Stotler ex rel. Stotler v. Chicago & Alton Railway Co.

98 S.W. 509, 200 Mo. 107, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 18, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 509 (Stotler ex rel. Stotler v. Chicago & Alton 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
Stotler ex rel. Stotler v. Chicago & Alton Railway Co., 98 S.W. 509, 200 Mo. 107, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 345 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Suit for personal injuries at a road crossing. The defendant railway company is incorporated under the laws of Illinois and operates a railroad running from Louisiana, Missouri, through the city of • Laddonia in Audrain county, to Kansas City. Defendants Wiseman and Haines are residents of Missouri and sérvants of their corporate co-defendant, acting respectively as conductor and engineer on the train doing the injury. •

The crossing in question is that of Pine street, a street of the city of Laddonia, a public highway running north and south, and said railroad (running at a tangent, southwest and northeast at that point) within said city of Laddonia.

Eugenia Stotler is a young girl, aged fifteen years and some months on the 22nd day of April, 1903. Her father was dead and she,-with her mother, Phoebe, and her brothers, resided on a farm a mile or so from said town, a city of the fourth class, of, say, 1,000 people. Eugenia sued through her guardian and curator, her brother, and at the trial it was admitted he was her ' guardian and curator, but when he was appointed and qualified does not appear.

On the evening of said day in April, while still daylight, to-wit, about 6:40 p. m., she was , riding with her mother in a one-horse top-buggy (with the top down) going north on Pine street. At said crossing, when another instant would have put them over and out of danger, the hind wheel of their buggy was struck by a locomotive pulling a caboose and running east from Slater, Missouri, to Roodhouse in Illinois, to transport soldiers from that point.

It was running on no schedule, i. e., was an extra “running wild.” The engineer testified he was to get to Roodhouse as quickly as possible. “He was,” said [117]*117he, “going to get there as soon as he could with safety.” The collision tore the mother to pieces, and the daughter received hurts for which she recovered a verdict for $15,000 against all the defendants.

From a judgment entered on that verdict, they appeal. The petition counts on the negligent violation of an ordinance of the city of Laddonia making it unlawful to run any locomotive, car or train of cars upon any railroad track, tracks or switches within the corporate limits of said city, where said track, tracks or switches are unfenced, at a rate of speed to exceed eight miles per hour. It further counts upon defendants’ failure to ring a bell or blow a whistle as provided by statute; and seeks to recover on the theory that defendants saw and knew, or by the exercise of due diligence might have seen and known, that plaintiff was in a perilous position, unaware thereof and unable to escape from impending danger, and thereafter failed to give the usual and ordinary signals in time to avert the injury, and negligently failed to stop or slacken the speed of said train in time to avert said injury, when they might by the exercise of due care (after seeing and knowing her peril) have stopped the train or slackened the speed thereof in time to avert said injury.

As we see it, the case was not put to the jury on the ground of negligence last above, hence, there is no life left in that issue.

Other facts material to an understanding of the case will be uncovered in connection with a consideration of the assignments of error.

I. Before answering, the railway company in due time and form filed its petition and bond in the circuit court of Audrain county to remove the cause to the United States circuit court for the Eastern District of Missouri, on the ground of diverse citizenship between the company and Eugenia Stotler and her guardian. It was alleged therein that Wiseman and Haines, [118]*118citizens of Missouri, were fraudulently and improperly joined as parties defendant for the sole purpose of defeating the right of petitioner to such removal, and that plaintiff’s petition stated no cause of action against Wiseman and Haines, in that the acts complained of, as to them, were acts of mere non-feasance for which they, were answerable alone to the company —in short, that the averments of plaintiff’s petition showed the controversy to be a separate and separable one with no joint liability charged. The petition for removal was disallowed. ■

Thereupon defendant corporation filed a plea, termed by it a plea in abatement, in which the jurisdiction of the State court was assailed by the same matter. On issue made, on a hearing before the court, defendants placed upon the stand Mr. Cullen, attorney for plaintiff, and he was asked whether his object in joining defendants Wiseman and Haines was not to prevent the removal of the cause to the United States court. He answered that his object was to sue the parties who were liable for the wrong — to hold all the parties who were in the wrong liable for it, whether it was the act of the railway company or its servants. He was then asked if he 'made any inquiries as to whether he could recover anything from defendants Wiseman and Haines, i. e., whether they were solvent ? He replied that he made no inquiry, that they were the active agents in' committing the wrong and were liable for' the wrong in his judgment. The question was then asked Mr. Cullen whether he would have joined them in this action but for the fact that by that means he expected' to defeat the removal of the cause to the United States court? To this inquiry he answered as follows: “I cannot say what I would do in that case. I will cross that bridge when I come to it in the management of the case.” This was all the [119]*119evidence on the plea in abatement. It was overruled —defendants excepting.

Thereupon the railway company filed answer and therein again renewed its assault on the jurisdiction of the State court, by way of defense — setting forth its various unsuccessful steps taken to bring about such removal, and the adverse rulings of the court thereon.

The cause went to Callaway county on the application of Haines and Wiseman. A demurrer to the evidence having been offered on behalf of the railway company and overruled, and the motion for a new trial again directing the court’s attention to alleged error in its ruling on the question of jurisdiction, the matter is assigned for error here.

It would sqem the law on this Federal question, once much vexed and long in a plastic state, has been somewhat put in a condition of stable equilibrium and rest by the Supreme Court of the United States. [Railroad v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131; Railroad v. Thompson, 200. U. S. 206; Railroad v. Bohon, 200 U. S. 221.] In a very late case, Lanning v. Railroad, 196 Mo. 647, those decisions were considered In Banc, and we all then agreed that further discussion of this question was foreclosed by them — they being utterances of the supreme oracle of the law on Federal questions. In the Banning case, as here, the question of a fraudulent joinder was raised by the petition for removal, and it was not held fatal to the jurisdiction of the State court. But it is plain there is no evidence of any fraud introduced on the hearing of the plea in abatement. At the trial on the merits no evidence was directed to the question of fraud, and, as the pleadings stand, under the evidence on said plea, the question of fraud places defendants in a strait betwixt two.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 509, 200 Mo. 107, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stotler-ex-rel-stotler-v-chicago-alton-railway-co-mo-1906.