Boyce v. Chicago & Alton Railway Co.

BROADDUS, P. J.

This is a suit for damages for negligence. The facts of the case are as follows. On the evening of October 16, 1903, the plaintiff, in company with her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Dorothy Boyce, started to go to the opera house in the town of Odessa. They took the usual route on the south side of Mason street, which crosses the defendant’s track at its station. When they got to defendant’s tracks, they stopped and waited for a passenger train to go by. They also saw a freight train standing on the passing track, which was cut in two to allow the passing of traffic on the street, which crossed the track parallel with the sidewalk, and to enable foot passengers to continue their journey. At this opening of the train they saw a man dressed in overalls with a railroad lantern in his hand, who appeared to be connected with the train, who told them they “could cross if they wanted to.” Whereupon plaintiff started to cross the tracks, at which time the train began to move, which alarmed her, and in order to prevent being crushed between the cars when they came together she got off the sidewalk onto the streetway, trod upon a stone, fell to the ground, but got up in time to get out of the way of the moving cars. She did not discover that she was injured until she got to the opera house, when she says she felt a pain in her ankle, which *172according to the evidence turned out to he a severe sprain. Plaintiff, her companion, and another witness testified that they did not hear any warning given of the starting of the train, hut the train operators testified that the usual warning in such cases was given. When plaintiff started to cross the track, her companion cried out to her to come back but she did not heed the warning. The . rear brakeman testified that he was at or near the place in question, that he did not say anything to plaintiff about crossing the tracks, and that he gave the signal for starting. Defendant insists that there was no evidence that the man plaintiff took to be a brakeman, was such.

We think there was sufficient evidence that it was defendant’s brakeman who told plaintiff that she might pass between the two parts of the train. Such matters are sometimes difficult to prove to a certainty, and reliance must necessarily be placed upon the appearance and acts of the person charged with the duty of a brakeman. Ordinarily, the only person found on such occasions at such places, where the person whom plaintiff took to be a brakeman was found, is a brakeman with a lantern if it is dark, dressed in overalls and apparently connected with the movements of the train. And it is the duty of a brakeman on such occasion to exercise reasonable care to prevent injuring persons who may be in the act of passing over the tracks of his company. [Montgomery v. Railroad, 181 Mo. 477.] It is the brakeman that cuts a train in two at a crossing, and it is the brakeman that gives the signal to close the train again. He is at the place of separation of the train or nearby and necessarily has his attention called to the surroundings and, if he sees a person about to enter into danger, it is his duty to warn him of its approach. If he says to a traveler that he may safely pass, the traveler may rely on what he says, for he is apparently authorized to speak for the company operating the train. In law, he *173has such authority. Otherwise, the master would be liable because he did not have some one present who did have such authority. Great diligence is required of those operating trains over the streets of cities and -towns. [Burger v. Railroad, 112 Mo. 238.] The argument and authorities presented by the defendant to the effect that it was not shown that the brakeman was acting within the scope of his authority at the time mentioned, have no application for the reason already given; or, in other words, the very nature of his employment implies authority.

The next question presented by defendant is that the injury plaintiff received was not the proximate result of the negligent act charged. That is to say, plaintiff was not injured by being struck by the cars, but was injured by stepping upon a stone in her effort to escape danger. It is a general rule that there must be a direct connection between the negligent act and the in-' jury. [Gilliland v. Railroad, 19 Mo. App. 411; Brink v. Railroad, 17 Mo. App. 177.] And it has been held “that the injury must be the natural and probable consequence of the negligence, such a consequence, as under the surrounding circumstances of the case, might and ought to have been foreseen by the wrongdoer as likely to flow from the act.” [Banks v. Railway, 40 Mo. App. 458; Foley v. McMahon, 90 S. W. 113, 114 Mo. App. 442.] “The proximate cause of an event must be understood to be that which, in a natural and continuous sequence; unbroken by any new cause, produces that event, and without which that event would not have happened. Proximity in point of time or space, however, is no part of the definition.- That is of no importance, except as it may afford evidence for or against proximity of causation.” [Dickson v. Railway, 124 Mo. 140.] “The negligence which is the proximate cause of the injury authorizing a recovery, is not necessarily the immediate cause, but the culpable act in the chain of causation nearest *174the injury.” [Hensler v. Stix, 113 Mo. App. 162.] The doctrine of the latter case was applied in Parker v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 465: “Where a passenger in alighting from a street car, by the sudden and negligent starting of the car before she had time to alight, was thrown under the feet of a mule hitched to a wagon, when the animal became unmanageable and drew the wagon wheels over her,” it was held that the negligence of the street railway company was the proximate cause of the injury and not the act of the frightened mule in drawing the wheels of the .wagon over the body of the plaintiff after she had been thrown to the ground.

