36 So. 812 | La. | 1904
Frank Davenport, the plaintiff, a young colored man, while discharging his duties of brakeman on the railroad operated by the defendant company in ■ connection with its lumber mill, was run over by a locomotive, and had his two legs crushed, so that they had to be amputated. He brings this suit in damages.
The train was on the yard of defendant. It was composed of 16 to 18 log cars, of which the 8 or 9 composing the front part of the train were loaded, and the others were empty. It had to be moved about 400 yards farther, to the pond, where the logs were to be dumped. For that purpose the locomotive had been detached from the front and brought to the rear. As the.grade was downward to the pond, it was necessary that the locomotive should be coupled to the train in order to handle the train with safety; and it was while doing this that plaintiff was run over.
Although a number of persons were near by, only three saw the accident — the engineer, plaintiff himself, and one Ranee Jackson. The engineer was not examined as a witness. Ranee Jackson appeared for defendant.
I-Iis statement is that plaintiff inserted one end of the coupling bar into the draw-head of the engine, and, holding up the other end, walked ahead of the engine as it moved slowly towards the cars. That the cars moved off when the engine struck them, and the engine followed without stopping, plaintiff still holding up the coupling bar, when almost immediately (plaintiff having walked only four feet, or four steps) plaintiff stumbled as the result of his heel being struck by the pilot of the engine, and fell, and the front wheel of the engine passed over his legs.
Plaintiff testified he signaled the engine to stop, and it did so, about 10 feet from the cars; that he then put the coupling bar into the drawhead of the rear ear, and was
The version of the facts thus given by plaintiff is adopted in the petition; but the petition also charges that, after plaintiff had stumbled and fallen, there was still a clear chance to avoid the accident by stopping the engine, and that the engineer negligently failed to take advantage of said opportunity.
While much of the criticism of the testimony of defendant’s witnesses by plaintiff’s able counsel appears to be well founded, it is not possible for this court to accept plaintiff’s version of how the accident happened. Putting aside the admissions which plaintiff is said to have made to the agent of the insurance company and to defendant’s general manager, and putting aside the testimony of Bill Jones and Seguin, there still remains the testimony of Ranee Jackson, a disinterested witness. Besides, plaintiff is contradicted by several witnesses in his statement that the locomotive went bn to the pond, without stopping at all, after passing over him; and he is contradicted by Ranee Jackson and Joseph Green in his statement that he himself pulled his legs from under the locomotive.
The only question must be whether defendant is not responsible even if plaintiff’s version of the facts is put aside and that of Ranee Jackson is accepted; in other words, whether, taking the facts as stated by Ranee Jackson, the engineer did not have an opportunity to stop the engine in time to avoid the accident, and, if so, whether defendant is not responsible under the last clear chance doctrine.
The court finds that for the satisfactory determination of that issue there is absent from the record some evidence that might have been furnished, and that may yet be available; and under all the circumstances of the case the court has concluded to remand the ease for taking this evidence.
It is established that plaintiff! was to the right of the center of the track — that is to say, on the engineer’s side of it; and the evidence would go to show that the engineer could see him as he stumbled and fell, but the evidence is not full enough on that point. If the engineer could see him, it was his duty, under the circumstances, to keep him in sight, and to set about stopping the engine the very instant he stumbled and fell.
There is no evidence going to show within what space a locomotive moving slowly as this one was doing can be stopped, if in good order, and in the hands of a competent engineer. Nor is there any evidence of the distance between the front of the cow-catcher, where Ranee Jackson places plaintiff!, and the front wheel of the engine; in other words, there is no evidence enabling the court to determine whether the engineer had a chance to stop the locomotive after he had seen, or should have seen, plaintiff stumble. If there was such chance, the defense of contributory negligence urged by defendant cannot avail, because the negligence charged to plaintiff would then have been only the remote cause of the accident. The proximate cause would have been the failure of the engineer to stop the engine after he had seen, or should have seen, plaintiff! stumble and fall. Maguire v. Railroad Co., 46 La. Ann. 1554, 16 South. 457, and cases there cited. It would make no difference whether the nonstopping of the engine was attributable to the fault of the engineer or to the defectiveness of the brakes of the engine..
