Holland v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
Holland v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff sued to recover for personal injuries. The cause was tried to a jury, and plain
Immediately south of Poplar Bluff defendant’s railroad runs practically north and south. The public road, known as the Pike Slough road, parallels the railroad on the east side, and within fifteen or twenty feet thereof. Plaintiff with her daughter was in a buggy traveling south on the Pike Slough road alongside the railroad. She alleges that an engine approached her from the rear and was so carelessly managed and controlled as to suddenly, and without warning, make a loud, unusual and terrifying noise by emitting" a great quantity of steam, thereby causing her horse to run away and throw her from the buggy and severely injure her. Defendant answered by a general denial.
Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, an instruction, and contends that the verdict is excessive.
Minnie Holland, plaintiff’s daughter, testified as follows :
‘ ‘ The first time I saw the engine down there we were on the Pike Slough road. The engine blew off steam from the bottom and sides, up near the cow catcher where the two little wheels are. The first noise wasn’t so very loud, the second time it got louder. At that time we were on the part of the road which ran by the side of the track. Then the horse got scared and started to run, ran about a hundred yards, or feet. At that point the road was pretty close to the railroad track, about as far as across this room. I saw the men on the engine. My mother just pulled on the bridle to stop the horse. We went on down the road, and that engine backed up then,' in the meantime we were trying to stop' the horse. The engine then backed up, while we were just about to Irby’s store the engine caught up with us and blew steam louder, from down at the sides, made a loud noise, and the horse jumped on one side and ran away, for a good ways; but kept straight in the road, and made a turn; and when he made this turn my mother fell out of the buggy. I did not hear the engine whistle or anything like that, just made these
On cross-examination this witness testified:
“We had just come from home and were going back home. We had been to town. This happened in the afternoon, I don’t know just when, about one or two o’clock. We were going south past the houses of the colored people when we first saw this engine, had just got past those houses when we first saw it. At that point the road goes west and then turns south. The engine was coming behind us when I first saw it. Say this is the corner now, the road comes down this way, and then comes down the Pike Slough road. When we turned the corner here, and started south, the engine was up the track further north, I don’t know how far. It had no cars attached to it, just an engine by itself. The pilot was pointed south. It went right on kept up with us. We went right along by the side of it, for about a hundred yards, or something. The horse kind of scared then at the engine which was blowing steam which came out from the side of the engine, the side we were on, and toward the front end of the engine, the end further south. I am sure the cowcatcher was pointed south, and the engine did not have any cars attached to it. It didn’t sound very loud the first time; but the next time it sounded louder, and came out at the same place. My mother was driving the horse which we had since last August. I do not know how old he was. That was the first time he got scared. Q. Did you ever have him around trains before? A. We would have him close to a gate when the train came by. We have driven him to town before that on the same road, and trains came by, and he never did get scared before. My mother had hold of the reins and she fell out and I got up' to get the reins, and in trying to catch the reins I fell out side-ways. Before the horse got scared he was
Plaintiff testified: “The horse was riding right along until it got scared. I just seen that 224 locomotive was the only engine I saw that day. I know where the negroes live, but that was down further, quite a ways further. It blew off steam down below, pretty loud. The steam came from down below the front wheels, and was very loud. At that time our horse was pretty close to the engine, about to the table there. We could see the engine; the horse started to run, and I checked it the first time, stopped him right away. The engine went north and then came south; before he came south again he went back north. When he went back north, I just kept going, and had got pretty near to Irby’s store when the engine came back, and the men were laughing, the engineer and fireman on the engine. I was going to Irby’s store then. The horse ran way, I know when a horse runs. I don’t know whether it ran a mile past Irby’s store or how far it was. It throwed me out and ran over me, and hurt me. ”
There were other witnesses who testified to facts tending to corroborate plaintiff, but we do not deem it necessary to set out their evidence.
