Stockton v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

164 S.W. 176, 177 Mo. App. 286, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 60
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 176 (Stockton v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockton v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 164 S.W. 176, 177 Mo. App. 286, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 60 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TEIMBLE, J.

Between one and two o’clock in the afternoon of September 8, 1910, B. B. Stockton, an employee of defendant, was instantly killed by one of defendant’s cars. Within 'six months thereafter, the plaintiff, his widow, instituted this suit under section 5425, Revised Statutes 1909, to recover damages for his death.

The tragic affair occurred in defendant’s car barn at Thirty-first and Holmes streets, Kansas City, Missouri. On the floor of the barn were a number of parallel tracks running east and west upon which cars are run and stored when brought from the outside. Under one of these tracks was a “pit,” or excavation, about four feet deep, forty feet long, and extending, about eighteen inches beyond or outside of each rail. The rails over the pit were supported by iron posts under the rails at intervals’ The pit was for the purpose of affording convenient access to the wheels, running gear and machinery of a car when it became necessary to make repairs thereon. The car stands over the pit while the work is being done.

Stockton, the deceased, and a fellow-workman named Stoba.ugh, had been engaged in putting new brake shoes on the car in question. A brake shoe is a curved friction-piece to press against a wheel to stop its rotation. The concave surface of the shoe must at all points fit the convex perimeter of the wheel when the brake is applied. Therefore, when new shoes are put on, it is necessary to grind them a little so they will fit the wheel properly before sending the car out on the road. This grinding is done by driving the car back and forth along the track in the car barn, [288]*288with the brakes set, thus wearing down the surface of the shoes until a perfect fit is obtained.

There was no one in the bam at the time of the accident except the two workmen and a negro boy. It was the boy’s first day at the barn, he having begun that morning at seven o’clock. He was engaged in washing the windows of a car standing near and on the north side of the car on which the workmen were engaged.

When the two workmen had finished putting on the shoes it was necessary to apply the air, that is, to set the brakes in order to see that they fitted properly and had the right tension. Stockton, the deceased, thereupon called from the pit to the negro boy to get on the car and apply the air. The boy, in obedience to the command got upon the car at its east end, but said to the men that they would have to show him as he did not know how. Stobaugh then said to deceased, “One of us had better get up.” Deceased said “You go up then.” Stobaugh got out of the pit and got upon the east end of the car where he stood with the colored boy. Stobaugh worked the lever to show the boy how to apply and reverse the air, and the boy stood at his side watching him, intent on learning how it was done. Stobaugh then asked Stockton, the deceased, if he was ready to grind the brake shoes. Stockton in reply ordered the men to “go ahead.” Thereupon Stobaugh, standing with the boy on the east end of the car, ran the car east towards the front end of the barn and then reversed it and moved the car back west again, passing over the pit and to a point about five feet west of the west end thereof, the car travelling at the rate of about four miles an hour. When Stobaugh reached the aforesaid point five feet west of the west end of the pit, both he and the boy saw deceased’s cap lying on the floor between the rails and about two feet from the end of the pit. Seeing the cap, Stobaugh ■stopped the car. It came to a standstill with the east [289]*289end from four to ten feet west of the pit. The two got off the car and discovered deceased’s dead body under the west trucks of the car.

At the west end of the pit was a ladder or steps leading from the bottom of the pit to the barn floor. On the top of the steps that led out of the pit were small particles of clothing of the same color and texture as those worn by deceased, and west of the pit, along the track between the rails, there 'were particles of this clothing clinging to the splinters of the boards in the floor, and the boards looked as if they had been swept by a bundle of rags having been dragged over them. Some screwdrivers, and deceased’s pliers which he usually carried around with him, were lying on the step next to the floor, that is, on the first step- reached after leaving the floor to descend into the pit.

Defendant demurred to the evidence both at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief and also at the close of the entire case. These were overruled. The case was submitted to the jury with no instruction on the part of plaintiff except one which told the jury that, if they found for plaintiff, they might allow her such a reasonable sum, not less than $2000 nor more than $10,000, as they found and believed from the evidence, and under the instructions of the court, would be fair and reasonable. The jury found for plaintiff in .the sum of $5000. Defendant appealed.

It’s main contentions are that defendant’s demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained; that there was a total failure to prove any of the specifications of negligence; that no negligence was shown; that the deceased was shown to have been guilty of contributory negligence; and that there was no evidence to justify the submission of the case upon the humanitarian doctrine.

The petition duly alleged the maintenance of defendant’s railroad and of the car barn in connection [290]*290therewith, the location of the tracks and of the pit in said barn; that deceased was an employee; that it was his custom and duty to get into said pit to repair cars and their running gear; that while deceased was in the pit in the performance of his duties, a car was negligently run over said pit and against said Stockton whereby he was killed; and that plaintiff was his widow.

That part of the petition which sets forth the specific acts of negligence is very long, covering more than two closely printed pages of small type.

Plaintiff asked no instructions showing upon what theory of negligence the case was submitted to the jury and, therefore, we have been compelled to carefully examine the long and multitudinous specifications of negligence contained in the petition, and attempt, as best we may,' to analyze and list them in order to be sure that we clearly understand what they are, and that we have overlooked none of them. Having done this, the acts of negligence specified may he listed as follows:

1. Permitting an incompetent, inexperienced, careless and reckless man to run the car.

2. Carelessly and negligently running the car over the pit when deceased was in the pit, when there was ample room in the barn outside of the pit for grinding the brake shoes.

3. Failing to make proper rules governing running cars over pits.

4. Failing to ring hell or warn deceased of the approach of the car.

5. Backing the car over the pit when it knew or should have known deceased was in or around the pit.

6. Failure to have man on rear or west end of the car to warn deceased of the approach of the car as it came hack west over the pit.

7. Failure to keep proper lookout for deceased as the car approached and ran over said pit.

[291]*2918. Humanitarian rule.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 176, 177 Mo. App. 286, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-moctapp-1914.