183 S.W.2d 123 | Mo. | 1944
Lead Opinion
This is an action under the Federal Employers' Liability act for injuries sustained as a result of the derailment of a locomotive tender during a switching movement. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company, a corporation, appeals from a judgment for $30,000 in favor of Joseph G. Cantley. Plaintiff based his cause of action upon the res ipsa loquitur doctrine. Defendant questions the submissibility of plaintiff's case under said doctrine, the giving and refusing of instructions, the admissibility of certain evidence and the amount of the judgment.
Plaintiff was injured about 6:50 P.M., September 21, 1940, on an in-bound switching movement on the Daly sand plant spur track in defendant's yards and about a mile south of Osage, Oklahoma. Plaintiff was in charge of the movement; being defendant's engine or switch foreman and footboard yardmaster. The crew consisted of plaintiff, engineer McGinty, fireman Eccles, and switchmen Spears and Ritchie. Locomotive No. 716 had been brought into Osage on September 21, 1940, from Parsons, Kansas, as part of a freight train for switching duties, was made ready and was turned over to plaintiff's switching crew at 3 P.M., they being on the 3 P.M. to 11 P.M. shift. There had been a "drizzling rain" but plaintiff did not recall whether that condition continued at 6:50 P.M. The locomotive headlights and the switchman's lanterns were lighted. The crew had picked up a car of gasoline 4 or 5 miles south of Osage, which was attached to the front or south end of the engine. The movement north was a back-up movement, the locomotive tender being the lead or north car. Five cars were destined out-bound from the Daly sand plant and plaintiff intended to pick them up on the return trip. The Daly sand plant was located on the Arkansas river and its spur track led off of defendant's main line to the east at a point where the main line is on a 6 degree curve to the west, or left proceeding northwardly. The track was banked, the outer (east) rail being 5 inches higher than the inside rail. The switch track was on a 1.36 degree curve to the right with a .38 per cent ascending grade for a distance of 73.2 feet, to the switch frog. The next 30 feet were practically straight and on a .15 per cent descending grade. Then the spur track entered a 10 degree curve to the left for 133 feet, and was on a descending grade varying from *611 2 to 4 per cent. Plaintiff was of opinion the switch track had the same kind of rail (85 pound rail) that defendant used on its main line. Plaintiff was riding the outer edge of the foot board (a divided board) of the tender on the engineer's (west) side; the front end of the movement. The car of gasoline was cut off four or five car lengths south of the switch point. Then the tender, the locomotive pushing, was moved to within the usual distance (4 to 8 feet) of the switch point and the switch, which was on the fireman's side, was thrown for the spur track. Plaintiff signaled the engineer to back up and when this movement had progressed between 75 and 130 feet, the lead end of the tender derailed on the east rail and the footboard on which plaintiff was standing caught on the rail of the spur, was bent back under the tender, and plaintiff was thrown between the rails and injured. Other facts are developed in the course of the opinion.
[1] The evidence established a submissible fact issue on actionable negligence. Defendant's brief concedes the speed of the movement occasioned the injury. Defendant's general assertion of no actionable negligence is without merit.
[2] Defendant insists plaintiff, under the evidence, was not entitled to submit his case under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine: Because the locomotive and tender were being operated at the time under the supervision and control of plaintiff. Because the facts bearing on negligence surrounding the derailment were as available to plaintiff as to defendant. Defendant does not question the applicability of the doctrine to master and servant cases under the Federal Employers' [126] Liability act in appropriate instances.1
Plaintiff's answer is that the case was properly submitted under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine because he made a res ipsa loquitur case under the Boiler Inspection act and also made a res ipsa loquitur case under common law negligence.
A reason why plaintiff may not prevail on the theory of defendant's liability under the Boiler Insection act is that this was not plaintiff's trial theory.
