Wright v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

37 S.W.2d 591, 327 Mo. 557, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 31, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 591 (Wright v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.) 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
Wright v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 37 S.W.2d 591, 327 Mo. 557, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 565 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

*562 GANTT, P. J.

— Action to recover for injury to automobile and for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in a collision of his automobile with an engine of defendant at “Buneomb Crossing” in Naylor, Ripley County, Mo. It is alleged in the petition that defendant negligently failed to give statutory warning of the approaching train. It is also alleged that defendant negligently stored cars on its sidetrack, with a car occupying a part of the highway, thereby obstructing plaintiff’s view of the approaching train and preventing him from hearing the noise of said train and thereby preventing the engineer and fireman from seeing plaintiff approaching the crossing. It is also alleged that defendant negligently ran the train, while hidden by the cars on the sidetrack, at a dangerous speed, and that as a direct result of defendant’s negligence, plaintiff was injured.

The answer was a general denial, with pleas that the injury was due solely to negligence of plaintiff and that he was guilty of contributory negligence.

Trial was had as if the reply was a general denial. The issues of failure to give statutory warning and storing cars on the side *563 track were submitted to tlie jury. Judgment for $10,000, and defendant appealed. I't contends plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

There is evidence tending to show the following: In the vicinity the railroad runs northeast and southwest. The sandy highway proceeding northwardly from the town of Naylor crosses the railroad at the “North Crossing,” which is 447 feet by rail and 600 feet by highway northeast of “Buncomb Crossing,” where the collision occurred. After the highway crosses the railroad at “North Crossing” it proceeds northwardly 150 feet, where it curves and proceeds south to “Buncomb Crossing” in the southwest part of Naylor. In other words, the highway crosses the railroad twice in this vicinity. A parallel sidetrack extends from northeast of the “North Crossing” to a point some distance southwest of “Buncomb Crossing.” The view of the railroad to the southwest of one traveling northwardly from Naylor to the “North Crossing” was obstructed, and especially by a pile of ties just southeast of the highway and within eight feet of the main track. On the southwest side of this crossing and just northwest of the sidetrack are two large oil tanks, the oil company’s office, railroad stock pens and another pile of ties. In addition there were nine cars standing on the sidetrack just northeast of “Buncomb Crossing” and twenty-three cars on the sidetrack southwest of the crossing, with the north car of the twenty-three cars extending fourteen and one-half feet into the highway. The cars to the southwest of “Buncomb Crossing” obstructed the view of one driving an automobile on the highway from the north until the front wheels of the automobile were within twenty-two inches of the north rail of the main track at this crossing.

This was not a trunk line. Only two passenger trains and a few freight trains were scheduled for a day. Plaintiff resided on a farm three miles west of Naylor, was familiar with the schedule time of the passenger trains, the obstructions near the crossings and the location of the cars standing on the sidetrack for some days. On June 6, 1927, at about 6:35 p. M. plaintiff, on his way home from Naylor, drove northwardly in his Ford truck, loaded with baby chickens, over the highway toward the “North Crossing.” As he approached the crossing Adam Hawks and son were also approaching it from the opposite direction in a horse-drawn wagon, behind which was fastened a cultivator as a trailer. Plaintiff stopped-when the horses were on the track and listened, but heard no train. He also looked to the southwest, but the ties obstructed his view. He then, while the horses were moving over the tracks, proceeded over the crossing. While traveling about twenty-five feet over the crossing, he had an unobstructed view *564 of tbe railroad, and could have seen an approaching train from the southwest from the time it reached a point about a mile from the “North Crossing.” He testified that he did not look in this direction at that time, for the reason he was giving attention to the cultivator, which he thought might collide with his car as he traveled over this unobstructed part of the crossing. After crossing the “'North Crossing” plaintiff proceeded northwardly and around the curve of the highway and then south to “Buncomb Crossing.” Approaching this crossing he could not see a train from the southwest on account of the twenty-three cars on the sidetrack. He looked over the top of the ears for smoke from an engine, but saw none. He listened for the noise of a train and warning signals, but heard none. Thereupon he drove slowly on the crossing and the collision occurred. On account of the baby chickens he traveled from Naylor to “Buncomb Crossing” at a speed of only five or six miles an hour. At the time of the collision the train was twenty-seven minutes late and running thirty miles an hour. However, steam had been shut off as the train approached the crossing and it may have been moving at greater speed. The fireman saw the automobile as it emerged from behind the standing cars. The front of the engine obstructed the view of the engineer and he did not see the automobile until the moment of the collision.

I. Defendant contends the failure of plaintiff to look for an approaching train while crossing the tracks of the "North Crossing" was contributory negligence as a matter of law. The contention rests on the statement of plaintiff on cross-examination that ``he failed to look because he thought the train had passed." He was cross-examined at length with reference to his failure to look through the open space to the southwest for an approaching train while he was traveling over the tracks of this crossing. During the examination he also testified that Hawk stopped on the other side of the crossing, which, caused him to think a train might be approaching. However, when Hawk proceeded to drive the team over the crossing, he concluded no train was approaching. He also testified that as he traveled over the tracks his attention was given to the movements of the cultivator.

Thus it appears the statement that he failed to look because he thought the train had passed" does not stand alone. In ruling the demurrer all of his testimony on the question should be consid~red. When so considered it cannot be held that his failure to look at the time and place was negligence as a matter of law. Moreover, *hp i~'ini,~r nnr flr~ni~rn i~tffieñ th~v ~aw nlaintffl~'~ trnck *565 moving over the “North Crossing.” If plaintiff, by looking to the southwest as he drove over this crossing, could have seen the train, it follows the engineer and fireman who were in their seats could have seen the truck at the crossing. Taking the speed of the train and automobile as given and the distance traveled- by plaintiff from the “North Crossing” to “Buncomb Crossing” as given, the train could have been seen by plaintiff from the “North Crossing.” But these speeds and distances were estimates and a jury might believe from the failure of the engineer and fireman to testify on the question that the train was around the curve southwest of the crossings and could not have been seen by plaintiff from the “North Crossing.”

II.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W.2d 591, 327 Mo. 557, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1931.