127 Mo. App. 151 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
(after stating the facts).—1. The main question in the case is to determine whether or not plaintiff made out a prima-facie case of negligence against defendant as alleged in his petition. The evidence shows that the cars were equipped with rods at their sides, by which one on'the ground could raise the brake pin to let the couplings come together, and that, ordinarily, Doss, when he wished to couple cars on the switch raised the pins by means of the rods before the car or cars were started down the grade; it shows that plaintiff had never coupled cars, and had never been shown or instructed how to couple them; that he knew there were rods on the sides of the cars to raise the pins, but the one on his car could not be reached from where he was when he was ordered to raise it; it also shows that Doss ordered him to pull it, not to raise it with the rod. In respect to the movement of the car and .the circumstances of his injury, plaintiff, on his direct examination, testified as follows:
“Q. What was Doss saying all the time? A. He was telling me to jerk the coupling pin up all the time so it would couple.
“Q. Was the car moving or standing still at that time? A. It was moving.
“Q. Past or slow? A. Pretty fast.
“Q. Well, just a short distance? A. Just a tolerably short distance.
“Q. State whether the car increased in speed as it got near this car Doss was on? A. Yes, sir; it got faster all the. time until it struck these other cars.
“Q. Tell the jury how you happened to get your foot caught there, if you know? A. Well, I was pulling on this coupling pin and the car Avas just ready to bump aud I gave a jerk on it and my foot slipped off just as they bumped and caught it there.”
On cross-examination, plaintiff testified as follows;
“Q. Do you know whether you Avere holding on or not? A. No, I don’t remember .whether I was holding to anything or not.
“Q. You knew if you slipped off there and went down between those cars you were apt to get killed? A. I never thought about slipping off.
“Q. There was no reason why you should slip? A. Nothing only pulling that coupling pin. I never thought about slipping.
“Q. There was no reason why you should slip off that you can think of? A. Only pulling this coupling pin.
“Q. There was nothing to make your feet slip? A. Well, a fellow jerking in a place like that you know his foot is liable to slip.
“Q. You knew that before as well as you know it now? A. Well, I knew a fellow could slip but I never thought of slipping on the car.
“Q. There is nothing to make you think he would slip, standing up there and reaching down? A. Nothing only jerking on the coupling pin.
“Q. What did he say to you when you got up there? A. After I got on the car he told me to take
“Q. Now there was a chain on that that came up to the end of this beam that runs along? A. Yes, sir; a short chain.
“Q. That brought it up level with your feet, didn’t it? A. Well, not hardly.
“Q. Well, it didn’t lack much of it? A. • Not very much.
“Q. You didn’t get hold of the pin; you got hold of the chain? A. I got hold of the chain.
“Q. Because the chain came up higher than the pin? A. The chain was laying on the coupling pin.
“Q. When you got hold of it and straightened up it brought your hands up as high as your feet? A. About as high.
“Q. Then you were standing on something here and pulling up about as high as your feet? That is, the thing you think made your feet slip out from under you? A. Yes, sir; pulling on that coupling pin.
“Q. You had a foot and a half to stand on? A. If I hadn’t been pulling on that coupling pin I wouldn’t have slipped.
“Q. But you don’t know what else made your foot slip from under you? A. That is all that I know of that made them slip.
“Q. You weren’t out on the coupler? A. No, sir.”
In his brief, counsel for plaintiff, as premises for his argument, assumes that the work plaintiff was ordered to do was, on account of the attending circumstances, hazardous. There is no direct evidence that it was hazardous, therefore, to find plaintiff made a prima-facie case within the scope of his petition, the court must hold, as a matter of law, that to pull a coupling pin from the drawhead of a car, situated as was plaintiff, was hazardous. It is not apparent that what plaintiff was ordered to do, in the circumstances shown
“That while plaintiff was so in the employ of defendant and under the direction of said foreman, Bur Doss, he was put to work by said foreman, along with other workmen, to couple together said railroad flat cars above described, on said side track; that by said foreman’s direction, an attempt was made to couple said cars in the following manner, viz.: A number of said workmen started one of said empty cars down grade on said sidetrack in the direction of another empty car standing on said track some distance away; the said foreman was on said stationary car directing the work; this plaintiff by said foreman’s direction, was on the moving car; while said car was moving and approaching closer and closer to said car on which was standing said foreman, the foreman, much excited and ‘rattled,’ abruptly and repeatedly demanded of plaintiff that he get on the front drawhead of the moving car and pull out the iron pin in said drawhead, so that when said cars came together they would be coupled and the pin would be dropped back into place; that plaintiff, urged and pressed by said foreman, got on said drawhead, and while attempting to pull said pin out, and while using all the care and knowledge of which plaintiff was capable, plaintiff’s left foot slipped between said cars as they came together, and was caught and crushed by the draw-heads of said cars he was attempting to couple, thereby ' causing great and permanent injury to plaintiff’s left foot, crushing and breaking the bones of his instep; and causing him to lose and necessarily have amputated two toes — the big one and the one next to it — so he became sick, sore and disordered, and so has remained until now, and is and ever will be permanently disabled
“That said injury to plaintiff was caused by the carelessness and negligence of defendant in this, that it negligently and carelessly kept in its employ a foreman, the said Bur Doss, while he was habitually and notoriously incompetent, as above set forth, and while the defendant knew he was so incompetent, and was so incompetent to the knowledge of defendant at the time of said injury to plaintiff, which occurred on the twenty-ninth day of May, 1905; that the manner of coupling said cars was due to the incompetence of said foreman; that said pin which the foreman directed plaintiff to pull out, ought to have been pulled out and adjusted before' said car was started down said grade; that said coupling ought to have been effected by some one standing on the ground, where the cars coming together could not have crushed him but on account of said foreman’s incompetence, he did not know how the work oughtsto be done and so directed plaintiff and the other workmen to do it in a wrong and a dangerous way, as above set forth.”
There is no evidence that plaintiff was ordered to stand on the drawhead, in fact, his own evidence disproves this allegation, and there is no substantial evidence that Doss was an incompetent foreman. There is some evidence that he was excitable. It has been stated and restated many times by the appellate courts of this state, that if a plaintiff alleges, with particularity, negligence, or a defect in appliances, or a place to work, to entitle him to recover, he is required to make proof of that particular negligence, or defect, which he has alleged. [Waldhier v. Railroad, 71 Mo. l. c. 516; McManamee v. Railway, 135 Mo. l. c. 447, 37 S. W. 119; Chitty v. Railway, 148 Mo. 1. c. 75, 49 S. W. 868; Bartley v. Railway, Ib. 124, 49 S. W. 840; Feary v. Railway,