277 Mo. 663 | Mo. | 1919
Action to recover damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff, William Cassin, a man forty-five years of age, was employed by the receivers of the Frisco Railroad Company, as a coach cleaner.. On January 23, 1915, at Lawton, Oklahoma, while he
The petition was in two courts, the first pleading the Federal Employers’ Liability Act and the second based on common law negligence. On the trial the court at defendants’ request instructed the jury that no recovery could he had on the latter count. The case originated in Lawrence County, hut was sent to Dade County on a change of venue.
Negligence was charged for failure to exercise ordinary care to furnish plaintiff with a reasonably safe hose with which to work; and failure to inspect and see that the hose with which plaintiff was supposed to work was in such repair as to make it á safe appliance.
The answer was a general denial, coupled with the defense of contributory negligence and assumption of risk.
The plaintiff replied, denying negligence on his part, or that his knowledge of the risk in using said hose was equal to or greater than the knowledge of the defendants.
The evidence tended to show that it was plaintiff’s usual duty to fill water-coolers in certain passenger coaches which were stored overnight at Lawton, preparatory to a day trip to and return from Quanah, Texas. A water-cooler is located at each end of such' coaches, and is filled by a hose which is carried to, the top of the coach and inserted in the cooler. The hose used in this instance was sixty-five feet in length and consisted of new hose, fifty feet long, which was. spliced to an old piece fifteen feet long by means of an eight-inch iron pipe. When this splicing was originally made, the two pieces of hose fitted the pipe closely, but in time, owing to hard usage and the fact that the hose was dragged about, it became loose and fell apart. The condition of
On the night of the accident plaintiff, as usual, went on top of the coach by means of a ladder, dragging the hose behind him. He filled one cooler and started toward the other end of the coach to fill the other, when the hose broke apart, causing him to lose his balance and fall to the ground, and" as a result was run over by a moving freight train and injured.
The coach on which plaintiff was working was one of the coaches of a passenger train which was used every day in interstate commerce between Lawton, Oklahoma, and Quanah, Texas. The train left Lawton at seven o ’clock in the morning, and returned from Quanah at four-fifty in the afternoon, when the coaches were run on a storage track and left to be cleaned for the next day’s run.
After the accident plaintiff was taken to a hospital at Lawton, where his foot was amputated, and later was taken to a hospital at Springfield, Missouri, where it was found that a second amputation of the leg was necessary.
The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff and assessed his damages .at the sum of twelve thousand dollars.
Prom a judgment of this amount defendants appealed.
In the present case the coach in question was exclusively used in interstate business and was only stopped for preparation for that use and hence it fell within the doctrine announced by the United States. Supreme Court in N. Y. Cent. Railroad v. Carr, 238 U.
“The scope of the statute is so broad that it covers a vast field about which there can he no discussion. But owing to the fact that, during the 'same day, railroad employees often and rapidly pass from one class of employment to another, the courts are constantly called upon to decide those close questions where it is difficult to define the line which divides state from interstate business. The matter is not to be decided by considering the physical position of the employee at the moment of injury. If he is hurt in the course of his employment while going to a car to perform an interstate duty, or if he is injured while preparing an engine for an interstate trip, he is entitled to the benefits of the Federal Act, although the accident occurred prior to the actual coupling of the engine to the interstate cars.” (Italics ours.) [238 U. S. 262.]
Again, said the same court on this subject: “It is argued that because, so far. as appears, deceased had not previously participated in any movement of interstate freight, and the through cars had not as yet been attached to his engine, his employment in interstate commerce was still in the future. It seems to us, however, that his acts in inspecting, oiling, firing and preparing his engine for the trip to Selma, were acts performed as a part of interstate commerce, and the circumstance that the interstate freight cars had not as yet been coupled up is legally insignificant. See Pedersen v. Deleware etc. Ry., 229 U. S. 146, 151.” [232 U. S. l. c. 260.]
The trial court did not, therefore, err in overruling respondent’s demurrer to the evidence.
In other words, it is apparent that the portion of the instruction above quoted and complained of was intended solely to prescribe the duty of the jury to make a comparison in case they should find that both parties were guilty of negligence and reduce the damages recoverable by plaintiff according to the rule fixed by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act.
However, the first instruction given for plaintiff did cover the entire case and did submit to the jury every phase of the evidence under the issues raised by the pleadings, and among other things, “that the plaintiff, as well as the defendants, at the time was engaged in interstate commerce between the different states,” and “that the parting of said hose and the consequent injury to plaintiff was due to the negligence of defendants, their agents, servants or employees in whole or in part, in the particulars as set forth in the next succeeding instructions and the other instructions herein” as prerequisites to a verdict for the plaintiff on the first count of the petition. It is the established rule
Clearly it was not the duty of the plaintiff to keep, the hose furnished him by the master in a reasonably safe condition. That duty the law imposed upon the employer. Nor have we been able to find any evidence tending to show any negligence on the part of the plaintiff which contributed to his falling from the top of the car while he was drawing up the hose in order to fill the coolers. Of course defendants cannot rely on any theory of contributory negligence beyond the averments contained in their answer, unless, which is not the case, negligence was shown as a matter of law by testimony given for plaintiff in submitting his case.
In these circumstances failure to embody in the instruction under -review language required by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act in cases only where both parties are negligent, was not harmful error in the absence of any substantial evidence showing that plaintiff was guilty of negligence directly contributing to his own injury in the manner stated in the answer of defendant.
Our conclusion is that we would not be warranted under the facts in this record in reversing this case .on account of the erroneous phraseology of the instruction defining the duty of the jury in cases where joint negligence is shown.
“The foreman furnished Cassin and me with a long hose for watering coaches; it was about sixty-five feet long, I suppose — something like that — and at times it was longer. Sometimes it would get cut off, it would get worn out, ánd one thing and another, and sometimes they would let the cars run over it, using it across the tracks. This hose was made up of two pieces, the longest piece was about fifty feet, the shortest about twelve or fifteen feet, something like that. The short piece was the old hose. It was from a long hose, I suppose fifty feet long that had been worn and cut off— some full of holes until it got down that short. The old hose from which the short piece was taken might have been there two or three years, or four.”
It is evident if the witness correctly described the hose, the instruction in question was not without support in the evidence. Besides it must be borne in mind that if the jury were required to find any bad condition of the hose not warranted by the testimony, plaintiff simply shouldered an additional burden which did not harm the defendants.
. IY. It is insisted that the court erred in the admission of testimony in reference to the common custom of using clamps to connect the two pieces of hose. Defendants were not compelled to adopt any specific method for that purpose other than such an one as would make the use of the hose reasonably safe. However, the evidence in question cannot be said to have been without any evidentiary force, since the very existence of the general custom consists with the idea that prudent men may have followed it. On that subject this court, in Gordon v. Railroad, 222 Mo. l. c. 536, approved a decision of the Court of Appeals in the following language:.
*678 “In Brunke v. Telephone Co., 115 Mo. App. 36, it was held that ‘evidence of a custom in doing a certain thing has probative force bearing upon negligence, since custom arises from its adoption by many prudent men, and the law recognizes the value of arriving at the nature or tendency of the given act by considering its effect upon the conduct of others as shown by a general custom;’ citing O’Melia v. Railroad, 115 Mo. 205; White v. Railroad, 84 Mo. App. 411, and other Missouri cases.”
There was no complaint that the verdict in this case was excessive. We have not been able to find any valid reason, under the facts in this record, why it should be disturned. It will, therefore; be affirmed. It is so ordered.