Barnett corroborated Dr. Walker as to the grades. He thought an engineer coming from the west [76]*76could see another locomotive 'at the 'switch as soon as he reached the summit of the hill beyond Lamonte, a' mile and a half distant. “There is nothing to obstruct the view there for some distance west of the west end of the switch, it is wholly unobstructed for a quarter of a-mile.” This was all of plaintiff’s oral evidence.

Plaintiff put in evidence defendant’s time-table or schedule in force at the time, under which this passenger train number 4 was running on the Missouri Pacific railroad, showing that the train on which engineer Smith was killed was running as the second section of number 4, and was due in Lamonte at 11:42 (that night), and that trains marked with a red dagger indicated that they did not stop at stations for passengers, and this second section of number 4 was so marked, and showing also that trains or stations marked with large figures denoted meeting and passing of trains'and that Lamonte was not so marked with large figures and that the second section of train number 4 was not required by this schedule to stop at Lamonte. That Knob-noster, the station west of Lamonte, was the passing station and the train did not stop after leaving that point till it reached Sedalia. It also appeared that this section was required by schedule to run ten minutes behind the time of the first section, and was running on schedule time, without special orders that night;

Defendant offered a demurrer to the evidence, which was overruled, and defendant excepted.

Thereupon the defendant called Fred Williams, the engineer of the freight train, with which deceased' collided, being the third section of freight train number 35. • He arrived at Lamonte at 11:15 that night and pulled in on the north switch or passing track; .another freight came in and took the south switch; then another freight followed him in on north switch about 11:20. This left, however, about two cars of the last [77]*77freight on the main track at the east end of the switch. The first section of passenger train number 4 was due and arrived at Lamonte about 11:34. After it came past the west switch Williams pulled his freight west of the switch on the main track so as to permit section 1 of passenger number 4 to proceed on its way east.

He testified: “Before I pulled onto the main line,. I sent out a flagman ; he opened the switch and went out west on the track with signals, a flag and a white light; there was an engineer riding with me learning the road, and I also gave him a red lamp, and asked him to follow the head brakeman and give it to him.’7 He saw this man with the red light proceed west on the track until he met the second section of number 4, he judged five hundred to seven hundred yards. The engineer in charge of the second section made no stop, did not notice the signals, and witness jumped from his engine and was caught and disabled for.some time. He testifies that the switch signal of danger was shown in addition to the two he sent forward, and that his headlight was burning and that it could be seen for a mile and a half; there was nothing to obstruct the view. He also testified that the second section was only seven or eight minutes behind section 1, instead of ten minutes. His engine carried red lights, danger signals.

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226 S.W.2d 599 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W. 896, 113 Mo. 70, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1892.