Wolf v. Wabash Railway Co.

251 S.W. 441, 212 Mo. App. 26, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 81
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 441 (Wolf v. Wabash 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
Wolf v. Wabash Railway Co., 251 S.W. 441, 212 Mo. App. 26, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 81 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*34 ALLEN, P. J.

Plaintiff is the widow of Frank Wolf, deceased, and prosecutes this action under section 423,7, Revised Statutes 1919, to recover damages for the death of her deceased husband who was struck and killed by a railway train operated by defendants, while he was in the act of crossing the track of defendant railway company at a public street crossing in the city of St. Louis. The suit was instituted against the defendant railway company and its locomotive engineer, one Bickel.

The first assignment of negligence in the petition charges that the servants of the defendant railway company saw the deceased, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen him or known of his presence on or near the track and in a position of peril in time, by the exercise of ordinary care, to have stopped the train or ...checked its speed or given him timely warning of the approach thereof by whistle, in time to have warned him of the approach of.said train, and thereby avoided any injury to him, but negligently failed so to do, thereby causing his death.

The remaining five assignments of negligence are (1) the alleged negligent failure to give timely warning of the approach of said train to the crossing by blowing the whistle; (2) the alleged violation of certain city ordinances as to erecting and operating gates at the crossing, within thirty days after notice by the street commissioner of said city so to do, and limiting the speed of trains to six miles per hour if such notice be not complied with or after compliance therewith to twenty miles per hour, alleging that though the defendant railway company maintained gates at such crossing the gates were not lowered 'upon the occasion in question, and that said train was negligently operated at a rate of speed in excess of twenty miles per hour; (3) the alleged negligent operation of the train at a high and dangerous rate of speed across a public street in a populous city; (4) the alleged negligent failure to keep a lookout at such crossing, where defendants ought to *35 have anticipated the presence of persons; and (5) negligence in failing to lower said gates as a warning to the deceased.

Defendants answered separately, each answer being a general denial coupled with a plea of contributory negligence on the part of deceased. _

The trial, before the court and a jury, resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff against the defendant Wabash Railway Coippany for the sum of $5000, and in favor of the defendant Bickel. From this judgment defendant railway company prosecutes this appeal. We shall refer to that company as the defendant.

Frank Wolf was killed on the morning of November 1, 1920, at the intersection of Angelica street .and a railway track of defendant in the city of St. Louis. Angelica street is referred to as extending east and west and defendant’s track as extending north and south, and we shall so refer to them here, though it appears that north of Angelica street defendant’s track extended somewhat west of north, being nearly straight for a distance of perhaps three hundred feet and thence curving slightly toward the west. About 6:30 on the morning of the casualty Frank Wolf was walking east on the south side of Angelica street approaching defendant’s track. The sidewalk on the south side of the street did not extend across the track, and at a point twenty feet or more west of the track, where a telephone pole stood near the street curbing, the deceased, it appears, left the sidewalk and walked into Angelica street, in approximately a northeasterly direction, toward defendant’s track. When he had reached the track and, it is said, had stepped over the west rail thereof, he was struck by a southbound train of defendant and instantly killed. On the north line of Angelica street a. shed stood about twenty-eight feet west of defendant’s track, at or about the corner of which was a telephone pole.. North of- Angelica street, perhaps two hundred or two hundred and fifty feet, a switch track left the main track on the west side thereof, extending north; and it appears that a car was *36 standing on this switch track, a few feet from the main track, at a point abont three hundred feet north of Angelica street. The testimony, as a whole, shows that one approaching defendant’s track from the west on Angelica street had a view of the track north, after passing the shed mentioned, for a distance of at least three hundred feet; while defendant’s plat in evidence and the testimony in connection therewith shows that from a point at the corner of that shed, abont twenty-eight feet west of the track, there was a view north along the track, with a car on the switch in the position mentioned above, for a distance of four hundred and ninety feet, and that from a point in Angelica street four feet west of the track the view to the north was unobstructed for a distance of five hundred and sixty-two feet.

The defendant maintained gates at this crossing, but it appears that they were not operated before seven A. M;., at which time the watchman in charge thereof came on duty, and they were consequently up, i. e. open, when plaintiff:’s husband went upon the track; though it appears that this crossing was much used prior to that hour of the morning by persons working in industrial establishments located east of the track. The train involved was a local or “accommodation” train, composed of an engine and tender and three cars. The engine was running backwards, with the tender preceding it. The evidence shows that it was a clear day, ,and that at the time of the casualty it was broad daylight, though there is some testimony as to smoke in the air. The deceased was fifty-four years of age, and his sight- and hearing were good. For about eighteen months prior to his death it was his custom to cross the track at this crossing in going to his work east thereof, at about 6:30 A. M.

One Sneed, a witness for plaintiff, who lived in a house on the south side of Angelica street just west of the telephone pole on that side of the street, mentioned above, observed the movements of the deceased as the latter approached the track and was struck by the train. He testified that he was standing at the corner of his *37 house when Wolf passed and went from the sidewalk into the street. He said: “When he passed me he was on the sidewalk, going angling out of the street, because nobody goes straight over the sidewalk to the track. They always cut by the.telephone pole and step out into the middle of the street and then go across the tracks. . . . He was fixing to go up on the track, but he'stopped just before he got up on the track and tightened his pipe in his mouth. . . . My attention was attracted by a bell ringing. ... I just looked around and hollered and I saw Mr. Wolf go up in the air. ’ ’ He said that he had heard no bell- until the ringing of the bell attracted his attention just before Wolf was struck, nor did he hear'any whistle prior to that time; that in his j'udgment the train was running about thirty-five miles per hour, and when it stopped the rear end thereof was about a. block and a half south of Angelica street; and that when Wolf stopped and “shoved his pipe in his mouth” he was about four feet from the track. When asked as to when he heard the ringing of the bell with reference to the time when Wolf Avas struck, he said: “All just about under one. The bell ringing and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 441, 212 Mo. App. 26, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-wabash-railway-co-moctapp-1923.