Woodward v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

295 S.W. 98, 316 Mo. 1196, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 733
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 98 (Woodward 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
Woodward v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 295 S.W. 98, 316 Mo. 1196, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 733 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*1199 GANTT, J.

This is a suit under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while working as a yard clerk for the defendant in the yards located at the state line in Kansas City. Judgment was for plaintiff for $9800, and defendant has appealed.

Respondent alleged in the petition several grounds of negligence, but at the close of all the evidence amended the petition to conform to the proof by charging that the employees of appellant were negligent “in carelessly and negligently causing, suffering and permitting said ear to be kicked in upon said track and in failing to warn respondent of said fact when they saw this respondent on top of said refrigerator car and in the act of inspecting the same and in a position of imminent danger and peril in which he wotdd’ be likely to be hurt and injured by the kicking of said car in on said track and when they knew or by the exercise of ordinary care on their *1200 part could reasonably have anticipated that respondent was oblivious to his peril and of the fact that said car was being kicked in upon said track.”

The answer was a general denial with pleas of assumption of risk and contributory negligence. The reply was a general denial.

About three o’clock a. m. on the 28th of July, 1921, respondent was on top of a refrigerator car on switch track No. 24, inspecting the ice bunkers, when another car, consigned to the Fowler Packing Company, was switched onto the same track, striking two. cars standing east of the refrigerator car, and they in turn struck the refrigerator car, and respondent was thereby hurled off the car to the ground and injured. The yard in question was an active switching yard, consisting of tracks numbered 19 to 41. Other facts will be noted.

We will approach a solution of the questions involved by conceding, without deciding, that the case falls within the general rule announced in the section-hand cases. The trial court so ruled. The respondent abandoned all grounds of negligence excepting the one covered by the amendment, and the case was submitted to the jury under the humanitarian rule, requiring the jury to find that the field man saw respondent on top of the ear in peril and oblivious thereto; that the field man knew or by the exercise of ordinary care on his part could reasonably have anticipated that respondent did not know said car was being kicked onto said track — all in time thereafter by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of said field man to have warned respondent in time to have prevented injury; that the field man failed to so warn respondent; that said field man was thereby guilty of negligence; that respondent’s injuries were directly caused by said negligence; and that respondent did not assume the risk as defined in other instructions.

I. Assignment of error No. 1: “The court erred in admitting evidence on behalf of the plaintiff to the effect that it was the custom of the field switchman to notify the plaintiff of the intended movement before kicking a car on a track while he was making inspection of a refrigerator car thereon. The petition contained no averment of such a custom, and without pleading the existence of such a custom the plaintiff should not have been permitted to introduce any evidence thereof.”

In support of this contention it directs our attention to Kirkland v. Bixby, 282 Mo. 462. In that case a section hand “was killed in a collision between the hand car upon which he was going to his work and one of defendant’s trains.” The defendant was charged with negligence in failing to ring' the bell and sound the whistle while running through the fog to warn the crew of the hand car of the approach of the train. Plaintiff relied upon a local custom to ring *1201 the. bell and sound the whistle while passing through a log. Under the general rule section men must look out for themselves. As against them the train crew has a clear track. We held that the plaintiff relying for a recovery on said custom should have pleaded the custom. In the instant case respondent did not seek a recovery on a custom. On the contrary, a recovery was sought under the general rule. Under the original charges of negligence in the petition and the pleas of contributory negligence and assumption of risk, a custom of the field man to notify respondent before' kicking a car onto a track while respondent was making an inspection of a car was admissible in evidence. It was an evidentiary fact tending to show that the respondent was not. guilty of contributory negligence, and that he did not assume the risk. [Kinney v. Met. St. Ry. Co., 261 Mo. 113; Osborne v. Wells, 211 S. W. 892; State ex rel. Pelligreen Const. Co. v. Reynolds, 279 Mo. 497, 498; Majors v. Kansas City Ry. Co., 228 S. W. 517.]

Appellant could have tendered an instruction limiting the effect of this evidence.

II. Assignment of error No: 2: “The court erred in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of the evidence.”

The respondent at the time of his injury was working from 11 p. M until 7 a. m., and had been a yard clerk in this yard since the 11th of March, 1919. On the night in question twenty freight cars arrived at Kansas City over the Omaha Division of the appellant and were set out of the train some distance from the yard. They were pushed from this place by the switch engine onto the middle track of this yard. In the “set out” were three cars consigned to the Fowler Packing Company, and a refrigerator car consigned to Swift & Company, at Sherman, Texas. Respondent received advanced information by telephone of the number of cars, the car initials, numbers, contents and the various destinations, whether for delivery to consignee or some other railroad for further transportation. On arrival he would get the way-bills, the conductor’s list of the cars and would make out an interchange sheet and also make out cards to be tacked on the cars showing the destination and contents of each car. When he tacked the cards on the cars he would get the seal records and would then make the icing inspection of the refrigerator cars by climbing on top of the car and examining the bunkers. He would ordinarily wait until the switching crew had broken up the “set out” before inspecting the refrigerator cars.

While the respondent was at work in the yard office- on the train sheets and cards, the switching crew was engaged in breaking up *1202 the “set out” and assembling tbe ears of like destination on the same track. In doing so different tracks throughout the yard were used. The refrigerator car was the first car kicked onto track 24. Afterwards, two of the three cars of stock for Fowler Packing Company were kicked onto this track and were standing near the refrigerator car. Only one switch engine could work in this yard, and the switching crew consisted of the engineer and fireman; Kasbergei*, the foreman; Mizee, the “pin puller,” and Morris, the field man. In switching the crew would kick cars from the east to the west onto the different tracks. Mizee worked' near the engine and uncoupled the cars that they might be kicked onto the different tracks. Morris worked some distance from the engine.

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Related

Jenkins v. Wabash Railway Co.
73 S.W.2d 1002 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
Goodwin v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
72 S.W.2d 988 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
Norton v. Wheelock
23 S.W.2d 142 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 98, 316 Mo. 1196, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-mo-1927.