Whiffen v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

262 S.W. 460, 216 Mo. App. 224, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 102
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 262 S.W. 460 (Whiffen v. Missouri Pacific Railroad) 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
Whiffen v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 262 S.W. 460, 216 Mo. App. 224, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 102 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*228 FARRINGTON, J.

Plaintiff recovered judgment in the trial court for personal injuries and damage to a motor truck in which he was riding. A collision between the motor truck and one of defendant’s trains occurred at a street crossing iii Poplar Bluff. The motor truck was traveling east on Vine street, and the intersection of Vine street and defendant’s railroad tracks is at the bottom of a sharp incline or hill, but after crossing- the railroad tracks, which run practically north and south, Vine street continues on across a bridge over Black River. In going east down this hill the street is in a cut which the evidence shows obstructs a view of the railroad tracks to the north until a point is reached somewhere between fifteen and twenty-five feet of defendant’s west railroad track, there being more than one track at this crossing. The train that struck plaintiff’s truck was coming from the north, which, under all of the evidence, could not have been seen by the plaintiff or the driver of his motor truck until the truck had reached a point twenty-five feet from the tracks, and then at that point a view of the tracks to the north was something like ninety to *229 one hundred feet, the hill on the north side of Vine street obstructing the view.

The petition contains a number of charges of negligence but was submitted in instructions on but three. The answer was a general denial and an affirmative plea of contributory negligence.

The assignments of error can be covered by a discussion of the right of plaintiff to recover at all, appellant contending that under the evidence he was guilty of contributory negligence in law; and second, that he could not recover under the humanitarian rule.

Plaintiff’s first instruction required the jury to find that the signals of warning were not given by defendant, or that the train was operated at a speed in excess of that provided for in city ordinances. The second instruction submitted the question on the humanitarian doctrine.

In order to dispose of the question of piaintiff’s contributory negligence, as a matter of law, it will be necessary to state the facts of the case, and in doing this it is our duty to state only the facts which are most favorable to plaintiff’s right to recover. No contention is made that there is not substantial evidence to the effect that defendant was guilty of failing to give warning signals as this train approached the crossing at Vine street, or that it was running at a speed in excess of that fixed by a city ordinance. The evidence shows that plaintiff, who did not live in Poplar Bluff but lived in Butler County, was familiar with this crossing, had purchased a second-hand motor truck and had procured a young man by the name of Robertson to drive it out of town for him. The truck was a second-hand Ford truck, and the driver, Robertson, was sitting on the left hand front seat operating the truck. The plaintiff was seated on the right, and standing in the rear was a young man who was going along with them. The evidence for plaintiff tends to show that as this truck started down the hill east on Vine street, at the bottom of which hill are defendant’s tracks, they were running from six to eight *230 miles an hour; that they listened and heard no signals given by an approaching train, -and that they were on the lookout for trains as they knew they passed there frequently. It is also shown that standing in the center of the street, according to defendant’s testimony, twenty-five feet west of its west rail, and according to plaintiff’s testimony from fifteen to twenty feet from the west rail, was a signal post, the defendant having installed a cross-signal for this crossing consisting of an electric hell or gong and a swinging signal, designated by some of the witnesses as a wig-wag or disc. That as they approached this street crossing they were listening for trains and for the electric signal, and that the hell or gong was not ringing nor was the wig-wag moving, both of which it was supposed to do as a train approached the crossing. Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that as they passed the signal post, which under the evidence was not over twenty-five feet from the'railroad west rail, and under plaintiff’s testimony not under fifteen feet from it, all three in the truck looked to the north and testified that no train was in sight; that they then looked to the south, seeing no train, the truck still approaching at a speed of six to eight miles an hour, and as the front of the truck reached the railroad track the cow-catcher of defendant’s train struck it, knocking it to the south off the street, destroying the truck and injuring plaintiff. The judgment for plaintiff for personal injuries was for $4000, and the damage to the truck, which was submitted on the second count in the petition, was for $125.

“Plaintiff’s testimony fairly presents his version of the accident and the surroundings, and being short we copy it in this opinion. It is as follows:

“I was in Poplar Bluff on January 18, 1922; and owned an automobile truck on that day, a half ton Ford truck. I had Mr. Robertson driving it for me that day, the young man who testified in this case. I was in the truck as it proceeded easterly on Vine street toward the appellant’s tracks, with Mr. Robertson driving. ITe was sitting in the driver’s seat and I was right at the side *231 of him. Mr. Campbell was in the back end of the car standing up.”

“As Vine street approaches the appellant’s tracks it goes down an incline, you know, and there is a bank on the north side of it. There is a signal post in the street, about the center, and I judge about fifteen feet from the railroad track. On the north side of Vine street at the intersection point with the railroad there is a big bank there. The track at that point approaches Vine street from the north on a curve. I really couldn’t tell you how high this bank is, but I judge it to be above the street about ten or fifteen feet at the signal post.”

“Q. Is it high enough to cut off the view of a train approaching from the north? A. Yes, a part of it is. By being on the right hand side of this signal post you can see something like eighty or maybe a hundred feet up the track north. ’ ’

“As the truck passed down Vine street on this occasion, I really do not know how fast it was moving, but I judge it would be about somewhere between five and eight miles an hour, not over that; it was going some faster than a man would walk. We passed on the right hand side of the signal post going toward the railroad track, east. On arriving near the signal post I looked at it; the bell on that signal post was not operating, nor was the red disc or flag operating; I looked north and didn’t see any train.”

“Q. Then what did you do ? A. We just went on down toward the track.”

“Q. What happened? A. They ran into us, the passenger train. It hit the left front wheel on the car and turned it over and threw me out. I couldn’t say exactly how far it moved the car, but it knocked it some ten feet at least. I don’t know whether it left it on Vine street or not; it was more on the walk. What I would call the cow-catcher struck the car first.”

‘ ‘ Q. Did you see the train before it struck the car ? A.

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Related

Shaffer v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
254 S.W. 257 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)
McGee v. Wabash Railroad
114 S.W. 33 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 460, 216 Mo. App. 224, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiffen-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-moctapp-1924.