Burnside v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad

110 Minn. 401 | Minn. | 1910

Start, C. J..

Appeal by tbe defendant from a judgment, based on a verdict for tbe plaintiff, of the district court of tbe county of Kamsey, in this, a personal injury action. There was on the trial but little conflict in tbe evidence as to tbe primary issues as to tbe alleged negligence of tbe respective parties.

Tbe evidence is sufficient to sustain a finding by the jury of tbe following evidentiary facts: Plaintiff was a shipper of stock, and on February 25, 1908, be was shipping three carloads of cattle from South Dakota to Illinois in a train over tbe defendant’s railway line. He accompanied tbe stock as caretaker and was entitled to transportation in a special caboose, which was located in tbe train directly in front of tbe regular caboose. Tbe train, with the cattle, reached and stopped at Morton, this state, about eight o’clock p. m. Plaintiff, with others, got off the train for supper. When be returned, bis train with bis caboose was standing in front of tbe station. Tbe conductor was standing on tbe platform of tbe caboose, and tbe plaintiff said to him that be wished to examine bis stock before tbe train pulled out. Tbe conductor replied that be could not do so then, but that tbe train would back up for water and coal, and that he would then have time to see bis stock. Tie then got onto tbe caboose, and tbe train backed up and stopped with tbe engine at tbe water tank, which left tbe plaintiff’s caboose on a trestle some twenty-three feet above tbe ground, of which fact the plaintiff bad no knowledge, as it was so dark where tbe caboose stood that be could not see tbe trestle. He was not familiar with tbe location. When tbe train stopped, tbe plaintiff, for tbe purpose of examining bis stock, got up and walked to tbe steps of tbe caboose, and, supposing that be was going to step upon tbe ground, be made no investigation. He stepped down from tbe caboose, and in doing so lost bis bold and fell through tbe trestle to tbe ground below, whereby be was seriously injured. Tbe jury, by their verdict for tbe plaintiff, necessarily found from such evidentiary facts tbe ultimate fact that tbe defendant was guilty of negligence, and that tbe plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence.

1. The first contention of tbe defendant to be considered, is that *403tiie finding of-the jury that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence is not only manifestly against the weight of the evidence, but that the evidence is practically conclusive that he was guilty of such negligence as a matter of law. If what took place between the plaintiff and conductor, with reference to the plaintiff leaving the caboose for the purpose of looking after his stock when the train should stop for water, were eliminated from the record,, there would be a substantial basis for the defendant’s contention. But what the conductor said to the plaintiff as to stopping the train for water and his opportunity then and there to look after his stock is an'important factor in the determination of the question whether he exercised ordinary care under all the circumstances of the case.

In the case of Farrell v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 100 Minn. 361, 111 N. W. 388, 9 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1113, which is here relied upon by the defendant, the plaintiff was told by the conductor that the next stop would be St. Cloud, and that if he then got out as soon as the train stopped he would have plenty of time to go back to the car-which was carrying his live stock. The train slackened speed as it approached a railway junction at the easterly end of the bridge over the river opposite St. Cloud. Hearing the whistle, and supposing that the train had arrived at St. Cloud, the plaintiff got out upon the ground. The train stopped. While he was getting into his own car, a sudden jerk of the train threw him off, and he was injured. He relied only on what the conductor told him, and paid no attention to the surroundings, although he knew he was on a high fill. The buildings in St. Cloud were in plain sight, and the place at which he alighted showed that it was wholly unused for the departure or arrival of trains, and a most casual vision of his surroundings would have shown him that the train had not reached St. Cloud. He was held guilty of contributory negligence. It is quite obvious that the Farrell case by reason of its special facts is clearly distinguishable from this one, and that it is not here in point.

The evidence in this case was sufficient to sustain a finding by the jury that the statement of the conductor was at least.an implied assurance that the place where the train would stop for water was & reasonably safe one for him to alight for the purpose of examining *404his stock. The statement was naturally calculated to create confidence on his part that he could alight from the train at the place designated by the conductor in safety. While this assurance of the conductor would not relieve the plaintiff from the duty of exercising ordinary care in alighting from the train, yet, in determining the question, whether under all the circumstances of this case he did exercise such care, the assurance of the conductor must be taken into consideration. Stegner v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 94 Minn. 166, 102 N. W. 205; Holden v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 103 Minn. 98, 114 N. W. 365.

We are of the opinion that the question of the defendant’s contributory negligence wag one of fact, and that the finding of the jury thereon is sustained by the evidence.

2. The only other assignment of error urged in the brief of counsel is that the damages are excessive. The verdict was for $8,500, which was reduced by the trial court to $5,500 on the defendant’s motion for judgment or a new trial. The defendant urges that,as reduced, the damages are excessive. The evidence on behalf of the plaintiff as to his injuries is to the effect that by reason of his fall he suffered intense pain; that he passed blood from his bladder for four days and from his bowels for four months; that his right shoulder was dislocated and some of the bones thereof broken, and the ligaments of the shoulder torn; that at the trial, about a year after the accident, he could not raise his right arm to the level of his shoulder, and his right hand was swollen and his right shoulder lower than the left that he suffers pain when he uses his right arm and when it is exposed to the cold; and, further, that there can be no complete recovery for two or three years, if at all, and only then by his submitting to a long and painful treatment. This evidence indicates that the damages as reduced are only fairly compensatory. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial upon condition that the plaintiff consent to the reduction, which he did.

Judgment affirmed.