Stoeckle v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railroad

258 S.W. 58, 214 Mo. App. 124, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 6
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 58 (Stoeckle v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railroad) 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
Stoeckle v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railroad, 258 S.W. 58, 214 Mo. App. 124, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 6 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

This is a suit for damages for the value of an automobile, of which plaintiff was the alleged owner, and which was demolished in a collision with one of defendant's freight trains at Silex, Lincoln county. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1300, the value of the automobile, from which defendant appeals.

Defendant makes no point relative to the pleadings. We deem it advisable, however, to point out that the petition charges defendant with negligently backing or pushing a freight car or cars over its switch track to contact with plaintiff's automobile driven by his wife, along the public road; that the defendant negligently failed to give any signal or warning of the approach of said car or cars, negligently failed to keep a lookout, man its train, and negligently failed to have a person in position to discover the automobile to prevent the collision.

The answer contains a general denial; alleges the known inefficiency of plaintiff's wife, the driver; the negligence of his wife in attempting to beat the train over the crossing; in failing to keep a careful lookout; in failing to look and listen for moving trains and stop; in failing to stop after seeing train, and in failing to stop, when by the exercise of ordinary care she could have seen the train; that the negligence of the driver and plaintiff are imputable to each other, and that the damage to the automobile was caused by the driver's negligence, imputable to plaintiff.

The reply is a general denial.

This is a companion case to Lawrence v. Railroad (not yet reported).

About August 1, 1918, plaintiff purchased at Fort Madison, Iowa, a new Buick roadster, costing $1350, for the use of himself and family. On August 4, 1918, Mrs. Lawrence, an aunt of his wife, then residing at Hannibal, Missouri, was visiting at the home of plaintiff and his *Page 128 wife in Fort Madison. On August 4, 1918, Mrs. Stoeckle and her aunt started on a trip to Hannibal and St. Louis in plaintiff's Buick car, arriving at Hannibal on Sunday, and remaining there at the home of the aunt until August 6th, on which day they set out for St. Louis. The relationship existing between plaintiff and his wife in the use of the car is demonstrated by the following testimony:

"Q. Now, Mr. Stoeckle, I will get you to state what you did with that automobile on or about the 5th day of August, 1918, 4th or 5th day of August? A. Why, I allowed my wife to take it for a pleasure trip to St. Louis. Q. Your wife asked you to use it to drive it down to St. Louis? A. Why, yes. Q. Did she say where she was going? A. They were going to Hannibal and from Hannibal to St. Louis. Q. Who was with your wife at that time? A. Why, her aunt, Mrs. Lawrence. Q. Now, did your wife say they were going to visit any one in St. Louis at that time? A. It was her cousin and Mrs. Lawrence's niece. Q. You permitted your wife to take the car on that day? A. I did. Q. And I will ask you whether or not your wife was performing any duty or errand for you on that day? A. None whatever."

On cross-examination:

"Q. Had you given your wife the car as a present or not? A. No. Q. You bought it for family use? A. For our use, it is our car. Q. For both of you to use? A. Yes, sir. Q. Your family consists of yourself and wife and one child? A. Two children. Q. Either of your children old enough to drive a car? A. No. Q. You had purchased the car for family use, for you and your wife both to use? A. I did. Q. She had the right to drive whenever she wanted to, the same as you did? A. Yes, sir. Q. Like any other article bought with your money for family use, she had the same access to it as you did? A. Yes, sir. Q. She did not have to ask your permission to use the car? A. Not necessarily, no sir. Q. She was welcome to use it whenever she wanted to? A. Yes, sir. Q. On this occasion she and Mrs. Lawrence were coming to Hannibal, Mrs. Lawrence living here at *Page 129 the time, and from here going on to St. Louis, perhaps to do some shopping and to visit Mrs. Lawrence's cousin; and they took the car for that purpose; while they were down there did they do any shopping for you, Mr. Stoeckle? A. Oh, might have bought me a tie."

Defendant in its statement of fact says: "The plaintiff, Mr. Stoeckle, testified that the automobile was bought and paid for by him and was his car. . . . Mrs. Stoeckle, the wife, also testified in the instant case on this point along the same line as her husband, and stood for the proposition that her husband loaned her the automobile to make the ill-starred trip."

For a more extended statement of fact, we refer to the case of Lawrence v. Railroad, supra. For the purposes of this case, we briefly state that Mrs. Stoeckle, with her aunt, on their return trip from St. Louis, were proceeding west along a road they had never been over before, near Silex. Defendant's railroad tracks run on the east side of Silex in a northernly and southernly direction. Silex is situated in the lowlands. Approaching Silex from the east, the road descends a hill to the lowlands, crossing a bridge over a creek, distant about 317 feet from the place where the railroad switch track crosses the highway leading to Silex. The ladies testified that as they proceeded along the road, their view of the railroad tracks was obscured by trees, brush and weeds along the road, and by elevators, stock pens, and other buildings, and that they did not see or know of the presence of railroad tracks or a train thereon as they came along the road. Later they stated, when near the elevators which abutted the road and the switch track on the east, they saw the track and brought their automobile to a stop. Looking both ways, they saw a box car protruding from the north elevator about half its length, which they saw was stationary. From their position where the Buick stopped, about thirty feet from the switch track, they looked and listened, but did not see or hear a train. Believing it safe to cross, Mrs. Stoeckle started in low, changed the gear to second, and proceeded *Page 130 across, looking and listening as they went, but looking particularly at the main track, forty-four feet west of the side track, for a train. When the tires of the Buick had gotten over the first rail of side track, the aunt saw the box car within a foot or two of the automobile, screamed, and Mrs. Stoeckle turned the wheels to the south, when the box car pushed the automobile into a building on the south side of road, almost completely demolishing it. The railroad took charge of the wrecked Buick, and sold it for $50.

Defendant contends that it was the duty of plaintiff to convey Mrs. Lawrence, in her status as guest, to her home in Hannibal. If such duty existed, which we do not think is shown under the facts in evidence, that duty was fully performed by Mrs. Stoeckle driving Mrs. Lawrence to her home in Hannibal. On the trip to St. Louis and return, Mrs. Lawrence became an invitee.

Defendant again contends that the wife in driving the Buick to St. Louis and return was the agent of her husband. This because in answer to the question: "While they were down there did they do any shopping for you, Mr. Stoeckle?" He replied: "Oh, might have bought me a tie." We take it that plaintiff would not have sent his wife to St. Louis, a distance of about 300 miles as the records shows, to buy him a tie. He may have asked her while there to buy him a tie or she may have bought it to present to him. But we do not think he sent her that distance for that purpose or that she was about his business. The record shows the trip was made solely for her pleasure or caprice.

Having disposed of the above contentions, this brings us to the more important question as to whether the contributory negligence of the wife may be imputed to the husband.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 58, 214 Mo. App. 124, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoeckle-v-st-louis-hannibal-railroad-moctapp-1924.