Treadway v. United Railways Company

253 S.W. 1037, 300 Mo. 156, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 245
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 31, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 1037 (Treadway v. United Railways Company) 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
Treadway v. United Railways Company, 253 S.W. 1037, 300 Mo. 156, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 245 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*161 RAGLAND, J.

— An opinion in this case was prepared by one of our commissioners, to’which in its entirety we were unable to agree. His statement of facts and his conclusions 'of law in part, however, have ’our concurrence and we adopt them, as follows:

“This ease, on appeal from the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, submitted at the October term, 1921, has been reassigned for consideration and decision.
‘ ‘ The plaintiff, aged eleven years, by his next friend brought this suit against defendant to recover damages for the death of his father, Marion Treadway, who was killed as the result of a work car of defendant striking an automobile in which Marion Treadway was riding, *162 and which was being driven at the (time by William Treadway. Marion Treadway was fifty-four years old, and William Treadway his son, a half-brother of plaintiff, was a grown man. The accident occurred at about nine o ’clock on the morning of January 12:, 1919, and at the crossing of defendant’s tracks and P'age Avenue, St. Louis County. Page Avenue extends east and west and is about fifty feet in width, and defendant’s two tracks extending north and south cross it at right angles. At the southwest corner of the crossing space 'is a building fronting north on Page Avenqe, and extending back south abo¡ut one hundred feet. Extending north and south along tbe east side of this building is an open space or driveway twenty to twenty-five feet wide, between the building and the tracks of defendant. William Treadway lived in this building; and the outer door of his quarters was. about seventy feet south of Page Avenue. At the time in .question Marion Treadway, who lived at Graniteville, Missouri, was visiting William for a few, days. On that morning William Treadway intended to drive to Clayton in his automobile, and Marion Treadway was going with him.
“At the time of ¡starting, the automobile stood on the driveway, headed south, in front of William Tread-way’s store, and they entered the car, which was a Max•well, at that point. William Treadway took the driver’s place, and Marion Treadway sat at his right, in the front seat. The automobile top was closed, except that the front curtains were raised or pushed back. William Treadway had artificial limbs (feet and lower legs presumably), but for several years had been driving an automobile. HU backed the automobile north along the driveway, to the south line of Page Avenue. There he stopped the automobile, still headed south and standing about six or eight feet west of the rail of defendant’s west track. He looked out and back north down defendant’s track. He could see northward, for a distance of about three-fourths of a block, but saw nothing and heard *163 nothing1 of an approaching car. He asked Marion Tread-way who also looked if he saw anything, who replied that he did not. He then hacked the automobile slowly into Page Avenue northward and eastward in a curve, a distance between twenty and thirty feet, and brought it to a stop, headed west, at a point not far from the middle of Page Avenue, and where the hind wheels of the automobile were standing in about the center of defendant ’s west track. At this point the automobile was struck by a large cinder car of defendant, moving south on defendant’s west track. A cross piece or bolster of the cinder car struck the automobile near the middle, and on its north side, the .side on which Marion Treadw'ay was sitting. William Treadway, the driver, says that as he was stopping and shifting the gear, he heard and saw the cinder car coming fifteen or twenty feet away. He cried out to his father, “Look out.” Before the automobile moved, or moved sufficiently, it was struck by the cinder car, and Marion Treadway received the injuries which resulted in his death. Other features and incidents will be mentioned later as occasion requires.
“The plaintiff charged negligence against defendant, in that defendant, without using any care to give warning of the approach of said work car to the crossing, or care to watch out for vehicles or persons, or care to slow up or stop said work car to avert injury to Marion Treadway, caused and suffered said car to strike and injure him, whereof he died. The petition further amplifying the charge of negligence alleged that defendant and its employees failed to stop said work car when they either knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care, would have known in time, by the exercise of ordinary care, to prevent the injuries and death of said Marion Treadway; that he was then and there in a. place of danger; that defendant negligently failed to sound any bell, gong, or other means of warning to persons about to come on the tracks at said crossing, or to keep vigilant watch for persons or vehicles on the track or moving toward it, *164 and failed to stop said car -within the shortest time and space possible and thereby avert the collision, and also that defendant negligently operated said car at a high and dangerous rate of speed. The amo,unt sued for was ten thousand dollars.
“The defendant after a general denial,.averred that said Marion Treadway’s injuries and death were the result of his own negligence in, that the automobile in which he was seated was being operated by William Treadway, who, on account of his physical condition, was not able or competent to operate it, all of which said Marion Treadway well knew; that Marion Treadway negligently permitted said William Treadway to back said automobile suddenly and without warning upon defendant’s tracks and so close to an on-coming car that said car icould not be stopped in time to avert a collision ; that Marion Treadway negligently permitted William Treadway so to operate said automobile, when he, Marion Treadway, knew or by the exercise of ordinary care woxüd Jiave seen • or1 ¡heard the on-comiñg car in time to have stopped the automobile and avoided injury; that Marion Treadway negligently failed to either look or to listen before permitting the automobile to back on to the tracks, when by the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety by looldng, he could have seen said car, or listening heard it, in time to have stopped the a¡utomobile and prevented said collision.
“At the close of plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of the case, defendant asked for a peremptory instruction, which the court refused to give. Upon this it is urged here that plaintiff was not entitled to recover under any theory of negligence counted on in his petition, and the contentions are: (a) That plaintiff was not entitled to recover under the last-chance doctrine, because there was no proof as to the relative positions of the automobile and the street cár, and no showing* that the car could have been stopped in time; (b) that plaintiff was not entitled to recover under the negligent-speed theory *165

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 1037, 300 Mo. 156, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treadway-v-united-railways-company-mo-1923.