Stid v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

139 S.W. 172, 236 Mo. 382, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 208
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 172 (Stid v. Missouri Pacific 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
Stid v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 139 S.W. 172, 236 Mo. 382, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 208 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

GRAVES, P. J.

The petition in this case is somewhat verbose, and but few statements therein go to matters of negligence, but that a full statement of the case may be presented, it is best to outline all the charges of the pleadings, as well as the evidence. Beginning, therefore, with the petition, or rather the amended petition upon which the case was 'tried, the following, epitomized, is the contents thereof: (1) that defendant is a Missouri railroad corporation; (2) that said defendant had and maintained switch yards in the East Bottoms near the corporate limits of Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri; (3) that in such yards were a number of tracks on each side of the main track for the purpose of switching cars; (4) that at said time, defendant had in its employ two switching crews, each consisting of a foreman, engineer and switchman, which crew was in charge of a switch engine; (5) that it was the duty of such crews to switch cars as the business of the company re* quired; (6) that at the date of the accident, plaintiff was a member of one of said crews to switch and transfer cars as the business of defendant demanded; (7) that plaintiff had been in the employ of defendant as switchman in one of said crews but one day prior to the accident; (8) that one Ferguson was his foreman and in control of plaintiff and other members of his crew; (9) that plaintiff met with his acci[388]*388dent on the night of October 10, 1904. The petition, in addition to the matters aforesaid, in this language then charges:

‘ ‘ That on the night of said last mentioned day and after dark of said day, plaintiff and the crew of which he was a member were proceeding with a train consisting of an engine and ten cars eastwardly through said yards on said main line, for the purpose of transferring some of the cars of said train to a side track of defendant on the north of said main line.
“That plaintiff and said foreman were then and there riding on said engine of said train, and that before reaching the switch of said side track on which said cars were to be transferred said foreman got off of said engine, and when said engine reached said switch, the plaintiff, by the direction of said foreman and in pursuance of his duty under said employment, got off said engine on the south- side of said track of said main line, that he might and could signal the engineer in charge of said engine, to stop when the rear car of said train had passed said switch, and to throw said switch and then to signal said engineer to back in upon said side track, and to repeat to said engineer any signals given by said foreman, for said engineer.
“Plaintiff further states that there was then and there a side track of defendant on the south side of said main line, and that said side track was about eight feet from and about two feet lower than the track of said main line, and that the road bed of said main line then and there sloped down and towards said last mentioned side track. That plaintiff got off of said engine on the south side of said engine, and as he stepped therefrom and out of the way of the cars of said train, he fell and stumbled, without fault on his part, down the said slope of the road bed of said main line to the north rail of said last mentioned side track, and before he was able to recover himself and [389]*389get away from said side track, a flat car of defendant came west upon said side track at á rapid and dangerous rate of speed and struck plaintiff and knocked Mm down and ran upon and against plaintiff and crushed, bruised and injured his legs and back, and that Ms left leg was thereafter and because of said injuries amputated just below the knee, and that his right leg was because of said injuries thereto and is permanently injured and disabled.
“Plaintiff further states that he entered defendant’s employment as switchman, as aforesaid, on the night before he was injured, as aforesaid, and that he did not know at the time he was injured, as aforesaid, that said yards were insufficiently lighted, nor that said side track was then and there lower than said main line, and did not then and there know that the road bed of said main line sloped down and towards said side track, and that he did not at the time he got off of said engine and fell and stumbled, as aforesaid, know that said flat car was coming in on said side track. That there was then and .there no light upon said flat car and no one upon or in charge thereof, and that the moving cars of said train made so. much noise that he could not and did not hear the approach of said flat car, and that he then and there did not know that said flat car was upon said side track until it struck him,-as aforesaid.
“That said yards were then and there insufficiently lighted. The defendant then and there knew that said yards were insufficiently lighted and that said side track was two feet lower than the track and road bed of said main line, and that said yards were then and there not a safe place for plaintiff to work, in the discharge of his duties as such switchman, and that said side track was two feet lower than the track of said main line and was in an unsafe and dangerous condition for that reason, and so plaintiff says that defendant was negligent in failing to have its said [390]*390yards properly lighted and in having and maintaining said side track lower than the track and road bed of said main line.”

Plaintiff prayed for damages in the snm of $25,000, with allegations as to special damages for loss of time and medical attention.

The answer after some specific admissions was (.1) a general denial, and (2) a plea of contributory negligence. Reply, a general denial.

Such are the issues made by the pleadings. Upon trial before a jury, the plaintiff had a verdict for $16,000, upon which in due course judgment was entered and from such judgment the defendant has appealed. The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict is challenged and hence a full statement of the facts proven is required.

Omitting the testimony as to the character of his injuries, which were very serious, plaintiff in his own behalf testified substantially as follows:

That there were two main lines of track in the East bottom through these yards; that the east-going main track was on the south side of the yards and west-going track on the north side of the yards; that there were a number of side tracks upon either side of these main tracks; that at the date of the accident and at the place of the accident the switch track just south of the south main track was' “from fourteen to eighteen inches or two feet- lower” than the main track; that on the night of the injury he went to work about seven o ’clock p. m.; that he was injured on his first-trip through "the yards; that he was on the south main line track running east; that to the south of this was the switch track which was lower; that he and Ms foreman, Ferguson, were riding upon the front board of the switch engine:

In chief, he then describes the accident:
“Just before I stepped off, the foreman says to me, he says: ‘We’ll get off here,’ he says, ‘and throw [391]

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 172, 236 Mo. 382, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stid-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1911.