Spooner v. St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co.
Spooner v. St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
This action is on three counts for the killing of plaintiff’s mare on the defendant railroad. It was begun before a justice, appealed to the circuit court, and by change of venue taken to the circuit court of New Madrid county, where the court, after the submission of all the evidence, directed a verdict for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals and assigns such direction as error.
Appellant insists that there is some conflict in the evidence as to the necessity for leaving the defendant’s track unfenced at the place of the accident. This point is untenable. From the end of the switch defendant’s track outwardly from the town of Malden is unfenced for about three hundred feet until it reaches a cattle guard; thereafter it is fenced on both sides of its further course. The testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses is that this three hundred feet of exposed track could not have been fenced with due regard to the safety of defendant’s employees when engaged in switching. The testimony of defendant’s witness is that this space of three hundred feet is too narrow for safe switching, and must be increased in the future on account of the importance of the business done at the town of Malden.
The animal was killed about sixty feet from the head blocks of the switch. By the concurrent testi
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.