Womack v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

88 S.W.2d 368, 337 Mo. 1160, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 368 (Womack v. Missouri Pacific 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
Womack v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 88 S.W.2d 368, 337 Mo. 1160, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 557 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This is an action for wrongful death, on behalf of next of kin, under Section 3262, Revised Statutes 1929. Plaintiff's daughter, Nellie Womack, was killed by defendant's train on a public crossing in Butler County. The case was submitted only upon negligence under the humanitarian doctrine in failing to give warning of the approach of the train. Plaintiff recovered a verdict for $10,000, and from the judgment entered thereon defendant has appealed.

Defendant did not call the trainmen to the witness stand and offered no evidence except photographs and measurements, but contends that plaintiff's evidence was not sufficient to make a jury case. We will therefore consider the evidence from the viewpoint most favorable to plaintiff's contentions. Miss Womack was the teacher at a country schoolhouse located on the west side of plaintiff's right of way, which ran through that locality in a northerly direction. She stayed at the farm home of B.A. Stoecker, about 1000 feet east of the right of way. The day of the accident was the last day of school and there was to be a community dinner at the schoolhouse. Miss Womack started in her car, a Model A Ford coupe, about eight A.M. to make preparations. The road from the Stoecker house to the schoolhouse was a dirt road ("some sand and some gumbo"), which ran east and west. The railroad crossed it at almost a right angle. There had been about a one-inch rain during the night so that on the morning of the accident, the road was slick, muddy and full of ruts, "probably a foot to eighteen inches deep." Miss Womack started from the Stoecker house with two small Stoecker children and Mrs. Stoecker's daughter, Mrs. Crenshaw, then Mildred Porter. Miss Womack, driving, sat on the left side of the car; the side windows were open. Miss Porter was seated on the right side of the car and one of the Stoecker children was on Miss Porter's lap, the other seated between them. Only Miss Porter survived the accident and she testified to the course of the car and the actions of the driver before reaching the track. She was unconscious for some time after the accident.

The country on each side of the road was flat and defendant's track was on an embankment from three and one-half to four feet higher than the surrounding country. Beginning at a point about 1520 feet south of the crossing, there was timber which obscured the view of the track on the south. It was, however, possible to see south down the track as far as the timber after passing an orchard, on the south side of the road, about 400 feet east of the crossing. It was possible to see farther south on the track from points nearer the crossing. At fifty feet east the view was 4100 feet south. Near the edge of the right of way and about sixty feet east of the track, there were two trees, one nineteen inches in diameter and the other twenty-one inches in diameter. One tree was in the highway a little north *Page 1164 of the south highway fence, the other just south of this fence. These trees were close together and it was shown that they obscured the view of the track at that point so that they made a blind spot, for a few seconds, for a driver going west. There was a mudhole that morning on the right-hand side of the road about even with the two trees, so that "Miss Womack had to go around the mudhole on the left-hand side of the road and that put her over next to the two trees." Miss Porter testified that both she and Miss Womack looked south when they passed the orchard about 400 feet from the crossing; that they could see "down to the woods;" and that "the train hadn't come out of the woods." She said that she looked south again near the right of way when they "had not passed the two trees" and that Miss Womack was then "either looking or she was just turned around in that direction." She said that she "could see down to the scope of woods except the space where the two trees hid the view." Miss Porter also said that the next time she looked south the "front part of the car was on the track;" that then "the train was on the cattle guard;" that she "never heard the train sound any alarm;" and that Miss Womack had "looked twice to the south," the second time being before they passed the trees. Miss Porter further said that "the road was rather wet and rather muddy that morning;" that the mudhole was in the dirt part of the road and "might have been directly across from the right of way fence;" that Miss Womack was driving the automobile at about five miles per hour; and that "it continued at about the same rate of speed on up to the crossing."

The train was about an hour late and was running from sixty to sixty-five miles per hour. The engine was stopped about a quarter of a mile north of where it struck the automobile. The rise of the road to get over the track was shown by the following measurements: 70 feet east of the track, the road was 3.06 feet below the top of the rails; 60 feet east, it was 2.09 feet below; 50 feet east, it was 2.06 feet below; 40 feet east, it was 1.09 feet below; 30 feet east, it was 1.04 feet below; and 20 feet east, it was only six inches below. It had some gravel on it across the right of way, but "the roadway of the dump would be slick" and the pictures show ruts in it. It was shown that a car traveling five miles per hour could be stopped within two feet after putting on the brakes. A number of witnesses, who lived in the neighborhood, said they heard and saw the train. The testimony of these witnesses was that it whistled for a highway crossing south of the woods but did not whistle for the one where the accident occurred. There were two short alarm blasts blown near the crossing. According to some witnesses, these blasts were given when the train was one or two rail lengths from the crossing; according to others, they were after the engine was on the crossing and the automobile was in the air. One witness testified that he heard the train. *Page 1165 walked out from his house, and watched it come along. He said that he "could see in the engine when it went by, but didn't see the engineer in the cab" when the train passed his house, which was over a quarter of a mile south of the crossing. Another witness, who lived on the south side of the road about halfway between the Stoecker house and the crossing, testified that she heard the train coming and looked out of her window; that she had seen the automobile when it passed her house; that the car was getting near the right of way, when she first saw the train about halfway between the woods and the crossing; that she saw the engineer getting to this post; and that "he got up and sat down on the seat and jerked the whistle cord." She said, "I never saw the engineer until he was getting up on his seat as the train was getting up near the crossing, about 20 feet from the crossing." She also said, "the automobile was right on the crossing when the train gave the two blasts. It was just at the minute of the collision."

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 368, 337 Mo. 1160, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/womack-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-mo-1935.