Stanley v. Union Depot Railroad

21 S.W. 832, 114 Mo. 606, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 832 (Stanley v. Union Depot 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
Stanley v. Union Depot Railroad, 21 S.W. 832, 114 Mo. 606, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 257 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Oantt, P. J.

This is an action of E. B. Stanley and wife for damages for killing their minor son, Edward W. Stanley, on June 25, 1890.

The petition alleges that plaintiffs are husband and wife; that Edward W. was the minor son, about seven years old; that each of the defendants are corporations organized under the laws of this state, the city of St. Louis being a municipal corporation, and the Union Depot Railroad Company and the Heman Construction Company business corporations; that Twelfth street was, prior to the twenty-fifth of June, 1890, one of the public highways of the city of St. Louis; that on and prior to said date the Union Depot Railroad Company owned and operated a street railroad along Twelfth street between Spruce street and the Twelfth street bridge, drawn by horses; that prior to said date the Heman Construction Company, with the knowledge of the other defendants, dug a deep ditch in said Twelfth street between Spruce street and the bridge, and negligently, carelessly and unskillfully piled the granite paving which it dug up out of said street in a large pile and wall many (to-wit, five feet) [612]*612feet high, parallel with and alongside of said railroad track, and so close as not to afford room for pedestrians to pass along said street between said wall and the passing cars, and negligently made and left open a narrow aperture in said wall with perpendicular sides as high as the wall, and negligently placed across said ditch a foot bridge from the sidewalk to the street and immediately opposite said aperture; that said ditch and wall extended from Spruce street to the bridge, so that persons passing along the west side of Twelfth street were unable to cross said ditch and wall and go on to said bridge in any other way than to cross said foot bridge and through said aperture, and upon and over said railroad track in front of approaching cars; that Twelfth street sloped in both directions (north and south) to a point immediately and directly opposite to and in front of said aperture, and that said railroad company, with full knowledge of all the facts so stated, negligently, carelessly and unskillfully ran and operated its cars over and along said street and track in front of said aperture at a rate of speed so great as to endanger the lives and safety of pedestrians who attempted to pass over said foot bridge between said sidewalk and the roadway of Twelfth street; that such condition of affairs constituted a continuing nuisance and was dangerous to the lives and safety of pedestrians; that on or about the twenty-fifth of June, 1890, the son of plaintiff, who was then seven years of age, while attempting to cross said foot bridge and go from said sidewalk to and upon said Twelfth street, ‘ ‘was, through and by the negligence, carelessness and unskillfulness of the defendant Union Depot Railroad Company, its agents and servants, run upon and knocked down by the horses drawing one of the cars owned and operated by the defendant Union Depot Railroad Company, and was then and there run over by said cars, and thereby [613]*613suffered injuries which caused his death on the next day thereafter, to the damage of the plaintiffs in the sum of $5,000.

The city and construction company filed a general denial for answer. The street car company pleaded a general denial and contributory negligence, which last was by the court stricken out.

The evidence developed the following facts: On the fourth of April, 1890, the city of St. Louis passed an ordinance, being 15640, “to establish Thirteenth street sewer from Poplar street to Market street, to provide for the cost thereof, etc.” In pursuance of this ordinance, on May 13, 1890, the city of St. Louis made a contract with the Heman Construction Company for constructing Thirteenth street sewer on Twelfth street from Poplar street to Clark avenue in the city of St. Louis, Missouri. By the terms of this contract it was the duty of the Heman Construction Company to so place excavated material as not to interfere with travel on the street or to incommode occupants of adjoining property; and to replace paving in the same manner as when originally constructed. Twelfth street from Poplar street to Clark avenue is a public highway and is paved with granite blocks. Twelfth street runs north and south; Poplar street and Clark avenue run east and west. The northern approach of the bridge on Twelfth street which crosses the railroad tracks commences at a point about fifty feet north of Poplar street. The Union Depot Railroad Company had two tracks on Twelfth street from Clark avenue to the northern approach of Twelfth street bridge, and on the bridge on June 25, 1890, and for a long time prior thereto, was running horse cars on those tracks. The cars going south ran on western track and cars going north on eastern track.

[614]*614Sometime prior to June 25, 1890, defendant, the Heman Construction Company, began the construction of a sewer under its said contract with the city of St. Louis and commenced on Twelfth and Poplar streets, going north on Twelfth street as the work progressed; and on June 25, 1890, the trench for the sewer was dug about two hundred feet or more north of the north point of the Twelfth street, bridge. The granite paving blocks on Twelfth street along the trench were taken up by the Heman Construction Company and piled-along the east line of the trench about five feet high, three feet wide, and west of the western rail of street car track. North of the bridge approach the granite was piled northwardly nine feet seven inches in length and two feet two inches wide to an opening, leaving a space eastwardly between the granite wall and the west rail of track of about from four to five feet for pedestrians crossing the bridge to walk upon. There was no obstruction between the western car rail and this pile of granite blocks. On . the bridge the distance between the west rail of track and pile of granite blocks was four feet and at the opening it was about six feet. At a point nine feet seven inches from north approach of bridge, defendant, Heman Construction Company, left an opening in the pile of granite seven feet wide and placed three boards across the ditch so that persons coming north on the west side of bridge could cross the trench to the pavement on Twelfth street, and persons going south on the pavement on west side of Twelfth street could cross the trench to get to the bridge. North of this opening the granite blocks were piled along the trench five feet high,- three feet wide and about two feet from west rail of track. There was no 'street crossing at this point, nor was the opening in the granite intended to faciltate or invite crossing of the street at this point, but its purpose seems to have [615]*615been simply to afford a continuous way north and south to and from the Twelfth street bridge on the west side of said street. The street cars were drawn by two horses, but at" a point near Spruce street a third horse was hitched to all cars going south on the west side of the team, in such a position as to occupy in passing more or less of the space between the west rail and the wall. It was hitched to the car to help the team draw it, after passing the aperture, up the grade going south and leading over the Twelfth street bridge. This condition of things had been nearly the same with the knowledge of the railroad company since a time late in May or early in June.

On June 25th, Eddie, the seven-year old son of these appellants, in going east across the foot bridge into the street was run over by a car drawn by three horses moving south.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 832, 114 Mo. 606, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-union-depot-railroad-mo-1893.