50 F. 728 | 6th Cir. | 1892
The action below was brought to recover damages for the death of Charles Reynolds, alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the defendant below. On the 14th day of February, A. D. 1890, the deceased was a brakomau on west-bound freight train No. 87, on the Chicago division of the railway of the defendant below, and while in the discharge of his duty as such was killed in a collision with east-bound freight train No. 88, near the town of Bairdstown, a station on the line of said road. It appears from the bill of exceptions that upon 1he trial testimony was introduced on the part of the plaintiff, and also of the defendant, “proving” that train No. 88, on the date named, left Garrett, Ind., with Theodore Cruder acting as conductor, and J. M. Smith as engineer. It “was run under the exclusive orders, direction, and supervision of the train dispatcher and the superintendent of the Chicago division of the defendant’s railroad.” The train dispatcher gave instructions by telegraph to the engineer and conductor as to the movements of the train, directing when and where it should stop, where it should pass other trains, and all other matters connected with its running and management. While it was at De,shier, a station on the line oí said road, a telegram was sent by the train dispatcher, and delivered to the conductor and engineer, ordering them to meet and pass train No. 87 at Bairdstown, but both the conductor and engineer made tiie mistake of reading “Bloomdale” instead of “Bairdstown,” Bloomdale being a station east of Bairdstown, and, so reading the order, ran the train past Bairdstown without stopping, the conductor of train No. 87 having an order from the train dispatcher to meet No. 88 at Bairdstown, and moving his train to that station. The result was that the trains collided, and Reynolds was killed. But testimony having been offered, on behalf of the plaintiff below, tending to maintain an allegation of the petition that the conductor of train No. 88 was incompetent, and the engineer not only incompetent, but of reckless habits, the court suggested to counsel that, as negligence of both the conductor and engineer, in not correctly reading their orders, was conceded, and as, in the judgment of the court, the testimony upon the other issue was not sufficient to support a finding in favor of the plaintiff, the case be allowed to go to the jury upon the sole question of the negligence of the conductor and engineer in not properly reading their orders, for the reason that, in the opinion of the court, that negligence made the defendant liable in law, and it was not therefore material or important that the jury should determine any other question. This suggestion was accepted by counsel, and the court then proceeded to charge the jury. The portion of the charge upon which the questions to be here decided arise is as follows:
“There is no fact to be submitted to you in this case. The defendant, by its counsel, concedes that the conductor did not properly read his instructions, and by such negligence caused the accident complained of. The conductor in this instance, the court instructs you, as a matter of law, represented the defendant. The conductor’s negligence, therefore, was the negligence of*730 the defendant, and, the plaintiff having been without fault, the defendant is liable for the injury sustained. It is therefore solely a question of damages. ”
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on the 24th of April, 1891, upon which, a motion for new trial having been overruled, a judgment for $4,000 was, on the 29th day,of July, 1891, rendered against the defendant, and the cause was then brought to this court by proceedings in error. The defendant in error objects to the jurisdiction, that the verdict having been found before the 1st of July, 1891, for less than $5,000, the case could not be brought here by proceedings in error. It was held in Railway Co. v. Bennett, 49 Fed. Rep. 598, (decided by this court October 6, 1891, and reported in No. 6 of the advance parts of the United States Courts of Appeals Reports,) that while the then existing jurisdiction of the circuit courts and of the supreme court was preserved up to the 1st of July, 1891, as to all appeals pending or taken before that date, there was also a right of appeal to the circuit courts of appeal from the time the act was passed; and, consequently, that the writ of error in that case, which was taken on the 24th day of June, 1891, was properly taken, and that this court had jurisdiction of the case. The court cited, as sustaining this ruling, In re Claasen, 140 U. S. 200, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 735. The objection to the jurisdiction is overruled.
