State Ex Rel. Vulgamott v. Trimble

253 S.W. 1014, 300 Mo. 92, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 28, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 1014 (State Ex Rel. Vulgamott v. Trimble) 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. Vulgamott v. Trimble, 253 S.W. 1014, 300 Mo. 92, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 240 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*96 GRAVES:, J.

— Certiorari to' the Kansas City Court of Appeals. The case out of which this- action grows is an action for personal injhries by Charles Vulgamott v. John Barton Payne, Director General of Railroads.

The case has been in the Court of Appeals twice. [Vulgamott v. Davis, 229 S. W. 394; Vulgamott v. Payne, 245 S. W. 592.] It is from the latter opinion and judgment that the relator, Vulgamott, seeks relief through the present action. The case is singular in one respect, in that both sides of the present controversy contend that *97 the. opinion and judgment is wrong. They assign quite different reasons, for their respective suggestions. The facts as stated in the Court of. Appeals opinion are as follows:

“This is a suit in damages on account of personal injuries, sustained by plaintiff while riding in a freight car operated by defendant. The facts are substantially as follows:
“In the Spring of 1919', the plaintiff, a farmer then about forty-six years old, lived in Stoddard County, Missouri. He desired to move back to' Nodaway County, where he had formerly lived, and chartered a car from the Iron Mountain Eailway Company, in which he stored his household goods, farming implements, and four head of horses. The household goods and implements were placed in one end of the car, and the four horses in the other end. The space between the two side doors of the freight car was reserved by the plaintiff as Giving quarters* for himself, his son, Jake Vulgamott, and .a young man named Floyd Grace. The end of the car in which the four horses were quartered was fenced off from the center space of the car, between the two side doors, by a partition made of a. strong white-oak pole extending across the car and nailed at each end to the upright pieces on the two sides of the car with twenty-penny spikes. This pole was about four and one half feet above the ííoor, and below it were cypress boards one and one-fourth inches thick and about twelve or fourteen inches wide, extending across the car. The four horses weighed about 1600 pounds each, and were permitted to run loose in that end of the car. In the space between the two side doors, plaintiff placed one or more loose bales of hay and a. barrel of water, none of these being fastened down in any way.
“The car moved from Dudley, Stoddard County, to St. IJouis, or to Luther, a suburb of St. Louis, and was there delivered to the Wabash Eailway Company, then in charge of the Director General of Eailroads. At this *98 point a new contract of shipment was entered into for the transportation of the par and contents to- Burlington Junction, Missouri. At Burlington Junction, the Wabash Railroad crosses the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad practically at right angles, the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy tracks running approximately north and south and the Wabash tracks approximately east and west. A curved switch connects- the two roads, and a joint stockyards is maintained at a, point on the Burlington tracks about two blocks north of the Wabash crossing.
“The car was transported to Burlington Junction in a freight train which arrived at that -station about 1:35 a. m.- on the night of February 19, 1919. When the train reached Burlington Junction it stopped at the railroad station, which was near the Wabash tracks in the northeast angle between the intersecting tracks of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy and Wabash. Plaintiff was awake at the time and knew the train had reached Burlington Junction. There was a suitable place for him to alight from the car at the place where it came to a stop'. He knew that it- would be necessary to switch the car over the curved track connecting with the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy road and thence two blocks or so northward in order to ‘spot’ the car at'the stockyards chute. Plaintiff remained in the car.
“After the train had come to a stop, the engine and plaintiff’s car were disconnected from the rest of the train, and, by means of a flying switch, the emigrant car was run on to the curved track connecting the two railroads, the engine came in behind it, was coupled to it and pushed it up to the stockyards chute. During this operation, the ear was being pushed north and the horses were in the south end of the car next to the engine. When the par reached the stockyards, in an effort to bring it to • a stop so the side doors of the car would be opposite the stockyards chute, the engineer applied the brakes so tightly that the car came to a stop' too suddenly, in consequence of which one of the horses in the south part of *99 the ear was thrown against the partition, which fell down and against plaintiff while he was sitting on a hale of hay and leaning against a barrel of water. He received certain injuries in the nature of scalp wounds and a slight fracture of one of the bones of his shoulder.
“The cause was before us on a former appeal prosecuted by plaintiff from an order granting defendant a new trial. Said order was sustained'and the cause remanded (229 S. W. 394) ‘in order that a new trial may be had, if plaintiff so desires, under a petition presenting the case upon a theory which may entitle plaintiff to recover. ’ A second amended petition was accordingly filed, the cause went to trial and a verdict w;as returned for plaintiff in the sum of $4,000, from which defendant appeals.
“The second amended petition alleges that while the car in which 'plaintiff was riding was being switched from the Wabash tracks to the stockyards, the plaintiff remained in the car, in the space between the two- side doors, with the knowledge and consent of the trainmen;that, while thus riding, plaintiff was exposed to danger and liable to be injured by rough and reckless switching; that the trainmen knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known and anticipated, that plaintiff was in the car and thereby in a position of peril and danger, in time to have avoided injuring him by the exercise of‘'ordinary care; and that notwithstanding these facts the car was negligently handled and the live stock therein was thrown violently against the partition and upon the plaintiff, causing injuries as alleged.-
“Our former opinion holds plaintiff w'as guilty of contributory negligence in riding and remainiug in said car while it was being switched, and therefore that he could not recover on a general charge of negligence, and it clearly was the intention of plaintiff in the second amended petition to plead a case under the humanitarian or last-chance rule. Defendant takes the position that this has not been accomplished, and it is chiefly upon this question that defendant relies for reversal.
*100

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 1014, 300 Mo. 92, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-vulgamott-v-trimble-mo-1923.