Wack v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.

157 S.W. 1070, 175 Mo. App. 111, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 196
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 1070 (Wack v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wack v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co., 157 S.W. 1070, 175 Mo. App. 111, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 196 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff, a widow, under tbe statute on account of tbe wrongful death of her husband through tbe negligence of defendant in omitting to close tbe g;ates at a street crossing on its railroad. Plaintiff recovered, and defendant prosecutes tbe appeal.

It appears plaintiff’s husband was run upon and killed at tbe crossing of Barton street, a public thoroughfare in tbe city of St. Louis, and defendant’s railroad tracks. Tbe petition sets forth and counts upon an ordinance of tbe city requiring railroad companies to install and maintain, at tbe crossings of áll public streets with their railroads, gates to be lowered as a warning to persons in tbe street when tbe railroad locomotives or trains are approaching tbe crossing. Tbe ordinance further requires that such gates shall operate either automatically, or that a watchman shall at all times be in charge, to tbe end of lowering tbe gates before a locomotive or train approaches. It is admitted tbe ordinance prevailed and enjoined on defendant tbe requirements mentioned, and it appears' defendant bad installed tbe gates at Barton street crossing in accordance with the ordinance. Tbe gates were not automatic, and were operated during tbe day[117]*117time by a watchman. Bnt at the time plaintiff’s husband came upon the track and was killed — about ten o ’clock at night — no watchman was in charge, and the gates were allowed to be open. At the point in question, defendant maintained several tracks. The evidence tends to prove — that is, it affords a reasonable inference to the effect — that plaintiff’s husband came upon the railroad crossing from the west, and was killed on the second track through being run upon by defendant’s switch engine, which was moving south but backwards. The gates on the west side of the railroad track were not closed, and it is to be inferred the decedent walked upon the crossing there, for he was seen upon the crossing as if going east an instant be-. fore the locomotive ran upon him.

In approaching the railroad crossing from the west, the first track in Barton street is a switch or sidetrack, and the second the defendant’s southbound main line, while the third is its northbound main line. Plaintiff’s husband was seen at the corner of Second and Trudeau streets, about three blocks north and west of the railroad crossing on Barton street, from half past eight to nine o’clock in the evening. No one mentions having seen him thereafter until an instant before he came to his death on defendant’s southbound main line, or second track. That was about ten o’clock in the evening, or possibly a few minutes thereafter. All of the witnesses say the night was very dark and stormy. It was snowing and a blizzard prevailed. One and all agree that the wind was high, and it appears that several lights had been extinguished because of the blizzard. One of defendant’s witnesses testified that the blizzard prevailed with such force as to put out the street light at the crossing of Barton street and the railroad. It appears that a locomotive and train of ears were moving slowly and backwards to the northward on the third track from the west — that is, defendant’s northbound main line — -and that the de[118]*118cedent was standing upon the crossing facing eastward as though he was waiting for the train to pass beyond so he could move forward in Barton street to the east of the track. While thus standing, defendant’s switch engine, running backwards also, with its tender foremost, came from the north, going south on the second track from the west — that is, the southbound main line —and ran upon and killed plaintiff’s husband. It is quite clear from the evidence in the record — and, indeed, from all of it, that introduced by defendant as well as by plaintiff — that, on account of the darkness and the storm, it was difficult to discern objects for more than a very short distance. Then, too, it appears the locomotive on the third track, which was pushing a train backwards, was very near the crossing and emitting steam copiously, which, it is said by defendant’s switchman, further contributed to obscure the view thereabout. Besides the view being obscured by the combination of the extreme darkness, the prevailing blizzard,' which included drifting snow, and the steam emitted from the locomotive on the third track, it is to be inferred the noises afforded by the high wind and the escaping steam impeded the sense of hearing as well.

In this situation and in such circumstances defendant’s switch engine, running light — that is to say, single and alone without cars attached — came from the north, backing down the main line and upon the crossing, according to the evidence most favorable to plaintiff, at about twelve miles per hour. It appears the switch engine carried a headlight on the rear, or south end, of its tender — that is, on the foremost end of the tender- as it approached the crossing. But this headlight was an oil light only. The locomotive was not equipped with electric' or gas lights, as is quite usual, and, as before said, the street light had been extinguished by the wind and blizzard. However, besides the oil headlight on the south end of the locomo[119]*119tive tender, a switchman stood on either end of the footboard on the south of the tender, each of whom held an oil railroad lantern in his hands. Though it appears plaintiff’s husband, the decedent, was standing at the time either in the center of the second track on which the locomotive w;as approaching or between that track and the third one, awaiting the train then occupying the third track to move out of his way, one of these switchmen on the footboard of the locomotive says he did not see him at all. The other switchman, Yaker, who was standing on the east end of the foot-board at the south end of the tender on the engine which rai- upon decedent, says that he first saw him when the tender was not more than from three to five feet away. It appears this witness testified at the coroner’s inquest tbe day following the death that decedent was standing in the center of the southbound main fine — that is, the line on which the locomotive which ran upon him approached; but at the trial, though the same witness said he did not see decedent until the tender was within from three to five feet of him, he said, too, decedent was standing between the two tracks when first seen, and not on the main line. Touching this matter, the witness said on the trial of the case: “I seen a man standing on the crossing', and I says to the engineer, ‘Stop! There’s a fellow there.’ He was standing in between the two tracks, you understand, and if he had stayed there he would have been all right; he’d a been in the clear; he would have been safe ... Q. Where was he standing, yon say, when you first saw him? A. Why, he was standing there trying to get by, going east, I expect. He w:as standing next to the cars, and then I hollered and he got scared, and instead of him staying where he was he backed up and fell right in front of my foot and fell under. . . . Moved back and fell right in front of my leg, and I was going to shove him out that way with my foot when he fell. ... He just [120]*120stepped one step too far. . '. . Yes, sir, I hollered ‘Lookout!’ . . . He had his back towards us. When I hollered1 he looked around, and he looked the other way again and stepped back and just catched him. . . . Why he just no more than turned around just as we hit him, just sort of turned around and backed out with one leg and went right under.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 1070, 175 Mo. App. 111, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wack-v-st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-moctapp-1913.