Van Norman v. Illinois Central Railroad Company

320 S.W.2d 512, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 923
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 12, 1959
Docket46666
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 320 S.W.2d 512 (Van Norman v. Illinois Central Railroad 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
Van Norman v. Illinois Central Railroad Company, 320 S.W.2d 512, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 923 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

VAN OSDOL, Commissioner.

Plaintiff, Thomas Van Norman, instituted this action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq.) for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained when plaintiff, employee of defendant Illinois Central Railroad Company, was being transported in a railroad motorcar in connection with his employment and was thrown to the roadbed and injured when the motorcar was derailed by a closed switch in defendant’s yards at Laurel, Mississippi. A jury returned a verdict for plaintiff awarding $62,400 damages. Defendant has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

At the place in defendant’s yard at Laurel where the north end of defendant’s house track connects by a switch with the main line, there is a switch stand or standard six feet high a few feet east of the main line, which standard bears a red, arrow-shaped vertical target two feet high and one foot wide. In a northbound move-' ment of a railroad motorcar (or train of cars) on the house track toward the switch at the main line, if the flat side of the target is displayed to the operator of the motorcar it is indicated that the switch points of the switch are so aligned that the motorcar can move onto the main line. But if the edge or profile of the target is displayed to the view of the operator in such northbound movement, it is indicated that the switch points are aligned “against” the movement of the motorcar with flanged wheels from the house track onto the main line. When the switch points are so aligned “against” the stated northbound movement, the west switch point is in contact with the west rail of the main-line track and the east switch point is not in contact with the east rail, and traffic may not move from the house track onto the main line. And if such a northbound movement were continued to and into the switch with switch points so aligned there would be a likelihood of derailment because there would be no space through which the flanged left wheels of *514 the motorcar could pass onto the west rail of the main-line track.

At 7:30 in the morning of March 11, 1955, defendant’s assistant foreman Barlow and members of a paint crew including plaintiff had loaded the motorcar with ladders, brushes and paints preparatory to moving through the house-track switch onto the main line in proceeding to their place of work. Barlow and plaintiff and the other members of the crew had taken their regularly assigned seats on the motorcar. Plaintiff was seated with his face to the rear. He was the “lookout” man to protect the crew and motorcar against movement of traffic from the rear.

In operating the motorcar, the operator “always keeps his eyes on the front, looking for open switches or closed switches * * * if the switch points are aligned against the motor car as he approaches the switch * * * he is supposed to stop and get off and line the switch point (s) where you can bear into the other track.”

The northbound movement on the house track started at a point approximately 1,000 feet south of the house-track switch.

There was substantial evidence introduced tending to show that when the motorcar was operated in northbound approach to the switch, the edge or profile of the target on the switch stand was exposed to the view of the operator from a distance of as much or more than three hundred feet; that the target, displayed in profile, correctly indicated the fact that the switch points were closed against the northbound movement of traffic through the switch onto the main line. However, the operator did not stop the motorcar in safety short of the switch. The motorcar was derailed, and plaintiff was thrown violently to the roadbed and seriously injured.

Herein upon appeal, defendant-appellant has contended error in the giving of plaintiff’s verdict-directing Instruction No. 1. But our examination of the transcript on appeal shows that defendant, in its motion for a new trial, did not assign error of the trial court in giving any instruction. The two (only) assignments in defendant’s motion for a new trial pertained to excessiveness of the award. In this situation we shall not consider contentions of error in instructing the jury in the face of the mandatory rule that allegations of error, “in order to be preserved for appellate review, must be presented to the trial court in a motion for new trial (with stated exceptions) * Section 512.160, subd. 1 RSMo 1949, V.A. M.S.; Supreme Court Rule 3.23, 42 V.A.M.S. 30; Brock v. Gulf, M. & O. R. Co., Mo.Sup., 270 S.W.2d 827. However, in defendant-appellant’s brief we have observed it is contended plaintiff had not made out a case submissible to the jury, and defendant in effect'requests that we review this question under Supreme Court Rule 3.27, 42 V.A.M.S. 31. Upon such request, we review the question under Rule 3.27, although a defendant did not file a motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of all the evidence (or filed a defective one), and did not direct the trial court’s attention to this question in any after-trial motion, because, if a plaintiff has failed to make a submissible case, to permit his judgment to stand would be usually, if not always, a plain error affecting substantial rights and usually, if not always, would result in manifest injustice. Millar v. Berg, Mo.Sup., 316 S.W.2d 499.

Defendant urges that no substantial evidence was introduced tending to show facts assertedly essential to plaintiff’s case. It is said there was no evidence introduced tending to establish whether or not the motorcar was equipped with any kind of stopping device; and if it was so equipped, whether or not it was working properly; and if it was so equipped and if it was operating properly, the distance within which the motorcar could be stopped at various speeds. And also it is said that indeed there was no evidence introduced tending to show the speed at which the motorcar was moving at any time from *515 the time it started until the casualty occurred.

Specifically, plaintiff had alleged defendant’s employee, operating the motorcar carelessly and negligently, failed to stop the motorcar before its wheels struck the switch points and thereby avoid a derailment and plaintiff’s injury when the employee knew or by the exercise of due care should have known that the switch points were aligned against the house track and that a failure to stop would likely derail the motorcar and injure plaintiff. The alleged negligent act of omission here — the negligent failure to stop — which allegedly caused plaintiff’s injury was a simple one. We discern no material difference here from a charge of a negligent act of commission — “did carelessly and negligently run into” a switch. Compare Jenkins v. Wabash R. Co., 335 Mo. 748, 73 S.W.2d 1002. See also Jones v. Central States Oil Co., 3S0 Mo. 91, 164 S.W.2d 914. As we see it, the petition charged a specific but simple violation of defendant’s duty to plaintiff, an employee, who was being transported in connection with his employment, to exercise ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety. This duty included the obligation to exercise ordinary care to prevent a derailment. Jenkins v. Wabash R. Co., supra; Lloyd v.

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Bluebook (online)
320 S.W.2d 512, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-norman-v-illinois-central-railroad-company-mo-1959.