Steele v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.

257 S.W. 756, 302 Mo. 207, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 792
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 756 (Steele v. Kansas City Southern 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
Steele v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 257 S.W. 756, 302 Mo. 207, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 792 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

This is an action in damages for personal injuries. At.the close of plaintiff’s evidence the trial court directed a verdict for defendant and judgment was entered accordingly. After moving unsuccessfully for a new trial, plaintiff appealed. This *211 court has jurisdiction because of the amount claimed in the petition.

The case has had an unusual history. Plaintiff was injured in the year 1910. Suit was filed soon thereafter which, coming on for trial in due course, resulted in a verdict for plaintiff. The trial court set the verdict aside and granted a new trial. Prom this order plaintiff appealed to this court. The order of the trial court was affirmed and the cause remanded for a new trial. [Steele v. Railway, 265 Mo. 97.] Thereafter, the case came on for re-trial in the circuit court, and plaintiff suffered a nonsuit. Later a new action was begun,- which resulted as above stated. It- is conceded that the pendency of the different suits has avoided the bar of the Statute of Limitations.

The uncontradicted facts are as follows:

At the time plaintiff was injured, defendant owned and operated a double-track railroad along Second. Street in Kansas City, Missouri, particularly between Walnut Street and Grand Avenue. Several other railroads also used the same tracks. Second Street runs east and west, and Walnut Street and Grand Avenue run north and south and cross Second Street. Ordinarily, west-bound train movements used the north track in said street, and east-bound train movements the south track. An industrial spur track, serving the produce house of Clemons & Company, connected with the north track at or very near Walnut Street. This produce house was north of and close to Second Street, between Walnut Street and Grand Avenue.

About 1:30 A. M., October 26, 1910, the plaintiff was found lying or sitting near the north rail of the south main track. One leg had been crushed just below the knee. The foot of the other leg had been partially crushed. The crushed leg was afterwards amputated. Plaintiff testified, and the finding of a shoe cut in two and some mangled flesh and blood there clearly indicates, that plaintiff was injured by the wheels of an *212 engine or car, or both, running, over his leg and foot while they were upon the north rail of the north track.

A few minutes before plaintiff was found injured, a locomotive of defendant, being Engine No. 60, left three or' four cars upon the north track just east of Grand Avenue, and moved westward along said track past the point of the Clemons spur track, backed into said switch and coupled on to an empty car. With said car it then pulled out of said spur track upon the north track, and moved eastward, pushing said car, for the purpose of picking up the cars left standing east of Grand Avenue. It was in the course of this last train movement that plaintiff was discovered. ■

The testimony of plaintiff was to the following effect: He was employed upon the night shift as an inspector in the Kansas City water department. On the day preceding his injury he was suffering from a severe headache and took a dose of bromo-seltzer for relief. On this particular evening he arrived at the City Hall at the usual hour. No calls coming in to disturb him, he slept in his chair until about midnight. He then felt better, but was dizzy and had a “swimming” headache. He then went to a restaurant adjoining a saloon to get some lunch. He denied that he took a drink of liquor there or that he had been drinking during the day.

Shortly after having his lunch and about 1:10 A. M., he walked north two blocks from the City Hall to see a man at Second and Main streets. Main Street is the first street west of Walnut Street. He did not find the man he sought. He then remembered that he had a report of a leaking hydrant at Second Street and Grand Avenue. He walked east on Second Street between defendant’s north and south tracks, and within sis or seven inches of the south rail of the north track, until he reached Walnut Street. There he encountered some sort of obstruction between the tracks and stepped over between the rails .of the north track and continued walking there slowly toward Grand Avenue until he was knocked down and run over by an engine and freight car or *213 ears moving eastward upon the north track. The point of injury was about two hundred feet east of Walnut and one hundred feet west of Grand.

Plaintiff claims that he had walked from Main to Walnut close to the north track to avoid danger of injury from eastbound train movements upon the south track and expected train movements upon the north track, if any, to approach him from the east, in which direction he was facing. He did not look back when he stepped between the rails of the north track at Walnut or after that as he proceeded toward Grand Avenue. He heard no signal of any kind before he was struck. He saw no light, nor did he hear the noise of any train movement behind him. He heard trains moving upon tracks farther north, apparently about one-fourth of a mile away. After plaintiff passed Walnut Street, he saw an engine and freight car pulling out of the Clemons spur track. The first he knew of the approach of the train which struck him was when he was struck by it. After he was run over he attempted to crawl toward the north, but could not get up the embankment there. He then crawled south across the north track almost or quite to the south track. The next thing he knew men with lanterns were about him. They asked him where he worked and other questions. Someone gave him a drink of whisky. He soon lost consciousness again.

Second Street was an opened public street of said city. It was used by people on foot at all times of the day and night. There was no light on the freight car, although the switch engine had lights on each end. None of the train crew was riding the freight car to keep a lookout in the direction it was being pushed. One of the switchmen stood on the running board of the engine behind the freight car. Another switchman, after uncoupling the freight ear on Clemons spur, walked west along the platform of the produce house down the east steps and thus to Grand Avenue, where he waited for the purpose of coupling the approaching freight car to those left standing there. Ho saw no one on the track. *214 There was evidence tending to show that the engine and car of defendant could have been stopped within a very-few feet after application of the brakes.

It was developed by defendant upon cross-examination of witnesses put on the stand by plaintiff, that, as defendant’s Engine No. 60, pushing the freight car, backed eastward, the fireman called the attention of the engineer to something on the ground south of the engine. The fireman got off with a torch and found plaintiff there. The engine was backed up about twenty-five feet east of the plaintiff, and the engineer and switch-men returned to the point where plaintiff was found. One or more of them testified that plaintiff was intoxicated; that no one gave him any whiskey; that the plaintiff told them several trains had passed since he was struck and injured; that the blood on his face was dried, as were also a few little spots of blood where he was found; that plaintiff’s wounds were not bleeding when he was found.

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Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 756, 302 Mo. 207, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-kansas-city-southern-railway-co-mo-1924.