State Ex Rel. Terminal R.R. Assn. v. Hostetter

119 S.W.2d 208, 342 Mo. 859, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 8, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 208 (State Ex Rel. Terminal R.R. Assn. v. Hostetter) 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
State Ex Rel. Terminal R.R. Assn. v. Hostetter, 119 S.W.2d 208, 342 Mo. 859, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 356 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

Certiorari to the judges of the St. Louis Court of Appeals bringing up the record in Brown v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 85 S. W. (2d) 226 (hereinafter called the Brown case), wherein *862 the plaintiff recovered a judgment against the relator Terminal Railroad Association in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis in October, 1933, for $7500- damages for personal injuries sustained in a collision between the automobile he was driving and one of the relator’s freight trains in East St. Louis, Illinois. On appeal the respondents affirmed that judgment.

The two assignments of conflict are that respondents’ opinion ruled it was not reversible error for the trial court: (1) to permit plaintiff to go to the jury without any instructions hypothesizing his theory of relator’s negligence, the only instruction given at his request being one on the measure of damages; (2) and to deny relator’s counsel the right to comment in their argument to the jury on plaintiff’s failure to offer such instructions. Relator contends these rulings contravene the following decisions of this court: Freeman v. Berberich, 332 Mo. 831, 60 S. W. (2d) 393; Dorman v. E. St. L. Ry. Co., 335 Mo. 1082, 75 S. W. (2d) 854; Yerger v. Smith, 338 Mo. 140, 89 S. W. (2d) 66.

The facts in the Brown ease, as disclosed in respondents’ opinion, were that about 2:30 A. m. on a dark night in a drizzling rain the plaintiff was driving an automobile along Illinois State Highway No. 4 in East St. Louis at a point where it crosses relator’s railroad tracks approximately at right angles. A string of box cars was standing on one of the railroad tracks ten or fifteen feet from the highway intersection. There were no lights on the freight cars, no trainmen on guard and no warning signals — nothing to indicate they were attached to a locomotive at the other end and about to be moved. There were twenty cars in the train making its length approximately 800 feet. Plaintiff saw the cars standing there and after-stopping his automobile drove on across the tracks when the freight ears backed up and struck the right rear fender of the automobile pushing or dragging it forty or fifty feet. Then the train stopped. The plaintiff got out and endeavored to extricate his fellow passenger from the automobile. While so engaged, the train started forward dragging the automobile and the plaintiff back to within six or eight feet of the crossing.

The negligence of the trainmen as charged in plaintiff’s petition was: (1) failure to keep a lookout; (2) failure to givé any signal or warning of the movement of the train; (3) failure to stop1 or slacken the speed of the train to avert the collision, or to keep the same stopped and motionless; (4) violation of the Illinois last chance doctrine, in that relator’s trainmen saw or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen the plaintiff in a position of imminent peril in time to have avoided the collision by stopping or slowing up the train or by giving warning signals; (5) pushing the automobile back after it was struck, and dragging it and -the plaintiff forward after *863 the train had stopped the first time; (6) movement of the train without sounding bell or whistle eighty rods from the crossing, as required by the Illinois statute; (7) failure to have a brakeman stationed on the rear of the train; (8) failure to have a light on the rear of the train. There were still other assignments of negligence but they were withdrawn by instructions from the consideration of the jury.

Much of relator’s brief is devoted to a discussion of the merits of the case and an effort is made to demonstrate that the evidence failed to support many of the specifications of negligence pleaded in the petition. Relator’s theory in this connection is that if plaintiff had asked instructions on these several unsupported assignments of negligence the trial court would have been compelled to refuse them, and thus would have excluded from the case the issues covered by them; but that since he was permitted to submit his case without any instructions (except on the measure of damages) he was left free to argue all these unproven charges to the jury. Relator stresses these facts as showing the grievous error in such broadside submissions without instructions, and further says the practice of trying cases that way has become a “racket” in St. Louis. Proper objections were made and exceptions saved but relator did not, as appears from respondents’ opinion, ask any withdrawal instructions which were denied on these assignments of negligence, except one, Instruction E, attacking the third assignment set out in the last paragraph above. And respondents held that Instruction E' was properly refused.

The trial court gave six instructions at relator’s request: (1) cautioning the jury against resorting to speculation or conjecture; (2) on plaintiff’s contributory negligence if he failed to stop, look and listen; (3) stating that negligence is a positive wrong and cannot be presumed; (4) on the burden of proof; (5) on the proposition that mere proof of injury is no proof of negligence; and that plaintiff must show by evidence that defendant was guilty of negligence “as defined in these instructions;” (6) defining ordinary care. We shall not attempt a fuller summarization of these instructions as they were set out in the report of the Brown case in 85 S. W. (2d) l. c. 231.

Getting back to the basis of this original proceeding in certiorari, it will be remembered the relator’s contention is that respondents’ opinion contravenes three decisions of this court in affirming the judgment plaintiff obtained in the circuit court by submitting his ease to the jury without any instructions hypothesizing his theory of recovery, except one on the measure of damages. But respondents’ opinion was delivered in July, 1935, several months "before one of these three cases. Yerger v. Smith, 338 Mo. 140, 89 S. W. (2d) 66, was decided in December, 19'35, and therefore cannot be said to have *864 contravened it. The opinion was delivered after Freeman v. Berberich, 332 Mo. 831, 60 S. W. (2d) 393 (another of the cases cited by relator) was decided in April, 1933, bnt the argument in relator’s brief does not mention it and nowhere in the brief is an effort made to point out wherein respondents’ opinion conflicts with it. As a matter of fact the Freeman case does not hold it is reversible error to submit a case to the jury without instructions except upon the measure of damages. This leaves for consideration the third case cited by relator, Dorman v. E. St. L. Ry. Co., 335 Mo. 1082, 75 S. W. (2d) 854, which decision alone is discussed in relator’s brief.

The Dorman case was decided en banc in October, 1934, before the delivery of respondents’ opinion in July, 1935. To get a full understanding thereof the decision must be read as a whole. The substance of its conclusions may be extracted as follows:

“When it is apparent to a trial judge that the nature of a case is such that the jury should be instructed as to the issues and the law, he should see that such is done before the case is submitted and refuse to submit it otherwise, and counsel for the respective parties, as officers of the court, should not fail to render the aid that may be rightfully expected from each of the parties to this end. ...

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.2d 208, 342 Mo. 859, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-terminal-rr-assn-v-hostetter-mo-1938.