Tannehill v. Kansas City, Clinton & Springfield Railway Co.

213 S.W. 818, 279 Mo. 158, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 5, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 818 (Tannehill v. Kansas City, Clinton & Springfield 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
Tannehill v. Kansas City, Clinton & Springfield Railway Co., 213 S.W. 818, 279 Mo. 158, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 142 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

PARIS, J.

Appellant as the curator of certain minor children of one H. Earl Tennehill, deceased, sued to recover damages for the negligent killing of the latter by a passenger train of defendant. Upon a trial nisi, the court at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief sustained defendant’s demurrer to the evidence. There[163]*163upon plaintiff took a voluntary nonsuit with leave. Cast in his motion to set this nonsuit aside, plaintiff in the conventional mode appealed.

The grounds upon which plaintiff, pursuant to his petition, seeks to fix liability upon defendant, are: (a) The failure and neglect of defendant’s servants, agents and employees in charge of said train to sound the whistle or ring the bell upon defendant’s locomotive at the crossing where the decedent was struck and killed, and (b) the negligent failure to avoid striking and killing decedent at a place whereat he could and ought to have been seen in a position of danger in time to have stopped the train and thus avoided killing him. Defendant’s answer is a general denial and a plea of decedent’s contributory negligence.

Decedent, who lived at Garden City, Missouri, while riding in an automobile, was struck and killed, at a grade crossing of a public highway, called in the record the “Kenagy Crossing,” on December 18, 1914. The time was about one o’clock in the afternoon. The train was practically on time. The day was cloudy and overcast, damp and foggy, or misty. A light snow partially covered the ground, and the roads were muddy, or slushy. The railroad and the highway crossed at an angle of forty-five degrees.

Decedent and one of his brothers were returning to their home at Garden City from a trip to Clinton in an automobile. Decedent’s brother was driving the car, which car was jointly owned by decedent, the brother who was driving, and another brother. The curtains of the car were down as the car approached this crossing, though a view of objects to the side was obtainable through celluloid covered spaces, or windows, some seven or eight inches by twelve or fourteen inches in dimensions. Decedent was about thirty-five years of age, and slightly hard of hearing. His business was that of a real estate agent, wherein he seems to have been engaged with the brother in question, and perhaps with another brother, at his home town of Garden City.

[164]*164The only eye-witness who testified upon the trial was the brother of decedent, who, as stated, was driving the car at the time the decedent was killed. Upon the testimony of this brother the ■ case, of necessity, must largely turn. He says that as he and decedent approached this crossing and, when at a distance of some 409 feet therefrom, he looked for an approaching train; that he knew a train was due from the south at about one o’clock, but that he did not know what time of day it was. Seeing no train, though from the point at which he looked a train coming as was the one which killed decedent could ordinarily have been seen when a quarter of a mile distant from the crossing, he continued driving. When he and decedent reached a point some forty feet from the crossing and while driving on an up-grade at the rate of five or six miles an hour, he again looked for a train. From this last point of observation, a train could ordinarily have been seen a quarter of a mile away, but on this day, on account of the prevailing weather conditions, the witness says, he could only have seen a train when the same was some 200 feet distant from the crossing. Seeing no train from this final point of observation, hearing none, and hearing no crossing signals, he looked in the other direction toward Garden City and continued driving until he reached the railroad track. There he suddenly saw the locomotive right upon him, and was instantly struck, and hurled with the car and decedent some 100 feet. From this impact decedent was fatally injured, dying in the afternoon of the same day, and the witness rendered unconscious for some few minutes. The automobile, this witness says, at the rate it was traveling when struck, could have been stopped in from eight to ten feet.

Whether the required statutory signals were given by sounding a whistle, or whether the train on this day and at this time was visible at a greater distance than that stated by decedent’s brother, is contradictory upon the record before us; some of plaintiff’s witnesses saying-these signals were given, some that they were not given, [165]*165and some that if they were given the witnesses did not hear them. Touching the visibility of the train, so far as such visibility was affected by existing wheather conditions, some of plaintiff’s witnesses say they actually saw it on this day and at this time, while it was from a quarter of a mile to a mile and a half away. This, however, by the way, for the rule requires us here to apply every inference in favor of plaintiff, and to consider in his favor the very highest points shown by the proof. .

Since the case is a fact case, we will on this account reserve other facts for recital when we shall come to discuss what we deem to be the controlling law of the case.

Negligence!7

I. As forcast, this case presents but one question; that question is, was the evidence sufficient to take the case to the jury? Plaintiff in effect contends, w^h absolute correctness, we think (if it were, or could here be, considered alone), that there was sufficient evidence of one element of negligence pleaded, that is, as to the failure of the defendant to sound the whistle or ring the bell upon the engine (Sec. 3140, R. S. 1909), as to constitute primafacie negligence, to take the case to the jury. In this connection, plaintiff urges upon us the rule stated in the case of Peterson v. Railroad, 265 Mo. 462, which rule he excerpts bodily from the syllabus of the case. Taking the rule stated in the Peterson case as his text, plaintiff insists that since contributory negligence is an affirmative defense, the moment a prima-faeie case bottomed upon defendant’s negligence is made out, every such ease must go to the jury, and therefore this case ought to have gone to the jury.

This view, we think, leaves out of consideration another controlling point by which the rule contended for is in a proper case always modified. That point is, that even if the plaintiff’s evidence make out a primafacie case, or, to be more exact, make out proof of defendant's negligence, yet if in developing such a case [166]*166the evidence adduced by plaintiff also proves plaintiff’s own contributory negligence as a matter of law, then the case is not one for the jury, but is one for the couid, and the court ought to sustain a demurrer to the evidence. [Sissel v. Railroad, 211 Mo. 515.]

In the Sissel case, supra, Graves, J. upon a point presented in that ’case which was much similar, and wholly analogous upon principle, said at page 526, this: “Even though there was no plea of contributory negligence, yet the trial court would be authorized to take a case from the jury upon a demurrer to the evidence whenever it was shown by plaintiff’s own proof there was contributory negligence, such as to preclude a recovery. Without a proper plea of contributory negligence the defendant should not be permitted to show, affirmatively, by his proof, that there was contributory negligence, but where the witnesses for plaintiff disclose the facts, an,d the court is thus possessed of them, such court has but one course to follow, and that is to say that by plaintiff’s proof no case has been made.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W. 818, 279 Mo. 158, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tannehill-v-kansas-city-clinton-springfield-railway-co-mo-1919.