We may mention that the contributory negligence is said to have consisted in that plaintiff did not set the brakes tight enough to prevent the log cars from moving under •the impact of the engine; and in that, for effecting the coupling, plaintiff walked ahead of the engine, instead of standing on the
Defendant says in his answer, but nowhere else in the record, that the engineer could not see the brakeman. But how could that be, when he had to have him in sight in order to obey his signals? Defendant says also that the engine was stopped within three feet. Had that been done, or anything like it, plaintiff would not have been injured. So far as the record shows, he suffered no injury from the pilot or cow-catcher, which must have been more than three feet long.
There is much evidence that the engine was out of order. The shoe brakes certainly were worn out, and the court is inclined to believe that the air brake also was out of order. 'The preponderance of the testimony is that the engineer was incompetent, and that defendant knew it. He had had a comparatively short experience even as fireman. Defendant had taken him up and intrusted the locomotive to him simply because the engineer was sick and some one had to be put in his place. But the defectiveness of the engine or the incompetency of the engineer can make no difference in the ease if there was not time or space to stop the engine even if the one had been in good order and the other competent. It may be that after further evidence is taken the case will become analogous to that of Crisman v. R. R. Co., 110 La. 640, 34 South. 718, 62 L. R. A. 747; but it has not as yet reached that stage. It does not yet appear that the best of engineers and of engines could have increased the chance of plaintiff’s not being run over.
Another defense is that any claim' plaintiff may have had has been fully settled by compromise.
Plaintiff denies all knowledge of the compromise; says that, if he ever made it, it must have been at a time when his mind was so affected by the opiates that were being administered to him that he did not know what he was doing.
There can be no doubt that plaintiff did make the compromise; but the case presents very much the same features as that of Lampkins v. R. R. Co., 42 La. Ann. 997, 8 South. 530, and we shall let the compromise have the same fate as in that case.
The circumstances are these: The agent of the insurance company holding an employe’s liability policy on the defendant company came from Chicago to the mill of defendant, and with the general manager of the defendant company went to the cabin where the young negro man lay with both legs recently amputated for the second time, when, according to his attending physician’s testimony, “he was in a very bad state. To be plain about it, I called him nearly dead”— and made the alleged compromise with him, giving him 850 (which he put under his pillow) “in full settlement, accord, and satisfaction of any and all claims or demands of every description which I now have or may hereafter have against the said Fred. B. Du-back Lumber Company on account of an accident causing injury to me on or about September the 6th,"1902.”
It is hardly necessary to say that a compromise such as this cannot stand. In the language of Judge Story:
“A contract with a person of weak mind or for an inadequate consideration furnishes the most vehement presumption of fraud.” Story, Eq. Juris. §§ 236, 246.
The attending physician says that he administered sedatives, anodynes, and morphine to the patient, who for the first three weeks “hardly knew anything that was going on.” The colored woman who was the young man’s constant nurse says of him that at the time of the compromise “Frank had no sense”; and that one reason why she knows that Frank did not know the nature of what he had done was that “when they [the two white men who made the compromise] left Frank asked what they came there for, and said he reckoned he would know when he got
The court properly excluded proof of what the engineer said after the accident. It was hearsay, and did not come within the rule of res gestee. The statement was made after the engineer had gone to the pond with the train, and had returned with his engine to the scene of the accident, and had gotten out of his ckb and come to where the wounded man lay. In this interval he had had ample tipie to reflect and make up a story to exculpate himself and lay the hlame on the defectiveness of his engine.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from' be set aside, and the ease be remanded for further trial in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. Defendant to pay the costs of this appeal; the other costs to await the final determination of the suit.