Williams v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railroad

85 S.W.2d 624, 337 Mo. 667, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 412
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 85 S.W.2d 624 (Williams v. St. Louis-San Francisco 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
Williams v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railroad, 85 S.W.2d 624, 337 Mo. 667, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 412 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*670 PER CURIAM:

Action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act for personal injury received in a wreck. The cause was tried to a jury resulting in a verdict for plaintiff for $15,000. Motion for new trial was sustained and plaintiff appealed.

The petition is bottomed upon the res ipsa loquitur doctrine and alleges that plaintiff had no knowledge or means of knowledge of the cause or causes that operated to bring about the wreck; that the derailment and wrecking of the train and plaintiff’s injuries were directly caused by the negligence of the defendant. The answer is a general denial.

The motion for new trial was sustained on the ground that the court erred in refusing defendant’s peremptory request for a directed verdict. The contention is that under the law and the facts the res ipsa rule cannot be invoked. It was conceded that both plaintiff and defendant, at the time of the wreck and plaintiff’s injuries, were engaged in interstate commerce.

Plaintiff for several years had been employed by defendant as train auditor and his sole duties were to collect tickets and fares. He boarded defendant’s passenger train, the Texas Special, at Union Station, St. Louis, about six-ten p. m., Sunday, August 31, 1930. The train consisted of twelve coaches, six of which were Pullmans, which were in the rear. About fifteen miles out at what is called Osage Hills, while passing around a curve at a speed between forty and fifty miles per hour, a disastrous wreck occurred resulting in serious injury to plaintiff, and the amount of the verdict is not challenged in defendant’s brief. The engine and five or six forward coaches left the track. Plaintiff had no control' over the management of the train and knew nothing about the condition of the equipment, the track, roadbed, etc. His duties were confined solely to the fares.

At the place where the wreck occurred, defendant maintained two tracks designated as the outbound and the inbound. The train was going west on the north or outbound track. The evidence for plaintiff was to the effect that there were wheel marks on the ties north of the north rail of the outbound track and also north of the south rail of the same track; that these marks extended some 200 feet west. *671 from the point of beginning to a switch on the north side of the outbound track; that about two feet east of the point where these marks on the ties first appeared, the north rails on the outbound track and on the outside of the curve were joined with angle bars which had four holes for bolts; that two of these holes were without bolts, and the nut on each of the two bolts in the' bars was sheared off; that there was a spike about eighteen inches west of the angle bars mentioned and this spike was bent over from the rail; and plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that about seventy-five per cent of the ties from the switch east to the point where the wheel marks first appeared on the ties “were in a more or less deteriorated condition.” The condition of the ties east of the point where the wheel marks first appeared on the ties is not clear. Plaintiff’s evidence also tended to show that the train at the time of the wreck was about four minutes behind schedule.

Plaintiff testified that after leaving the station, he had worked the train and had gone “to what we call the office or combination . that is, the office where we unload our stuff, and had just got my stuff out of my pockets like this and had not yet gotten it all out, I don’t think, when I felt some sudden jar and leaving the track and a kind of lurch that way, and a lot of dust, and that quick, I went out.” Plaintiff was rendered unconscious and was in the hospital some time thereafter.

George D. Schroeder, chief of police of the city of Kirkwood, and a,witness for plaintiff, testified that he arrived at the scene of the wreck about seven o ’clock and shortly after the wreck and that about eight o’clock, he made an examination of the track from the switch east for “about 200 or 220 feet,” and that he saw the wheel marks on the ties; and that “at the point where I first saw the marks: on the ties like wheels had been over them, I didn’t see or notice any rocks or anything of that kind around there. There was none right there, only little bit of rocks such as gravel and things like that, ballast rocks on the tracks.” This witness stated that he examined particularly as to rocks, and as we interpret the record, the reference to the point where he first saw the marks on the ties is the point east of the switch where the marks first appeared on the ties. We mention the subject of rocks here because, as will presently appear, it was the theory of defendant that some one not connected with it, put a rock or rocks on the north rail of the outbound track and that such caused the wreck. Schroeder further testified as to the angle bars with only two bolts and the nuts of' these sheared off as above stated. He stated on cross-examination that the rails joined by the angle bars mentioned were “still together and held by the tie plate and two bolts.”

Archie W. Kehr, a witness for plaintiff, testified that two or three days after the wreck, he examined the track for a distance of 200 *672 or 300 feet east from the switch and that the ties he observed “were rotted.” This witness examined from the switch east to the “hot dog stand,” but it is not disclosed how far east of the switch this stand was. He stated that the ties along by the hot dog stand ‘ ‘ were not pulled out of the ground at that point. They were still in the ground. They were not pulled up, but you could take pieces out of them, or kick pieces off of the top of the ties with your foot.”'

Corliss N. Williams, a contractor and builder and a son of plaintiff, went to the scene of the wreck in the forenoon of the next day thereafter to get his father’s clothing and while there, made an examination of the track from a point a short distance west of the switch back east as far as the wheel marks appeared .on the ties. This witness testified that he noticed “some marks on the ties there at a point east of where the engine lay. With reference to the place where these marks occurred on the ties, at that point or back immediately east of there, I would say the general condition of the entire roadbed was about 75% of the ties were bad; 75% of the ties were in a more or less deteriorated condition. I mean the ties were in a decaying stage of preservation. I didn’t notice anything at all with reference to the rails or marks on the steel rails themselves. I do not know anything about the angle bars or anything like that.” On cross-examination, this witness testified: “Q. Were there any rails out or any track torn up east of the switch stand that you observed ? A. Yes. They were not torn up but they were loose. They had been pulled loose. Q. Out of position? A. Yes, sir. Q. East of the switch stand? A. Yes. The rails were in a more or less spread condition from the train.”

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W.2d 624, 337 Mo. 667, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-mo-1935.