Turbett v. Thompson

252 S.W.2d 319, 363 Mo. 577, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 680
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 10, 1952
Docket42768
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 252 S.W.2d 319 (Turbett v. Thompson) 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
Turbett v. Thompson, 252 S.W.2d 319, 363 Mo. 577, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 680 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

HYDE, P. J.

Action for damages for personal injuries sustained when plaintiff was struck by defendant’s engine. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $18,000.00, and defendant has appealed.

The case was submitted on humanitarian negligence of failure to warn, stop or slacken, speed. The question for decision is whether plaintiff made a case for the jury. We, therefore, consider the evidence [320] most favorably to plaintiff’s contentions.'

Plaintiff was struck on the Sand Plant crossing, at the west end of defendant’s Jefferson City yards, which crosses five of defendant’s tracks. The general direction of defendant’s tracks was east and west. The crossing was about 16 feet wide and the road went north and east to the Sand Plant on the bank of the Missouri River. There was a pump house on the river bank about 55 feet north of defendant’s north track. There was also a boat dock nearby. Plaintiff went there about 2:00 A. M. on the night of December 28, 1949 to look for a motor that had been stolen from him. He did not find the motor and as he started back, defendant’s freight train had started west from a point in the yards about 1000 feet east of the crossing. The train was on the north track, which was straight for 300 feet east of the crossing and *579 which, had a grade of 0.64% ascending to the west. Plaintiff related what happened as follows: “I walked to within twelve feet of the track, the north rail, and I looked and glanced to my left, and I seen the train approaching. * * * Then I looked to the west and started walking. * * * I thought the train was on .the second track * * '* I got within six or eight inches of the south rail of the north track. I was looking at a signal that attracted my attention up the track, * * * to my right. When I got near the south rail I turned around to my left again and seen the train was on top of me. * * * It wasn’t over six or seven feet. * * * I jumped. * * * And something brushed my left leg and spun me around and tripped me, and I fell on my buttocks and back on my back. The train ran over my leg. ’ ’

Plaintiff not only saw the headlight but heard the engine chugging loud enough to prevent him from hearing the engine bell and he knew the train was moving. Tie stopped (coming to a complete standstill) twelve feet from the north rail of the north track and looked east toward the train. He then started forward slowly, walking about two miles per hour, taking steps about two and one-half feet long (plaintiff was about six feet tall), looking west at a red signal light about 900 feet away, walking about a foot west of the center of the road. . Plaintiff said he saw no headlight to the west and that there was no other engine at or near the crossing except the one he saw and heard coming from the east. He was not trying to beat ,the engine; he was not in a hurry and had the whole night to spend. He intended to go back to look for the motor again before morning. The chugging of the engine continued right up to the time he was struck and got louder as the engine approached the crossing. The headlight was bright and would blind him if he looked at it very long, but he could see the outline of the engine. The engineer saw plaintiff standing near the track when the front end of the engine was 50 or 55 feet from him. (He said plaintiff was then three or four feet from the track and that plaintiff waved to him.) The parties agree that the speed of the train was from five to seven miles per hour.

Plaintiff had two expert witnesses on stopping distances, James T. Walker and Frederick Biery, retired locomotive engineers. Both testified 25 to 30 feet would be thé stopping distance at six miles per hour (defendant’s evidence was 80 feet) for a train of the length and weight of the one involved on the grade shown. (2 engines, 5 empties, 39 loads, 2 cabooses, total weight 2510 tons.) Walker said the engineer’s reaction time would be 6/10 of a second. Biery said it would take approximately two seconds from the time the valve was put into emergency until the brakes were fully applied. During that time he said the train would travel about 18 feet. Walker said at six miles per hour the speed would be reduced *580 two-thirds after running 20 feet after the brakes were applied. The overhang of the engine was 34 inches and Biery said a man four feet from the rail would be in the clear of a slow moving train.

Plaintiff’s theory is that his danger zone of imminent peril commenced when he started toward the track from the point where he stood still 12 feet from the north rail. He walked, at 2 miles per hour, between 16 and 17 feet. (12 feet to [321] the rail; the distance between the rails was 4 feet 8% inches and plaintiff had not cleared the south rail.) The train going three times as fast as plaintiff was, therefore, about 50 feet from plaintiff’s path over the crossing when he started toward the track. However, we think plaintiff’s theory is incorrect in assuming that the engineer’s duty commenced at that time. Only obliviousness of the approach of the train could extend the danger zone that far and the engineer was only required to act on reasonable appearances of obliviousness. (Womack v. Missouri Pacific R. Co., 337 Mo. 1160, 88 S. W. (2d) 368; Elkin v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 335 Mo. 951, 74 S. W. (2d) 600; Allen v. Kessler, Mo. Sup., 64 S. W. (2d) 630.) Thus the danger zone would commence at the point where reasonable appear anees of obliviousness began.

Plaintiff claims obliviousness because he thought the train was on the second track but the engineer could not know what he thought and failure to anticipate that he would think so would not be humanitarian negligence. The reasonable appearances of the situation were that plaintiff knew the train was approaching when he looked directly at it. There could hardly be a more evident warning of its approach than its bright headlight and in addition to that there was the chugging noise of the engine which plaintiff said was louder than the engine bell. A whistle would not have given plaintiff any more information than he .had as to which track the train was on, and plaintiff so admitted in his testimony, but in any event there was no humanitarian duty to warn when the reasonable appearances were that plaintiff was aware of the approach of the train. (Pentecost v. St. Louis, M.B.T.R. Co., 334 Mo. 572, 66 S. W. (2d) 533; Lister v. Ludwig, 362 Mo. 162, 240 S. W. (2d) 694.) The engineer was not bound to anticipate that plaintiff (walking slowly) would go ' on the track when the bright headlight of the engine was shining directly on him. It was said in oral argument (on rehearing) that a whistle after plaintiff got on the track would have caused him to accelerate his pace so that he could have escaped. We think it is wholly a matter of speculation and conjecture, under these circumstances, whether a whistle would have prevented the casualty. (See Vietmeier v. Voss, Mo. Sup., 246 S. W. (2d) 785.) Plaintiff’s cited cases Marczuk v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 355 Mo. 536, 196 S. W. (2d) 1000, *581 l.c. 1002-3; Larey v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co., 333 Mo. 949, 64 S. W. (2d) 681, l.c. 684; Diel v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 238 Mo. App. 1046, 192 S. W. (2d) 608 are not in point on this situation.

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Bluebook (online)
252 S.W.2d 319, 363 Mo. 577, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turbett-v-thompson-mo-1952.