The Federal Employers' Liability act imposes liability on railroads for injuries suffered by employees while engaged in interstate commerce arising out of the negligence of officers, agents, or employees, or negligence connected with any defect or insufficiency in its equipment. See 45 U.S.C.A., p. 118, sec. 51 et seq.
The Boiler Inspection act provides: "It shall be unlawful for any carrier to use or permit to be used on its line any locomotive *612
unless said locomotive, its boiler, tender, and all parts and appurtenances thereof are in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which the same are put, that the same may be employed in the active service of such carrier without unnecessary peril to life or limb . . ." Ibid., p. 97, Sec. 23. The carrier is an insurer with respect to the matters mentioned in the Boiler Inspection act. Its liability for a violation thereof is absolute, whether it be at fault or not. "Negligence is not the basis of liability under the Act." Lilly v. Grand Trunk Western Rd.,
[3] The charge in plaintiff's petition was that while assisting the defendant in "its business of interstate commerce and interstate transportation"; "that said engine and tank, by, through, and on account of the negligence of defendant, was caused to jump the track and become derailed, and injure the plaintiff in the respects hereinafter described;" that the locomotive and tank were owned and used by defendant and that plaintiff "had nothing to do with the inspection, operation, maintenance, or repair of said" locomotive, tank, or any part or appurtenance thereof, or the track or the road bed, his duties being concerned only with switching movements in the Osage yards. This was followed by a charge "that on account of the aforesaid negligence of the defendant," plaintiff suffered specified injuries.
The Boiler Inspection act was enacted for the safety of railroad employees and by the terms of Secs. 53 and 54, quoted in the margin,2 of the Federal Employers' Liability act, contributory negligence and assumed risks constitute no defense, in whole or in part, to an action founded on a violation of any provision of the Boiler Inspection act.
Plaintiff's main instruction, insofar as material, required the finding that plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce and certain enumerated facts and concluded: ". . . then you are instructed that such facts . . . are sufficient circumstantial evidence to warrant a finding by you that the defendant was negligent, and you may so find, unless you find and believe from other facts and circumstances in evidence that the occurrence was not due to any negligence of the defendant, and if you do find and believe from all of the evidence in the case that the defendant was negligent and that the plaintiff's *613 injuries, if any, were directly caused by the defendant's negligence, if any, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff, unless you should find against the plaintiff on the defense of assumed risk . . ."
[127] The recitals in the petition respecting plaintiff's want of control over the "inspection, operation, maintenance, or repair" of the locomotive, tank et cetera only negative plaintiff's control under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine. Plaintiff's instructions recognized the defenses of contributory negligence and assumed risks. Two related to the assumption of the risk; the main instruction being quoted supra and the other being cautionary in nature. Two related to contributory negligence; one required a finding that plaintiff's negligence constituted a contributing proximate cause and the other, if the jury found defendant "so negligent," authorized a proportionate diminishing of the damages if they also found plaintiff negligent. It is inescapable from the pertinent portions of this record that plaintiff proceeded upon the theory his res ipsa loquitur case was grounded in common law negligence as distinguished from an absolute and continuing obligation on defendant in the nature of an insurer against enumerated defects under the Boiler Inspection act; and he may not, upon appeal, prevail upon a different theory — a theory not passed upon by the jury. Consult: Keele v. Atchison, T. S.F. Ry. Co.,
[4] We are of opinion plaintiff was entitled to submit his cause on common law negligence under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine. The views of the Federal courts, not State courts, constitute the supreme law on questions arising under the Federal Employers' Liability act. Chesapeake O. Ry. Co. v. Kuhn,
The jury was privileged to find and especially so under plaintiff's evidence that plaintiff's control was not such as to necessarily deprive him of the benefit of the res ipsa doctrine under the Federal decisions. Eker v. Pettibone,
