Huggart v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

GrANTT, P. J.

On the thirtieth day of October, 1893, plaintiff’s husband, Porter S. Huggart, was struck and killed by an engine on defendant’s railway at a public crossing about five miles south of the city of Independence.

Prom Independence to the place of the accident the public county road and the railroad run in the same general direction, at times approaching within a half' mile of each other but cross each other at right angles at the crossing on which plaintiff’s husband was killed. The county road leads over a high rocky hill just before crossing the railroad, but immediately on the crossing they are both at about the same grade.

On the west side of the crossing the railroad passes through a cut so that a person approaching the crossing on the county road could not see a train on the railroad to the west until he should get to a point about thirty-five or forty feet from the railroad track. Prom this point (thirty-five or forty feet from the track) a traveler could see up the railroad to the west a distance *678from six hundred to one thousand feet as variously established by the different witnesses, and the nearer he approached the track the farther he could see. About twenty feet from the track on the side of the county road there was a large sign, upon a post, containing the words “Bailroad Crossing, Look out for the Cars.”

The county road contained a cut through the right of way so that the view of a traveler was cut off on the west until he reached a point from thirty to thirty-five or forty feet of the railroad track.

On the thirtieth day of October., 1893, Porter Hug-gart borrowed a team and started from Independence to get a load of wood. He was not seen until he emerged from the cut in the county road at a point thirty to forty feet from the track moving on south to the crossing. No person witnessed the accident except the engineer, the fireman, and one brakeman. According to their evidence Mr. Hu'ggart did not stop after coming into view or look for a train until his horses were on the crossing. He then looked in the direction of the train and began whipping his horses1 with his lines. His team and the front wheels of the wagon passed over the track safely and a freight train on defendant’s railroad, moving from the west, struck the hind wheels and threw him from the wagon and killed him.

There is, as usual, much conflict in the evidence as to whether the whistle was sounded or the bell rung as required by the statute. Two witnesses on the part of the plaintiff testified that they were in a barn about one hundred and seventy-five yards from the place of the accident doctoring a sick horse and that they did not hear any bell rung or whistle blown for crossing. Indeed the burden of the testimony tended, we think, quite strongly to prove the bell was not rung at a distance of eighty rods from the crossing and was not *679kept ringing until the train crossed the road. As to the whistle, it appears to have been sounded at or near the whistling post but not at intervals as required by the statute until within six hundred feet of the crossing when the alarm whistles were sounded according to plaintiff’s evidence. The engineer testified that he reversed his engine and applied the brakes and did all he could to prevent injury to plaintiff’s husband, after discovering him.

The verdict was for plaintiff for $5,000 and defendant appeals.

I. The substantial point in this record is the propriety of refusing the demurrer to the evidence. Conceding that the defendant failed to have its bell rung and its whistle sounded as required by the statute; did not the plaintiff’s evidence and the whole evidence in the ease demonstrate that plaintiff’s husband’s own negligence was the immediate contributing cause of his death Í As he approached the crossing he was warned by the sign that he was about to cross a railroad and was warned to look out for the cars.

It is an uneontradieted and conceded fact that when he reached a point from thirty to forty feet from the track, a point where he was free from all danger of collision with trains upon the road, he could have seen up the track to the west a distance of six hundred and possibly a thousand feet. As a physical fact that train was then in sight. One of two conclusions is inevitable. He either did not look and heedlessly rode upon the track and was killed, or he looked and saw the approaching train and attempted to cross ahead of it. In either case he was guilty of such contributory negligence as bars a recovery by his widow.

Porter Huggart is dead. We have no explanation of his conduct in attempting to cross the track in the face of a rapidly approaching train, but in view of the *680physical impossibility of' bis failing to see the train had he looked to the west as it was his clear duty to have done, while yet out of danger, the law denominates his conduct in going upon the track and attempting to cross as contributory negligence. There can be no presumption of ordinary care in the face of such facts to the contrary and without explanation. Hayden v. Railroad, 124 Mo. 566; Kelsay v. Railroad, 129 Mo. 362; Lane v. Railroad, 132 Mo. 4.

The learned counsel for plaintiff, while conceding the force of these cases as precedents, yet attempts to draw a distinction between those cases and the one at bar because he thinks plaintiff’s husband was not in a place of safety when thirty to thirty-five feet .from the track when he first saw the train; that he could not stop his team; that he was a stranger and driving a borrowed team. Neither of these circumstances, nor all of them combined, change the complexion of the deceased’s conduct. There is not a particle of evidence that the team was unmanageable or that the deceased was ignorant of their characteristics.

Thé fact that he had never crossed at this point prior to this occasion instead of lessening his care should have incited him to greater vigilance. That a man of mature years, in possession of his mental and physical faculties, driving a team to an ordinary farm wagon, up grade,at an ordinary gait,and seeing a trains approaching while yet thirty or forty feet from a rail-roadcrossing could not safely stop without going upon the track, is contrary to reason and common experience.

In our opinion the facts bring the case clearly within the rule announced in Hayden v. Railroad, supra, and the court should have sustained the demurrer to the evidence. The judgment is reversed.

Sherwood and Burg-ess, JJ., concur.