Burnham v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
Burnham v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The administrator of the estate of Alexander Biswell, deceased, sued the defendant railroad company and Harry Crance to recover damages on the ground that the death of Biswell was caused by negligence- of the defendants in the operation of a train in the yards of the defendant company at Bevier. As Biswell was proceeding to board another train standing in the yards, for the purpose of becoming a passenger thereon, he was struck and killed by a passing train of which Granee was the engineer.
The petition alleges, in substance, that Biswell was at the place where he was struck on the implied invitation of defendant company and that his death was caused by one or more of the following acts of negligence, viz., failing to give warning of the approach of the train; running at excessive speed in violation of a city ordinance (the place was within the corporate limits of Bevier); running the train with loaded coal car in front of the locomotive and a negligent breaeh
Defendants offered no evidence at the trial. They demurred to the evidence of plaintiff but the demurrers were overruled and the issues of negligence raised in the petition were submitted to the jury as issues of fact. .The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff against the defendant company but made no finding as to the individual defendant. After verdict the court, over the objection of the company, allowed plaintiff to dismiss the individual defendant from the action. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, filed in due time by the remaining defendant, were overruled and defendant appealed.
The evidence of plaintiff discloses the following-facts: Bevier. is a station on defendant’s main line in the heart of a coal mining district and is the northern terminus of a short railroad operated by the Missouri & Louisiana Railroad Company from Bevier to certain mines and mining towns in the district. This railroad to which we shall refer as the M. & L. does a large passenger and freight business and is a feeder of defendant’s railroad, with which it connects at Bevier. Its tracks, depot, water tank and other terminal properties are on defendant’s right of way in close proximity to defendant’s tracks which run east and west. The depot is a quarter of a mile west of defendant’s depot and is a small, incommodious shanty. Most of the patrons of the road wait out of doors for trains in preference to crowding into the depot. The main track of the M. & L. road is eleven feet north of the depot and seven feet six inches south of defendant’s main track to which it runs parallel for a distance of a quarter of a mile west of the depot. The M. & L. water tank is about sixty feet west of the depot and on the south side of the main track. The tracks and buildings are on. an embankment and the situation
Biswell went to the M. & L. depot intending to become a passenger on an outbound train scheduled to leave at 4:30 p. m. The day was cloudy and rainy and he stood in the shelter of the water tank with two other passengers waiting for the train to be made up. When it'pulled into the depot its locomotive which was in front of the train but was running backward, i. e., with the tender in front, stopped at a point between the depot and the tank. Biswell walked a short distance east on the south side of the track and then turned northeast and crossed .the track just in front of the tender, evidently intending to board the train on the north side. He pursued a northeast course until he stepped on defendant’s main track. A westbound local freight train pushing a loaded coal car in front of the locomotive was coming on that track' and was so close to Biswell when he stepped on the track that In could not escape being struck. Apparently at that in stant he first became aware of his peril and attempted
On cross-examination: “Q. He was on the south side of the M. & L. track was he? A. Yes, sir, when I first saw him. Q. He could have gotten on this train from the south side? A. Yes, sir. Q. Without stepping on the C. B. & Q. main track? A. Yes, sir. Q. Without stepping on any railroad track? A. Yes, sir, he could have gotten on if he wanted to. Q. Of course,
“Q. Then he was instantly hit as soon as he stepped on the C. B. & Q. track? A. It looked like he walked on over there and the train was on him just as he crossed over. Q. He was instantly hit? A. It looked like it, only it didn’t get him down right there. Q. You saw him? You were one of the eyewitnesses of the accident, were you? A. I saw him’before he was hit. Q. You were an eyewitness to the accident? A. Yes, sir, I saw him before he was hit. Q. Now, when he was first struck how far west of the depot was he? I mean how far west of the M. & L. depot was he? A. I believe he would be, maybe possibly, about ten or twelve feet. Q. Ten or twelve-feet? A. That is what I believe now, to the best of my knowledge.”
“Q. When the train hit him how close was he to the north rail? A. A foot or a foot and a half of the north rail. He would be past the drawbar.”