Plaintiff testified throughout that he did not know just what caused the derailment. Plaintiff's witnesses Spears and Ritchie, members of plaintiff's crew, each testified in substance that the speed of the movement was 5 or 6 miles an hour; that there was nothing unusual about the movement except the fact of the derailment, and that he did not know the cause of the derailment. Plaintiff had been railroading since *615 1908, serving as engine watchman, foreman, fireman, brakeman, switchman, engine or switch foreman, and footboard yardmaster. At the time he was engine or switch foreman and footboard yardmaster. The engine foreman of a switching crew is in charge, somewhat like a conductor is in charge of a train. As footboard yardmaster, in addition to the duties of the engine foreman, plaintiff had charge of defendant's Osage yard after the regular yard master or agent left for the day, usually about 5 or 6 P.M.; and had a general supervision over the operation of the yards. Plaintiff had worked at the Osage yards for many years and knew the Daly sand plant spur, as well as the 700 type (the heavier type) of engine used in switching service, which engines were also used in road service. Plaintiff knew sand was used on curves and also was used in going in and coming out of the Daly spur. Plaintiff put the speed of the movement at the time of the derailment at 10 to 12 miles an hour, the tender having gone 100 to 130 feet into the curve and the usual speed at 6 to 7 miles an hour on this particular track. He was just in the act of giving the engineer the "go easy" signal as he thought they were moving a little too fast, going down hill and into a curve (reverse curve), and getting off the track could result. The engine left defendant's repair shops on September 12th, where wheels had been installed on the tender. Plaintiff testified that on the trip to the Daly spur (a back-up movement with the tender the lead car) he was riding the footboard of the tender and noticed that the wheels "would sing" on the curves; that the "singing" could have been caused by the wheels or truck being rigid; that a rigid wheel will always sing but a new wheel might sometimes sing without anything being wrong; and that if the wheels were very rigid it would probably cause a derailment.
Several of defendant's witnesses testified they did not know the cause of the derailment. Some never tried to determine the cause. The next afternoon the same crew, with the exception of plaintiff, took the locomotive and tender to the Daly spur and ran it in and out on the spur several times at different speeds but was unable to derail the tender. All conditions, save for the weather being dry, were the same. Defendant's witness Burris, who was designated by other witnesses as defendant's "wreck specialist," testified he was defendant's mechanical foreman: "Q. . . . have you been able to determine what could have caused that accident there at that place? A. Nothing — I couldn't determine exactly. There could be several things. It could have been that he was going in too fast and hit the curve with the condition of the weather and everything." He explained that the use of sand, made necessary by the grade, would cause the track to become more or less rough; that 4 or 5 miles an hour would be a safe speed there; that the speed could cause the derailment, that the down grade, the curve, the rough rail, and the weather conditions would make a derailment easier, but gave as his opinion that the speed caused it. *616
With this evidence in the record from defendant's witnesses, including the employee whose duty it was to ascertain the causes of wrecks, that he could not determine the exact cause of the derailment, defendant is in no position to assert that plaintiff should come forward with the cause of his injury. We hold that, under the applicable authorities and the record presented, error in submitting the cause under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine is not established.
[5] [129] Defendant's contention that plaintiff's testimony with respect to a derailment possibly resulting if the wheels were very rigid should have been excluded is not well taken. We understand from the record a derailment would not result from wheels that "would sing" on curves if new but not rigid. We think the jury was entitled to the fact for what it was worth that the wheels "did sing" on curves on this trip, the probable cause of such singing and the possible results from such cause in a res ipsa loquitur case, where a plaintiff by establishing the extraordinariness of the cause of his injury meets his burden of the proof and shifts the onus of going forward with the evidence and exonerating himself from all negligence to the defendant.
