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

36 Mo. App. 203, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 263
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 Mo. App. 203 (Wilburn 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
Wilburn v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co., 36 Mo. App. 203, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 263 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, a colored boy then about fifteen years of age, received an injury, in the year 1881, while attempting to alight from the passenger train of the defendant, in the night-time, at a coal chute near DeSoto station, in this state, which resulted in the amputation [206]*206of both his legs. He brought the present action to recover damages for this injury, and recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, from which the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

I. The first assignment of error which we shall consider is, that the defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence should have been sustained, because the petition failed to state a cause of action. The amended petition, after stating certain preliminary matter which need not be set out, recited that, on or about the twenty-sixth day of August, 1881, the plaintiff was a passenger in one of the passenger cars of the defendant on its railroad, from Taylor street station, in St. Louis, to the town of Mineral Point, in Washington county, Missouri, for which the plaintiff paid the defendant $1.65 as fare, the price of a ticket which he had purchased from the agent of the defendant at Taylor street station, to Mineral Point. That, after leaving Taylor street station and before reaching Jefferson Barracks, the conductor of the train took up plaintiff ’s ticket, at which time the plaintiff told the conductor that he wanted to stop over night at the coal chute near DeSoto, or at DeSoto, which the defendant said he could do. The petition then continued thus: “Plaintiff states that he afterwards went to sleep, and slept until the conductor, or some other employe on said train, of said defendant, woke him up at said coal chute or DeSoto, and informed him that this was the place where he wanted to wait over for the night. Plaintiff states that he hurried to the front platform of the car, after being waked up as aforesaid, and that the train was moving, and it was very dark, and he did not want to get off the train then, was afraid of being injured ; that the conductor, or some other employe of said defendant, of (sie) said train, to the contrary notwithstanding, ordered him to jump from said train, which he did, as he was negligently directed to do by [207]*207said conductor or other employe; and was then and there, by said moving train, thrown around just before said platform, falling in front of said ears, which, with two or three other cars, passed over his body; and that he did then and there receive such grave and serious personal injuries as resulted in the loss of both his legs, making him a helpless cripple for life. Plaintiff further states that the employe on said passenger train who ordered him to jump from said train, under the circumstances as aforesaid, was guilty of the grossest negligence and incompetency in the discharge of his duty as such employe; and that he, the plaintiff, received the personal injuries complained of as aforesaid, in consequence of the gross neglect of duty and unreasonable conduct of the officers, agents, and employes managing and operating said passenger train upon which plaintiff was travelling as aforesaid.”

The objection to this petition is indicated by the words in italics, —that it does not state that the “other employe” who gave the direction to the plaintiff to alight was authorized by the defendant to give such directions to passengers. But we think that the petition need not state this, because, in our opinion, the plaintiff need not prove it in order to a recovery. This question is not governed by the ruling of this court in JParber n. Railroad, 32 Mo. App. 378, where the plaintiff was hurt by the alleged negligence of a brakeman of a freight train in putting him off the train, and where it was held that he could not recover without showing that the brakeman, in putting him off, was acting in the line of his duty. The distinction is between the case of a trespasser and of a passenger, and this distinction was recognized in that case. A railway carrier owes to its passengers the duty, especially in the night-time, of giving them reasonable warning and direction as to alighting from the train at their destination. The passenger cannot know, at his peril, the authority of the various servants of the company; and if one of them [208]*208undertakes to give a passenger such warning or direction, the passenger is entitled to presume that he is authorized to do it and is acting in the line of his duty in doing it. This principle was recognized and acted upon by the supreme court of Illinois in the late case of Lake Shore, etc., Railroad v. Brown, 123 Ill. 162; s. c., 5 Am. St. Rep. 510, 523, where it was held that an instruction was properly refused which made the plaintiff ’s right of recovery depend on the authority of the switch-man or engineer to direct the deceased to take passage upon the engine, without reference to his apparent authority, and whether the deceased knew of such want of authority, or not.

II. The next assignment of error relates to the first instruction. In order to a proper understanding of this, it will be necessary to state the substance of the evidence. The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff purchased a ticket at Taylor street station, in St. Louis, to Mineral Point, as alleged in the petition,— intending, however, to get off at the coal chute, a little north of DeSoto, where he had a friend living ; that he advised the conductor of his desire to get off at that place, and the conductor told him that he would allow him to do so; that, thereupon, the plaintiff went to sleep, and when the train arrived at that place, some employe of the defendant woke him, and told him to get off ; that he went to the front platform -of the car in which he was riding and attempted to get off, the train being in slow motion at the'time; that, in stepping down, he missed the lower step and fell, and the car struck him in some manner and threw him under the wheels, so that his ankles were run over by some of the wheels, and so crushed and lacerated that amputation became necessary; that he cried for help, and was found on the track after the train had passed for some distance ; that he was removed first to DeSoto station on a flat “push car,” that he was afterwards taken to defendant’s-hospital in St. Louis, which hospital was [209]*209maintained by the defendant for the benefit of its employes; that his legs were there amputated, and that he remained there for about six months at the expense of the defendant.

On the other hand, the defendant’s evidence tended to show that the plaintiff received the hurt by reason, of the fact, that when the engine whistled for DeSoto station, the plaintiff went out upon the front platform of the car in which he was riding, to see if he could discover any of his friends, and lost his balance and fell off the car. The plaintiff acknowledged to one witness-that he was riding on the front end of the baggage car. The evidence of both parties showed that the train on which he was riding was an express train, and the defendant’s evidence showed that it was not customary for that train, going south, to stop at the coal chute. Another witness, who found the plaintiff crawling between the tracks after the accident happened, thinks that the witness told him that he had fallen off the train.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Mo. App. 203, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilburn-v-st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-moctapp-1889.