The evidence that the bell of the engine was not ringing is very weak, as is also the evidence that the train was moving in excess of six miles per hour, the limit fixed by an ordinance of the city in evidence, but for the purposes of our discussion of the demurrer to the evidence we shall concede for argument that there is some substantial evidence in the record tending to show that the bell was not rung and that the train was running at from eight to ten miles per hour. Defendant’s main track curves very slightly towards the south and it was impossible for the engineer who was on the north side of the cab to see Biswell when he stepped from behind the tender of the M. & L. engine. The fireman was shoveling coal and was not looking-ahead.
The facts and circumstances which we shall regard as proved in our consideration of the demurrer to the evidence, together with the reasonable inferences that
We do not agree with defendant that Biswell should be held to have been negligent in law for attempting to board the M. & L. train on'the north side instead of on the south side. He had before him an-open and safe pathway along the south side, but in view of the very common practice of passengers to board trains from both sides, we think the issue of care raised by his act in following a general custom, of which defendant had knowledge, should be. treated as involving an issue of fact for the jury to solve.
The conduct of the deceased after he emerged from behind the tender presents a far more serious question. At that moment he was in a place-of safety and the approaching coal car could not have been more than forty feet away even if it were moving at ten miles per hour. It was in broad daylight, the deceased was in full possession of the unimpaired -senses of sight and hearing and he could not have failed to see and hear the train had-he looked and listened. Every witness in the vicinity saw and heard it and the action of the deceased in going on the track directly in front of the coal car cannot be accounted for on any hypothesis that will excuse him from the imputation of negligence.
As is said by the Supreme Court in Dyrcz v. Railroad, 238 Mo. l. c. 46: “In the law of negligence a railroad track in and of itself is an unequivocal and large sign of danger. It. stands there mutely but un-. mistakably crying aloud, ‘Danger!’ It is much the
Counsel for plaintiff endeavor to'bring the case within the scope of the rule thus stated by Judge Black in Baker v. Railway, 122 Mo. 1. c. 544 : “But the rule before stated is not so unyielding that it must be applied in all of its rigor under all circumstances. It is well settled that the person traveling on the highway is not guilty' of contributory negligence because of a failure to look and listen when the surroundings are such that he cannot see or hear an approaching train. [Johnson v. Railroad, 77 Mo. 546 ; Donohue v. Railroad, supra ; Kenney v. Railroad, 105 Mo. 270 ; Petty v. Railroad, 88 Mo. 306.] Though the circum
But that rule cannot aid plaintiff since it undisputably appears that while he was in a place of safety Biswell was where no obstacle intervened to prevent him from seeing and hearing the advancing train that made-it perilous for him to attempt to go on the track. His duty to look and listen was a continuing duty. After he had passed from behind the tender he took two or three steps before he reached the path of danger. Obviously he took them blindly and heedlessly, or recklessly. In either case he was guilty of negligence that will preclude a recovery by plaintiff unless it could be said that the issue of last chance negligence raised by the petition finds support in the evidence. Since Biswell stepped on the track from a place of safety when the train was upon him, we perceive no ground upon which a reasonable inference may rest that the operators of the train saw or. should have seen his peril in time .to have saved him by the exercise of reasonable care. The peril arose and the lethal blow was struck within a brief moment — not to exceed two seconds — and it is impossible to conceive of anything effective that could have been done in the reasonable discharge of defendant’s humanitarian duty. The case falls within the purview of the rule thus stated in Dyrcz v. Railroad, supra:
“Under the doctrine of many cases plaintiff’s own testimony put him in the fix of a man who negligently moves from a place of safety beside the track to a place*296 of danger from a going locomotive on a track, and immediately before it. In that view of it there is no room to apply the last elear chance or humanity rule. Contra plaintiff’s negligence is the proximate cause of his injury. [Green v. Railroad, 192 Mo. 131 ; Schmidt v. Railroad, 191 Mo. 215 ; Mockowik v. Railroad, 196 Mo. l. c. 570 ; Eppstein v. Railroad, 196 Mo. l. c. 733 ; Stotler v. Railroad, 204 Mo. 619 ; Laun v. Railroad, 216 Mo. 563.]”
The demurrer to the evidence should have been given. Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.