218 F. 625 | 1st Cir. | 1914
The defendant in error (hereinafter called plaintiff) has recovered a judgment against the plaintiff in error (hereinafter called defendant) under the federal Employers’ Liability Act (Act April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65 [Comp. St. 1913, §§ 8657-8665]), for conscious suffering and death of- his intestate,.John H. Weymouth, who, being at the time a brakeman in the defendant’s employ, was knocked off the top of a moving freight car, upon which he was sitting, by an overhead bridge, near Lawrence, Mass. The defendant seeks here to reverse the judgment, upon the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in its favor, and upon alleged improper instructions given to the jury.
There was evidence that the horizontal bar of this bridge guard, from which its rope pendants hung, was 8 feet long, while the car was either 9 feet 5% inches or 9 feet 7% inches wide. There would thus be left several inches of the car roof on each side over which there could be no rope pendant to give warning. The outside ropes of the telltale were not quite 8 feet apart, not being attached to the bar quite at its extreme ends. And there was evidence that Weymouth was sitting, when he struck the bridge, on one side of the car, facing outward, in a crouched position, with his feet hanging over the edge. Assuming, not only that the bridge guard was of the standard form mentioned in the regulations, but also that the length of the bars used in such bridge guards when the regulations were issued, and ever since, appeared, without contradiction, to have been 8 feet long, there was still no evidence that the commissioners had ever specially approved this particular bridge guard in this particular place; and we are unable to hold that its sufficiency, under all the circumstances shown, was conclusively established merely by the fact that it complied with the regulations, so far as its form was concerned.
Without regard to evidence claimed to indicate that the pole carrying the arm from which this bar hung leaned so as to carry the whole telltale arrangement still further away from that side of the car
As to the remaining instructions refused, the assignments of error are either disposed of by what has been said, or the instructions requested were given in substance to the extent that the defendant had the right to require them at all. Two of the requests for instructions related to the question of assumption of risk. We find no error in the instructions given upon this point.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed, with interest, and the defendant in error recovers his costs on appeal.