Defendant’s engineer testified: “On January fifth last I was operating and running a switch engine here in the Poplar Bluff yards. I remember an accident that occurred down near Mr. Irby’s store on that date. I was operating that switch engine at that time; the engine was headed north; we had between twenty-five and thirty cars in the train and I was backing south; and I noticed a one horse spring wagon with two ladies in it, and I presume about six car lengths before I overtaken this wagon the horse acted as though he was going to become frightened a little bit, and I shut the throttle off and the engine was coasting when I passed them, and the lady on my side raised her feet and jumped out on my side between the wheels, and the driver then raised up and jumped out on the other side. When the old lady jumped out on my
Cross-examination: £ £ Our engine was numbered 427, *and that is the engine Pinkley was on. There is a cylinder on each side of the engine, the pilot being right ahead of the cylinder; the engine has only two cylinders. There is what we call a cylinder cock lever in the cab to either open ór shut them. That causes the engine to spurt out steam' down by the cylinders. When you operate that lever it permits the steam to escape there when you are
The fireman testified: “I was fireman on a switch engine here on the 1st and 4th of January, the way I got it. I remember the occasion when Mrs. Holland was hurt, and I was on the engine that day with ML. Hamblin as engineer. We came out from dinner and were switching in the south end of the yards, we had pulled out a cut of cars there up the east track there and my engineer called me over and he says, ‘ Come over here. ’ And he showed me a woman laying in the road, and I watched this woman a few moments, and I saw a man help her up, and they walked south towards that little store. I did not see the horse and buggy until I saw the horse about 200 feet from the accident, it looked like it was tied to the fence; that was some time near ten minutes, I guess, after I saw the woman. I did not see the horse going away or anybody getting out of the buggy. I was on the left or west side of the engine which was headed north. At that time we were pulling out this cut of cars, going south. The engine was of the 400 class. We had a pretty good load for that
Cross-examination: “The engineer opens the cylinder cocks; they are not on my side of the engine. When he opens them up the steam escapes at both sides. That isn’t necessary when you are running the engine unless the boiler gets too full of water; it is not necessary to open them up to operate the train. When I say the engine was exhausting I mean the throttle was open and it was what some.people call ‘puffing.’ I don’t know that the horse ran away; I never saw it, never saw the accident. I went over to the place to make inquiry.. The engineer told me to step over there and find out what I could about it. I went over and asked some old fellow, and he said he didn’t know anything about it that’s'what I understood him to say.”
Defendant contends that there is no evidence that the horse ran away, or that there was any unusual noise. Plaintiff’s daughter said that the horse trotted away, and that she followed after him and “hollered” whoa, and he stopped. It may be true that the horse did not run away as that expression is usually understood, but there is evidence that he was running, both by plaintiff and her daughter. Witness Jackson said that “the horse was coming at a pretty peart lick, between a trot and a run.” As to whether the horse ran away as that term is usually understood we do not think is wholly
Was there any substantial evidence of unusual noise negligently caused? Plaintiff testified that the engine “blew off steam down below pretty loud. The steam came from down below the front wheels, and was very loud.” The daughter said that “the engine blew off steam, from the bottom and sides, up near, the cow catcher where the two little wheels are.” It would appear that the escaping steam to which plaintiff and her daughter refer came from the cylinder cocks. This would be the conclusion from their evidence when read in connection with the evidence of the engineer. Also it appears from the evidence of the engineer that it was not necessary to open these cylinder cock’s while operating the engine. We think that there was sufficient evidence to take the cause to the jury. [Brown v. Railroad, 89 Mo. App. 192; Feeney v. Railroad, 123 Mo. App. 420, 99 S. W. 477; Miller v. Engle, 185 Mo. App. 558, 172 S. W. 631.]
Defendant contends that plaintiff’s instruction number 1 is too broad. The evidence of plaintiff and her daughter tends to show that the horse became frightened at the noise made by the escaping steam from the cylinder cocks. There was evidence that it was not necessary to open these cocks while the engine was running. One of plaintiff’s witnesses, Ed Jackson, testified that the engineer “blew the engine whistle and throwed some lever or another and throwed black smoke out.” The instruction permitted recovery if it was found that those “in charge of said engine so negligently managed, controlled and ran the same as to cause said engine to again emit
Is the verdict excessive? Plaintiff recovered a judgment for $5000. The record shows that plaintiff is a. married woman 57 years of age. Her injury consisted of a crushed ankle and three broken ribs; two on the left side and one on the right. At the time of the trial about three months after the injury plaintiff still used a crutch. Dr. A. S. Smith testified that “the ankle was so crushed that I hardly think a woman of her age will entirely get over it, but that she will limp considerably; the ribs ought to be all right eventually. The ankle was crushed right in the joint, this bone here was crushed. . . . I hardly think it will get well after a while. . . . At her age the bones don’t never heal as good.” Very little appears in the record as to physical suffering. The physician was not definite as to the permanency of the injury. The most that can be said of her evidence is that she was not certain. In the instruction on the measure of damages plaintiff omitted the element of permanent injury. We believe that this judgment is excessive
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.