There is but a single exception to the charge, and that is a general one. The only question to be considered is whether, upon all the evidence, the verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff below should be sustained. More precisely stated, it is whether the plaintiff in error was liable to the defendant in error for the negligence of the conductor of train 88, which it is conceded caused the collision and th'e death of Reynolds. If so, the judgment must stand; if not, it must be reversed. The facts are not in dispute. The suggestion made by the trial judge that the allegations that the conductor and engineer of No 88 were incompetent, and the engineer reckless, were not sustained by the evidence, was accepted by counsel for the respective parties. The jury was instructed that the conductor represented the railroad company, that his negligence was the negligence of the company, and that, Reynolds having been without fault, the company was liable for damages resulting from his death.
Counsel for defendant in error, in support of this instruction, cite numerous cases to which it may be as well at the outset to refer. Railroad Co. v. Ross, 112 U. S. 377, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 184, is clearly distinguish-, able from this case. There the injury to the plaintiff, a locomotive engineer, was received in a collision caused by the negligence of the conductor of the train, to whose orders he was subject. The court held that the railroad company was liable, recognizing a distinction “between servants. of a corporation exercising no supervision over others engaged with them in the same employment, and agents of the corporation clothed with the control and management of a distinct department, in which their duty is that of direction and superintendence,” and that “the conductor of a railway train, who commands its movements, directs when it shall stop, at what stations it shall stop, at what speed it shall run, and
Railroad Co. v. Herbert, 116 U. S. 612, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 590, does not apply. Thai case was decided upon the ground that it was the duty of the railway company to look after the condition of the cars, and see that the machinery and appliances used to move and stop them were kept in repair and in good working order, and that if the person appointed by it. and charged with that duty, neglected it, and injury resulted, the company was liable, because that person, so far as that duly was concerned, was the representative of the company. In that case a brakeman was injured in attempting to set a brake which was out of order. The court held that the railway company could not delegate to a servant its duty to keep its cars and their machinery and appliances in order, so as to exempt itself from liability for injury caused to another servant by its omission. The principle governing that case was recognized also in Hough v. Railway Co., 100 U. S. 217, another case cited for defendant in error, as an exception to the general rule exempting the common master from liability to a servant for injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow servant. Railway Co. v. Cummings, 106 U. S. 700, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 493, is an authority to the point that if the negligence of the company itself had a share in producing the injury complained of to
We turn now to Randall v. Railroad Co., 109 U. S. 478, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 322, cited for the plaintiff in error. That was the first case in which the court undertook to determine who are and who are not fellow servants; not by a precise and exhaustive definition, for the law is, in its wisdom, chary of such definitions, but by giving a definition sufficient for the decision of the case. The action was by a brakeman for personal injuries received while working a switch by being struck by one of the company’s locomotive engines. The court, declining to weigh the conflicting views of the courts of the several states, held that persons standing in the relation to each other occupied by the plaintiff, who was brakeman on a freight train, and the engineman of another train, who, controlling that train, and driving his engine at a speed of about 12 miles an hour, with no light except the headlight, and without ringing the bell or sounding the whistle, caused the injury, were fellow servants, neither working under the order or control of the other, and each, by entering into his contract of service, taking upon himself the risk of the negligence of the other in performing his service; and, therefore, that neither could maintain an action against the corporation, their common master, for an injury caused by such negligence. The relations of those persons, each to the other, were not in any material respect, or in a single essential, different from the relations of the plaintiff below, a brakeman on one freight train, to the conductor and engineer of the other freight train. In the Randall Case the engineer was in command, and by his negligence in moving his train caused the injury. In this case the conductor was in command, or, if we say the conductor and engineer were jointly in command, we do not alter the case, and, by moving the train in negligent disregard of special orders, caused the injury. It is now easy to answer the question put by counsel for defend
The law controlling this case is well stated in Railway Co. v. Devinney, 17 Ohio St. 198, as follows:
“A railway company is not liable in damages to a brakeman on one of its trains for injuries sustained by him in a collision of his train with another train of the same company, where the collision occurred by means of the negligence of the conductor or engineer, or both, of such other train, unless it appear that the company was guilty oí a want of ordinary care in the selection and employment of an incompetent conductor or engineer, through whose negligence the collision occurred.”
The exception to the charge upon the trial below was well taken. The judgment will be reversed, with costs.