Wilson v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

142 S.W. 775, 160 Mo. App. 649, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 16
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 775 (Wilson v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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
Wilson v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 142 S.W. 775, 160 Mo. App. 649, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 16 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

GRAY, J. —

Tlie plaintiff for Ms canse of action alleges tlie following facts: The appellant as a common carrier, undertook to transport a casket containing the body of the dead wife of respondent from West Plains, in this state, to Jamestown, Indiana; “that the defendant by and thorough its agents, servants and employees, wholly disregarded its duties under said contract of transportation, and in wanton and willful disregard of the rights and feelings of plaintiff, at divers times and places between West Plains and Springfield willfully, wantonly and maliciously-and in an inhuman manner, threw, stacked and piled upon said body, heavy baggage, to-wit: heavy trunks, having the appearance of trunks containing salesman’s samples; that said trunks and other baggage were piled and stacked upon and around said body as high as the ceiling of the baggage car. Plaintiff states that at Springfield, Missouri, said defendant by and through its agents, servants and employees willfully, wantonly and maliciously, and in a grossly inhuman manner pulled and dislodged said heavy baggage from the top of said stacks or piles as aforesaid causing them to fall upon the box containing the body of plaintiff’s deceased wife, causing them to bounce or bound from said box to the floor of the baggage car. Plaintiff states that defendant by and through its agents, servants and employees so used the said corpse as a bounding or bouncing board as aforesaid in the plaintiff’s presence in the willful, wanton, malicious and inhuman manner aforesaid, and in wanton, willful and malicious disregard of the plaintiff’s repeated entreaties to desist. Plaintiff states that in consequence of the aforesaid willful and grossly insulting and negligent conduct upon the part of the defendant by and through its agents, servants and employees said box containing said body was bnrsted; the lid torn loose; the screws placed in the lid to hold same on the box were torn out and bent down, and the whole outer surface of the box badly defaced and otherwise damaged. [654]*654Plaintiff states that by reason of the willful, wanton, malicious, insulting and inhuman acts of the defendant by and through its agents, servants and employees as aforesaid, plaintiff was made to' suffer great grief, pain, mental anguish, humiliation, nervous excitement and loss of sleep. Plaintiff further states that by reason of the aforesaid and other grossly wrong and negligent conduct of the defendant by and through its agents, servants and employees, said body of plaintiff’s said wife reached Jamestown, Indiana, in bad and unsightly condition, to-wit: badly purging, blood running from mouth, face and neck badly swollen, and otherwise showing that it had been violently disturbed. Plaintiff states that he was thus forced to take the box containing said body, and said body, into the presence of near relatives who had gathered for the funeral, in this damaged and unsightly condition, as aforesaid, by reason of the willful, wanton, malicious and grossly inhuman conduct of the defendants, by and through its agents, servants and employees, as aforesaid, and that he was thus forced to incur extra expense in preparing the body for interment, and that he has suffered and will suffer great grief, pain, mental anguish, humiliation and loss of sleep; all to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars. ($7500), three thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars ($3750) compensatory and three thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars ($3750') exemplary damages, for which sums he prays judgment.”

Respondent at the time of the death of his wife, resided on a farm about three miles from West Plains. Her parents resided at Jamestown, Indiana, and it was decided to take the remains there for burial. Under the rules of the defendant, dead bodies are transported as baggage, and the corpse was accepted and carried as such. It was necessary to transfer at Springfield, and also at St. Louis. The corpse was in [655]*655a casket and the casket in a box, such as are usually used for such purposes.

The defendant filed a general denial, and the cause was tried before a jury in Howell county on the 14th day of July, 1911, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, awarding him $500 compensatory damages, and $1000 exemplary damages. A judgment was rendered on this verdict, and the defendant appealed to this court.

It is appellant’s first contention that the plaintiff’s cause of action is for a breach of contract and his rights are to be measured accordingly. It is plain that the action is in tort. It is true the petition refers to a contract, but this is only matter of inducement. [Boling v. Railroad, 189 Mo. 219, 88 S. W. 35; Book v. Railroad, 75 Mo. App. 604.]

The next reason assigned for reversal, is that a corpse is not property, and that no action will lie to recover damages for injuries thereto. This is true when speaking of property in a commercial sense. [Guthrie v. Weaver, 1 Mo. App. 136; Litteral v. Litteral, 131 Mo. App. l. c. 311, 111 S. W. 872.] But in the broader meaning of the term, the husband has what the courts name a quasi property right in the dead body of his wife, which entitles him to the possession and control of the same for the purpose of proper and decent burial. [Litteral v. Litteral, supra; Koerber v. Patek, 123 Wis. 453, 102 N. W. 40, 68 L. R. A. 956.]

In Koerber v. Patek, supra, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin said: “For the purposes of this case we shall not deem it necessary to consider whether a corpse can be, in any respect, property. From the authorities above cited, and from original reason, the conclusion seems to us irresistible that in the nearest relative of one dying, so situated as to be able and willing to perform the duty of ceremonious burial, there vests the right to perform it, and that this is a legal right, which, as said in some of the cases, it is [656]*656a wrong' to violate, and which, therefore, courts can and should protect and vindicate. It is not alone with reference to property that leg*al rights exist, nor is it only those invasions of legal rights causing tangible pecuniary injury for which courts will entertain civil actions and award damages. ... We can imagine no clearer or dearer right in the gamut of civil liberty and security than to bury our dead in peace and unobstructed ; none more sacred to the individual, nor more important of preservation and protection from the point of view of public welfare and decency; certainly none'where the law need less hesitate to impose upon a wilful violator responsibility for the uttermost consequences of his act.”.

The case of Larson v. Chase, 47 Minn. 307, 50 N. W. 238, 14 L. R. A. 85, 28 Am. St. Rep. 370, is recognized in the text books and in the Koerber case, supra, and in Lindh v. Railroad, 109 N. W. 823, as the leading case in this country on this question. On the precise point now under consideration, the court in that ^ase said: “But this whole subject is only obscured and confused by discussing the question whether a corpse is property in the ordinary, commercial sense, or whether it has any value as an article of traffic. The important fact is that the custodian of it has a legal right to its possession for the purposes of preservation and burial; and that any interference with that right by mutilating or otherwise disturbing the body is an actionable wrong. And we think it may be safely laid down as' a general rule that an injury to any right recognized and protected by the common law will, if the direct and proximate consequences of an actionable wrong, be a subject for compensation.”

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 775, 160 Mo. App. 649, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-moctapp-1912.