127 Minn. 381 | Minn. | 1914
Lead Opinion
Action by tbe administratrix of Martin J. Boos to recover damages caused by bis death alleged to have resulted from defendant’s negligence. Plaintiff bad a verdict. Defendant appealed from an order denying its alternative motion.
Plaintiff’s deceased was killed on January 9, 1913, in defendant’s yards at Shoreham, Minneapolis. These yards were known as tbe east and west end. Tbe former consisted of two lead tracks extending from tbe main line, with 12 other tracks radiating between and connecting them, each long enough to bold a train of about 48 cars. Trains coming into tbe yard were set on one of these radiating, or spur, tracks for inspection, and cars found to be in bad order were so marked. At night a switching crew worked in each yard, sorting tbe cars and setting them on tbe various spur tracks in order to make up outgoing trains. Bad order cars were placed on one of tbe spurs selected each night by tbe assistant yard master or tbe foreman of tbe switching crews, from which they were transferred to tbe repair tracks. At tbe time of tbe accident, and for some time prior thereto, plaintiff’s deceased was employed in defendant’s yards as foreman of tbe repair track switching crew, with sole authority to direct its movements and work. He bad charge of a switch engine and bis crew consisted of an engineer, a fireman and two helpers. Among other duties, be was required to take tbe bad order cars each night from tbe track on which they were collected to tbe repair tracks. On tbe night of January 9, 1913, spur track No.' 4,
Tbe record contains no direct testimony tending to show any notification of deceased tbat any bad order cars bad been placed on track 4, or tbat the operation of collecting them thereon bad been completed so tbat be should go in and get them. On tbe contrary it affirmatively appears by tbe testimony of tbe foreman of tbe switching crew which released tbe last two cars, who, in accordance with tbe alleged custom or usage, would have given tbe notice, tbat none such was given. But notwithstanding this, defendant’s contention must fail; for tbe custom or usage upon which it is founded was neither so conclusively established as to require tbe jury to find it nor of a character sustainable by law. Insofar as its existence depends upon tbe testimony of tbe foreman whose crew released tbe cars which caused this accident, no great reliance can be placed thereon, for it would have been but natural under tbe circumstances tbat be should make tbe best explanation possible of bis conduct. Furthermore, while bis testimony tends generally to support defendant’s hypothesis, be admitted, while claiming tbe fact to be otherwise, tbat there was no general custom or rule requiring deceased to protect bimself; and bis insistence tbat deceased should not have gone after tbe cars until notified is contradicted by tbe testimony of defendant’s assistant night yard master tbat it was left to deceased entirely as to when be would do so, and tbat such was customarily done at any time during tbe night, though usually after midnight. Moreover, since debeased’s shift ended at 6 o’clock a. m., be would naturally, at 4:35, have been looking to tbe finishing of bis work. Tbe evidence, therefore, would clearly support a finding tbat, when tbe last two cars were turned loose, tbe foreman of tbe crew releasing them was bound to anticipate deceased’s presence on track 4, engaged in attempting to remove the defective car, from which tbe conclusion of negligence on defendant’s part would, under tbe fur-
Nor could defendant toll its duty to use reasonable care in keeping safe the place where deceased was required to work, by invoking a custom or usage of handling its cars in such an inherently dangerous manner as that disclosed by this record. As said in Hamilton v. Chicago, B. & Q. Ry. Co. 145 Iowa, 431, 436, 124 N. W. 363, 365: “It is practically the universal rule that custom or usage will not justify a negligent act.” To the same effect see Braaflat v. Minneapolis & Northern Ele. Co. 90 Minn. 367, 369, 96 N. W. 920; Wiita v. Interstate Iron Co. 103 Minn. 303, 309, 115 N. W. 169, 16 L.R.A.(N.S.) 128; The P. P. Miller, 180 Fed. 288; Thompson, Negligence, §§ 30, 3777; White’s Supp. Id. (Yol. YELL) same sections. And, as declared by Mr. Thompson in his Commentaries on Negligence, § 4528, note: “It would be difficult to state a proposition more careless of justice and absolutely brutal, than the proposition that a railroad company can shunt its cars along its tracks at night with no light upon them to apprise its yardmen of their approach, and with no man upon them to give warning to those who may be on the track in front of them.” See sections 4512-4543, Vol. VIII. (White’s Supp.) of the same work. See also, Bordeaux v. Atlantic, 150 N. C. 528, 64 S. E. 439. Defendant could not have contracted for immunity from liability for negligence, and so much the more can it not be permitted to stand behind a negligent custom. Nor would an employee readily be charged with assuming the risks involved in such a custom, and the evidence in this case falls short of establishing any such assumption as a matter of law.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Deceased was 32 years old, earning $90 to $100 a month. Plaintiff-his widow is 30. If, as the opinion indicates, it is “not competent for defendant to inquire into the state of the domestic affairs of deceased and his wife” short of showing “discontinuance of marital relations” it seems to me there is no ground for a reduction of this verdict.
If such matters are proper to be considered at all, then defendant’s proffered evidence should have been received and its rejection was error and a new trial should be granted to defendant without condition.
Neither does it seem to me that objectionable remarks of counsel furnish any ground for reduction of the verdict of a jury.
I can see no justification for a conditional affirmance of the order of the trial court.