Strictly speaking, the plaintiff’s injuries were not the immediate result of defendant’s act of negligence, but it was the producing cause. The injury was the result of her attempt to escape impending danger. There was no independent agency between the act of negligence and the injury. If A negligently sets B’s house on fire and B in attempting to escape is injured in jumping from a window and alighting on a stone, under the defendant’s theory, A would not be liable for his negligence because B’s injuries were not the result of his having been burned, but the result of his attempt to escape from being burned. Plaintiff was not injured by being crushed between the cars as they came together, but in endeavoring to escape from such a danger; ergo-, defendant is not liable as her injuries were not the proximate result of its negligence. The defendant has misinterpreted what the courts mean by the term “proximate cause.”

And defendant also misconstrues the language of the courts, where it is said that the injury must be “the natural and probable consequence” of the act of negligence. The meaning is, tracing the effect to the cause, was it probable and natural? As applicable to this case, it is not to say that it was natural or probable that plain*175tiff in endeavoring to escape from danger would step off the sidewalk onto a stone, but that, if she did, the natural and prohable result would be that her ankle would be sprained and that she would fall.

The defendant presented the question we have just been discussing in the following instruction which the court properly refused: “The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence in this case that defendant’s employees in charge of the train at the time in question, did not anticipate and could not by exercising ordinary care, have anticipated that if they started the train while plaintiff was crossing the railroad track, she would run off the track and in doing so would step upon a rolling stone and be injured thereby, then your verdict should he for defendant.” That is to say, if defendant by the exercise of ordinary care could not have anticipated what particular manner plaintiff would pursue to escape and in what way she would be injured in so doing, defendant would not be liable. That would require such foresight as human beings at this day do not possess and exercise. The law of the case is, did defendant’s agents have reasonable grounds for anticipating that plaintiff would be injured under the circumstances without reference to the manner in which it would occur?

The defendant asked an instruction, which was refused, to the effect that if the woman, who was with plaintiff and saw that the train was about to move- and warned her not to proceed, and that thereafter she persisted in attempting to cross the track ahead of the moving train, the finding should he for defendant. The vice of the instruction is that it singles out particular facts, to the exclusion of other facts, upon which the jury are authorized to find a verdict. This left out of consideration the fact that plaintiff had already started to make the passage and, such being the case, it was a question *176for the jury to say whether it was safest for her to proceed or turn back. We all know from experience that in case of danger it is sometimes a question whether it is safer to proceed or to retreat. And the law will not place a strict construction upon the acts of a person in such a situation because of want of time for deliberation, and because the imminence of peril is calculated to confuse the judgment. It was a question for the jury to say whether she acted in a reasonable and prudent manner under the circumstances.

The plaintiff’s instruction for damages contained the following: “If the jury find from the evidence for the plaintiff, then in assessing her damages the jury will allow her a reasonable compensation for loss of time, if any, the jury may believe from the evidence she has sustained up to the present time in consequence of such injuries.” As there was no evidence of the value of plaintiff’s loss of time, defendant insists that the instruction was erroneous. Under the most recent decisions of our courts, it is error to instruct the jury in estimating plaintiff’s damages to take into consideration loss of time without evidence of its value. [Mammerberg v. Railway, 62 Mo. App. 563; Stoetzele v. Swearingen, 90 Mo. App. 588, and numerous other cases.] But plaintiff contends that the instruction was not erroneous under the late ruling in Perrigo v. St. Louis, 185 Mo. 274. In that case the instruction only went to the diminished ability of the plaintiff to labor, which was the impairment of a faculty and “an injury to a personal right wholly apart from any pecuniary benefit that might be derived from the exercise of the power.” Plaintiff insists that although the instruction may have been erroneous, yet the verdict of the jury shows that it did not take into consideration plaintiff’s loss of time in estimating her damages. But there is nothing whereby we can infer *177that such was the case. For the error noted the cause is reversed and remanded.

All concur.