Spelman v. Delano

163 S.W. 300, 177 Mo. App. 28, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 24
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 300 (Spelman v. Delano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spelman v. Delano, 163 S.W. 300, 177 Mo. App. 28, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 24 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

In this action recovery is sought for the negligent killing of a horse by defendant’s train at a public crossing. The negligence charged was a failure to obey the statute with reference to ringing the bell and sounding the whistle eighty rods from the crossing.

On the occasion in question the horse was being ridden along the public road by one Dan Cook, a young man who was engaged in working by the day for plaintiff. Cook lived about two miles from plaintiff’s house. He spent 'his nights at home, furnished his own meals, and quit work every evening at six o ’clock. Occasionally he would ask plaintiff for a horse to ride home. And, if the request was agreeable to plaintiff, it was granted, Cook keeping the horse overnight at such times and returning him next morning when he came to work, feeding and caring for the horse while in his possession. This, obtention of the horse occurred possibly as often as twice a week.

On the day the horse was killed young Cook obtained the horse when the day’s work ended' and started homeward riding bareback. The crossing was about a mile west of plaintiff’s house, and it was also a mile south from plaintiff’s home to the railroad, it lying in a northwest and southwest direction. It was plain open country and one could see down the railroad on each side of the crossing for a long distance, and could do this continuously while going along the public road for at least a quarter of a mile before reaching the crossing. And in travelling this quarter of mile toward the crossing one could see southeast (or east as it is termed in railroad parlance) down the railroad for a mile or two. It was about 6 :30 in [30]*30the evening. Cook was. approaching the crossing in a lope which is a slow gallop. The train was a fast mail going northwest (or west in railroad terms). It was about twenty-five minutes late. A man named Pringle was walking down the railroad track coming from the northwest, approaching the crossing and about 800 feet away from it. At that distance he could see Cook a quarter of a mile from the crossing. Before noticing Cook he saw the steam from the approaching train and knew that one was coming. Engaged in watching the train, he paid no further attention to Cook, until the latter got close to the crossing and then the train was in 2001 or 300 feet thereof. It was 1501 or 200-feet from the crossing when Cook got right up to the track.

As Cook approached the crossing*, as stated in a lope, or as he said in a trot, along the country road, he looked northwest along the railroad track and saw Pringle. He did not, however, look to the southeast although if he had done so the train would have been in plain view and he would have seen it, and could have seen it for a mile or two down the track. He did not look southeast in the direction from which the train was coming* because he supposed it had gone, as it was past time for it to be there. As he rode up on the track or just to the track, both he and the horse, at the same instant, saw the train coming from the southeast and about 200’ feet away. The horse turned and ran northwest along the track so that when the train overtook him, the pilot beam struck the horse on the left side a little below the tail hurling him some distance along the right of way and killing him. In going alongside the track the horse jumped the cattle guard before the train struck him. Cook was on the horse when it jumped the cattle guard, but does not know whether he was on him when the horse was struck or not. He says the spot where he fell was about six feet from the cattle guard and that where the horse fell [31]*31was about thirty feet from the guard. The engineer says Cook slid off the horse before it went over the cattle guard, and that he was on the public road just far enough east of the crossing to escape being struck.

Plaintiff valued the horse at $200'. Defendant demurred to the evidence, was overruled, and the jury returned a verdict for $175. Defendant appealed.

Point is first made that the case cannot be affirmed because there was no proof that the defendant receivers were in charge of and operating the road. But the petition alleged that they were, and this was not denied or put in issue by a special plea. The case originated in the justice court and, under the pleadings required in such courts, no answer is necessary, nor was one filed. But in such cases the defendant is presumed to plead the general issue. [Reed v. Snodgrass, 55 Mo. 180; Farmers & Drovers Bank v. Williamson, 61 Mo. 262.] When the general issue alone is pleaded it does not put in issue either the character in which the plaintiff sues, or the character or capacity in which the defendant is sued. [McNalta Receiver v. Lockridge, Admr., 137 Ill. 270.] The fact that the receivers were in charge and operating the road being thus impliedly admitted, •plaintiff was not required to prove such allegation. [Powers v. C. B. & Q. Ry. Co., 142 Ill. App. l. c. 524; Taylor v. Peoria & E. R. Co., 156 Ill. App. l. c. 155; Walker v. Wooster’s Admr., 61 Vt. 403; 1 Chitty on Com. Law Pl. (16 Am. Ed.), 528.] This was true at common law and it is equally so under the code. [Baxter v. St. Louis Transit Co., 198 Mo. 1, l. c. 6.]

The point next raised is that defendants are not liable because Cook was guilty of contributory negligence. The first question under this point, then, is: Was Cook guilty of contributory negligence? If this be answered in the affirmative, then a second question arises, namely: Was he, at the time the horse was struck, a servant of the plaintiff or was he merely [32]*32a bailee of tbe horse? If be was a servant of the plaintiff at that time, then bis negligence was plaintiff’s negligence, and, in that event, plaintiff cannot recover. If not a servant bnt merely a bailee, then a third question arises: Can the negligence of tbe bailee avail appellants as a defense to an action by tbe plaintiff bailor? In other words, if Cook was guilty of contributory negligence, can that negligence be imputed to tbe plaintiff in an action by him against tbe defendants for negligently injuring tbe borse?

Undoubl.edlw-C.o.&lc-was.^uilty- of contributory neg(ligence. He admits that be never looked toward the / sduibeast'Io see if a train was coming although, if be I bad done so, be could have seen a train for two miles [ down tbe track and could have seen it from any point / on the country road for a quarter of a mile back from 1 tbe crossing.' He was riding in a lope, or trot as be ) says, not thinking about a train, but watching Pringle as be came down the railroad from tbe northwest. Thus engaged, and heedless of bis, danger, although be knew it was at a railroad crossing, be started to cross tbe track and just as be reached tbe rail be saw tbe train 200 feet away. If this doesn’t constitute contributory negligence it is bard to conceive of what would. [Newton v. Railroad, 152 Mo. App. 167; Burge v. Railroad, 244 Mo. 76; Holland v. Railroad, 210 Mo. 338.]

Jffihs Cook, at tbe time tbe borse was injured, the servant of plaintiff? lie was not. He worked for glaintiff by tbe day, and the relation of master and se^a£OSñB^tftgd~''§ább'^daT' ~^é¿nffie"'da^s~work ended. Plaintiff bad no' controI dvef CobE* after six o’clock. What be did from that time until be returned to work again, between seven and eight tbe next morning, was no concern of plaintiff’s. Indeed be could not legally require Cook to return to work next morning, since tbe hiring was by tbe day, and Cook'was only paid for tbe days be worked. Plaintiff was un[33]

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 300, 177 Mo. App. 28, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spelman-v-delano-moctapp-1914.