Waller v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad

83 Mo. 608
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 83 Mo. 608 (Waller v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad) 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
Waller v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, 83 Mo. 608 (Mo. 1884).

Opinion

Norton, J.

This action was commenced by plaintiff to recover, as damages, the statutory penalty, for the" death of his wife, a passenger on one of defendant’s trains, alleged to have been occasioned by defendant’s negligence.

The petition substantially alleges as follows:

1. The incorporation of defendant and its operation of a railroad. 2. The creation of the relation of carrier and passenger between plaintiff’s wife and defendant, and defendant’s duty arising therefrom, to transport her from St. Joseph to Easton and to stop the train “a sufficient length of time for her to pass therefrom with safety.” 3. And yet the plaintiff says that the agents, ■servants and workmen of defendant, in charge of the aforesaid train, wholly disregarding their duty in that behalf, did not stop at said station or depot a sufficient length of time for said Mary Waller to pass from said train, but carelessly and negligently started said train while the said Mary Waller was passing therefrom, and the said Mary Waller without any negligence on her part in attempting to pass from said train to the platform as aforesaid, was thrown suddenly and violently down between the car and the platform and under the train aforesaid, and was run over, crushed, wounded and lacerated by the car steps and carriage wheels, and otherwise so [612]*612injured that the said Mary Waller thereafter in consequence and by reason of the said injuries, and on the 18th day of July, 1879, died. 4. That deceased was the wife of plaintiff, and that she died from the injuries received at Easton within six months next before the filing of the petition.

The answer was a general denial with a plea of contributory negligence. On the trial plaintiff obtained judgment, from which the defendant has appealed.

The first action of the court excepted to, as shown by the record, was the reception, over defendant’s objection, of the following evidence of witness Bledsoe:

“ When Mrs. Waller got to the car door, the brakeman, Ben Lynch, was with her, and as they came out of the car door he said to her: ‘Come on; hurry up’; when I first saw the brakeman he was coming out of the car door with Mrs. Waller; the train was then in motion; he said, ‘ Come on; hurry up ’ ; just as he came out of the car door, he being ahead of her; when I next saw bim he was on the depot platform and she was on the platform of the car, he again said, ‘hurry up,’ and reached out his hand for her.”

We are of the opinion that this evidence was properly received as being part of the res gestee, and as tending to-rebut the defence of. contributory negligence set up in the answer, inasmuch as it must have had a tendency to-induce the belief in the mind of Mrs. Waller that she might safely alight from the train, while moving at its. then rate of speed.

No other objection was made to the reception or rejection of evidence, and without incorporating in this opinion what was said by the witnesses, it will be sufficient to say of it, that plaintiff’s evidence tended to establish the case made in the petition, and that while plaintiff was attempting to pass from said train to the depot platform, the train started by the negligent act of defendant, without having given a reasonable time for Mrs. - Waller to alight, whereby the accident resulting in her death oc[613]*613curred. On the other hand, all the evidence of defendant tended to show that the train stopped at Easton a sufficient length of time to allow deceased to alight in safety, and all of it except that of witness, Lynch, tended to show that Mrs. Waller did not leave her seat in the car till after the train started. Witness, Lynch, who' was the brakeman, testified on his cross-examination that “ just as the train started I turned and stepped on the steps of the car and as I did so met Mrs. Waller coming down the steps.”

On this state of the evidence the court instructed for plaintiff as follows: “The court instructs the jury that it was the duty of the defendant, as a common carrier of passengers, by its agents and employes, to have stopped the passenger cars at the platform, at the depot, for a sufficient length of time to have made it safe for ingress and egress of passengers into and from the same, and to enable them to get on and off with safety. And if the jury believe from the evidence that said Mary Waller was the wife of the plaintiff, that at the time stated. in the petition she was on defendant’s train as a passenger therein to be conveyed to defendant’s station at Easton, and that when said cars arrived at the Easton station said Mary Waller attempted without negligence on her part in so doing, as defined in the instructions, to pass from said train to the depot platform, and that while attempting so to do said train and cars were started by the negligent act or careless conduct of those in charge of the train, without having given a reasonably sufficient length of time for said Mary Waller to get off said car, and that in consequence of such negligence of defendant’s employes in starting said train, the said Mary Waller, without negligence on her part directly contributing thereto, was injured, and that her death was occasioned or caused by injuries so received, they will find for plaintiff and assess his damages in the sum of five thousand ($5,000) dollars.

“The defendant’s agents and servants to whom the ■ [614]*614management of the railroad in proof was intrusted, were bound to exercise the strictest vigilance in carrying the deceased as a passenger to Easton, her destination, and to then set her down safely; and for want of care and foresight in stopping and starting the train at that station, and in giving her a reasonably sufficient time to alight, if any such want of care or foresight shall have been proved by the evidence, defendant is responsible for the direct and immediate injury resulting therefrom. But the defendant railway company was not an insurer of Mrs. Waller against any dangers to which she as a passenger on defendant’s railway train might expose herself by her own imprudence or carelessness. If she as a passenger had been carried by her stopping place by any negligence of defendant’s servants or agents, she could have recovered compensation for the inconvenience, loss of time and expenses. But if the train on which she was a passenger stopped a reasonably sufficient time to allow her to alight on the Easton passenger platform safely, and without danger, and she did not alight while the train was thus stopping, but afterwards, when said train had started from Easton station the deceased stepped upon the platform of the passenger car and attempted to alight at a time and under circumstances there and then apparent to an ordinarily prudent passenger,, when ordinary care and prudence would forbid her making the attempt, and in thus attempting to step from the train the deceased was injured, then plaintiff cannot recover.”

The following instructions were asked by the defendant, of which the first and third were given, and the others refused: 1. If the jury believe from the evidence that defendant’s train stopped at the depot platform in Easton for a time sufficient to enable Mrs. Waller, the deceased, to leave the car and pass to the depot platform with safety, they must find for the defendant. 2. If the' jury believe from the evidence that the train made but a momentary stop at the town of Easton, and, that under [615]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Mo. 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waller-v-hannibal-st-joseph-railroad-mo-1884.