[6] Defendant complains of the portion of plaintiff's main instruction italicized infra. The instruction directed a plaintiff's verdict upon findings, so far as material to the instant issue, that plaintiff was injured while in the employ of the defendant and engaged in interstate commerce "as foreman of a switching crew and that said crew was in charge of defendant's locomotive engine and . . . tender"; and "that said locomotiveand tender and said main line and spur tracks were owned,maintained or under the control of the defendant" et cetera. The instruction authorized a plaintiff's verdict upon a finding that defendant owned the locomotive and tender, or upon a finding that defendant maintained the locomotive and tender. This is not the law. Defendant contends the instruction necessarily should have required a finding that defendant was in control of the locomotive and tender through some employee other than plaintiff. This is an employee-employer controversy; not a passenger-carrier controversy. It is an essential element of a res ipsa loquitur case that the defendant have control of the injuring instrumentality. This court en banc in McCloskey v. Koplar,
Plaintiff's petition was to the effect that defendant owned, maintained, operated, i.e., controlled, et cetera the locomotive and tender. Defendant's answer included a general denial putting this plea in issue and specifically alleged that said locomotive was being operated "in accordance with signals and directions given by the plaintiff and under the direction, supervision and control of the plaintiff" and that plaintiff "negligently directed said operation, and negligently failed to direct that said locomotive engine be operated otherwise . . ." This put in issue the constitutive element of control; i.e., whether plaintiff or defendant, through some employee other than plaintiff, was in control.
The rule of law is that controverted fact issues essential to a plaintiff's cause are to be established and so found by juries and that a verdict directing instruction omitting such a controverted essential fact cannot be cured by other instructions. In such cases there exists a fatal conflict in the instructions. State ex rel. v. Shain,
The instant record, considered as a whole, established the speed of the movement as an important causative factor. There was direct evidence and the jury could find the speed was the sole causative factor. The only witness undertaking to state a cause testified that "speed" was the cause. The jury, of course, was privileged to believe defendant's witnesses. The engineer testified that the locomotive was operated by signals, which included, among others, signals to "slow down" and "go easy"; and that it was plaintiff's duty to and he relied upon plaintiff to give the "slow" signal if he were going too fast. Also, if the jury might infer defendant was negligent from plaintiff's evidence establishing the occurrence of the derailment *618
then by as strong logic the jury could infer that plaintiff had control over the speed of movements on switch tracks from plaintiff's testimony that he was in the very act of giving the engineer the "slow signal" when the derailment occurred and especially so from plaintiff's testimony that at times it was necessary for him to slow down switching movements. In a sense it is true that defendant had control of the locomotive and tender; but defendant had delegated certain authority to plaintiff (he was engine foreman and footboard yardmaster) and constituted plaintiff defendant's alter ego for the purpose of controlling the movement on behalf of defendant; at least the jury could so find from the evidence. The engineer had control of the speed in the first instance but there was evidence a superior control rested in plaintiff. Injuries may result from the improper handling as well as from a defective functioning of the injuring instrumentality; and defendant, instead of admitting the fact, put plaintiff to his proof with respect to the handling of the instrumentality here involved. 45 C.J., p. 1215, states: ". . .the doctrine cannot be invoked where there is a divided responsibility and the accident is due in part to the act of a third party over whom defendant has no control, or where theinjuring agency is partly or entirely under the control or management of plaintiff. The rule that the exclusive control and management of the appliance or thing causing the injury must be shown to have been in defendant does not mean physical control, but refers to the right of such control . . ." McCloskey v. Koplar, supra; 38 Am. Jur., p. 996, sec. 300. 35 Am. Jur., p. 925, n. 12; Annotation L.R.A. 1917E, p. 231. Cochran v. Pittsburgh L.E. Rd. Co.,
[7] Error did not result from refusing defendant's instruction No. 9. It was to the effect that if the movement was under the supervision and in accord with the directions of plaintiff and the derailment was caused by the speed of the movement, the verdict should be for defendant. Defendants are privileged to submit, as stated in Borgstede v. Waldbauer,
We deem it unnecessary to discuss other matters.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded. Westhues and Barrett, CC., dissent.
". . . and no employee shall be held to have assumed the risks of his employment in any case where the violation by such common carrier of any statute enacted for the safety of employees contributed to the injury or death of such employee." Ibid., p. 695, Sec. 54.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BOHLING, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.