27 P.2d 635 | Cal. | 1933
Lead Opinion
THE COURT.
The plaintiff brought the present action to recover damages on account of personal injuries sustained by him while acting as a brakeman in the employ of the defendant. It is conceded that at the time the defendant was operating in interstate commerce. The plaintiff recovered a verdict of $35,000. From a judgment entered thereon the defendant appeals.
On the morning of October 30, 1928, the plaintiff and other members of a crew were engaged in switching operations in the defendant's yards at Barstow, California. At the time of the injury the crew was engaged in attempting to cut off the twelfth car from the middle of a string of about twenty-two *489 freight-cars. The plaintiff was riding the top of the last or twenty-second car about six feet back from the end thereof for the purpose of setting the hand-brake when the cut should be made between the twelfth and thirteenth cars. There was some distance for the train to go to reach the switch where this cut was to be made and it proceeded at a pace of about five or six miles an hour. The yard was not entirely level but was built on what in the testimony is called a "hump". When the string was backed to the switching point, the engine foreman took a position at the cut lever between the cars to be separated and gave a stop signal to the engineer. By the force of the ensuing stop the plaintiff was thrown over the end of the last car and was found a distance of about fifteen feet from the end of that car when the stop was completed. The testimony on the question whether the engine foreman made any attempt to operate the cut lever to disconnect the coupling appliance was conflicting. There was testimony by observers that he gave two or three pulls or jerks on the cut lever. The testimony of the engine foreman is that when he gave the stop signal, from a consideration of the incline at that point, he intentionally as yet made no attempt to disconnect until the slack had been gathered or "bunched" toward the engine. Evidence was introduced by the defendant that the appliance worked properly both before and after the accident and that an inspection thereof showed no defect. The plaintiff was an experienced brakeman and had worked for the defendant for about a year.
The plaintiff predicated a recovery on two causes of action. In the first, based on the terms of the Federal Employers' Liability Act (April 22, 1908, chap. 149, sec. 1; 35 Stats. at Large, 65; 45 U.S.C.A., sec. 51) he charged the negligent operation of the train by the employees by which the train was caused to come to a violent and unexpected stop which precipitated the plaintiff to the ground, etc. By the second cause of action the plaintiff charged a violation of section 2 of the Safety Appliance Act. (March 2, 1893, 27 Stats. at Large, 531; 45 U.S.C.A., sec. 2.)
On this appeal the defendant assigns as prejudicial error the giving of certain instructions. The court by its instruction numbered twenty stated to the jury: "There has been some evidence introduced by the defendant that the automatic *490
couplers . . . were inspected shortly after the accident . . . and that there was no defect found in said automatic couplers"; that under the Safety Appliance Act "it was the absolute duty of the defendant to equip its cars with automatic couplers which could be uncoupled at all times without the necessity of men going between the ends of the cars, and proof of a failure of a coupler to work at any time sustains the charge" that the act has been violated. Further, that if the jury believe from the evidence that proper attempt was made to uncouple the cars and the automatic coupler failed to work, "then I instruct you that it is immaterial whether said coupler was operated prior to or after the occurrence of said accident, and the plaintiff would be entitled to your verdict irrespective of what the proof may show regarding the operation or condition of said coupler prior to or after said accident had occurred". The defendant contends that the instruction erroneously places absolute liability on the defendant upon a showing merely that the appliance failed to uncouple. [1] The provisions of section 2 of the act place an absolute duty upon the defendant to equip its cars "with couplers coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the ends of the cars". (Chicago, B. Q.R. Co. v. United States,
The plaintiff maintains that the decisions establish that proof of the failure of the coupling device to work at any time supports the charge of the violation of the act.
In Burho v. Minneapolis St. L.R. Co.,
In Philadelphia R. Ry. Co. v. McKibbin, 259 Fed. 476, 478, 479, and Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Jones, 300 Fed. 525, 527, cases relied upon by the plaintiff are discussed. In the former, an uncoupling case, this statement appears: "The case then presents the question whether the repeated and unsuccessful efforts, by an experienced person, to operate the lever of an automatic coupler, when there are no circumstances consistent with its being in repair and workable condition to explain the inability to successfully operate it at a given time when, under the statute, it should be in working order, without other evidence of its defective condition, is sufficient to permit the inference that the coupler was not in the condition required by the statute when the efforts to operate it were made. This question has received an affirmative answer by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit in Nichols v. Chesapeake Ohio R. Co., 195 Fed. 913, 917 [115 C.C.A. 601]. With the conclusion thus reached we are in accord. We do not wish to be understood, however, as holding what seems to have been conceded in Chicago, R.I. Pac. R. Co. v. Brown,
In St. Louis Southwestern R. Co. of Texas v. Bounds, (Tex. Civ. App.)
On the other hand the cases which in Chicago, R.I. Pac. Ry.
v. Brown,
An examination into the facts of all of the foregoing cases makes it apparent, however, that the cases present no real conflict. The question in these cases where the verdict or judgment was for the plaintiff is whether under the particular facts the trier of the facts was entitled to find that the device was defective. In none of them was it intimated that it was not a question for the jury to determine whether under all of the facts and circumstances a violation had been committed. In many of them the only testimony material to the issue of whether a defect existed was that relating to the effort made to couple or uncouple by virtue of which the workman making the attempt to couple or uncouple was injured. No question appeared therein that the effort was not made under ordinary conditions and at a time when save for a defect the appliance would have operated. Where the evidence was that the train "broke", it is obvious that that fact alone is sufficient to uphold a finding that a defect existed. The giving of an instruction which has the effect of stating to the jury that the mere failure of the device to operate is conclusive evidence of a violation of the act does not find authority in any of the cases. [2] We think that that portion of instruction No. 20 which embodied the phrase "proof of a failure of coupler to work at any time sustains the charge", standing alone, so stated. It is contended that the balance of the instruction being conditioned upon the finding of the jury "that proper attempt was made to uncouple the cars" had the effect to cure any such error. That instruction, however, also told the jury that it could upon such a finding being made entirely disregard anything that the proof might show regarding the operation or condition of the coupler prior to or after the accident. In this connection the plaintiff relies upon the statement appearing in some of the foregoing cases that proof that the appliance was examined and showed no defect or that it operated perfectly on other occasions is not sufficient to overcome the reasonable inference that a defect existed from proof of what was done at the time of the accident to operate the appliance and its failure to work. This, however, was not made as a statement of a proposition of law or a legal principle, nor that such evidence was not to be considered by the jury at all, but was a statement of the reviewing court's conclusion that under the facts of the particular case the failure of the *495 appliance to operate supports the finding that a defect existed. In other words, that under the particular facts the weight of such evidence is not sufficient as a matter of law to overcome the inferences which may reasonably be drawn from the evidence of the failure of the device to operate at the time of the accident. None of the cases relied upon is authority for the proposition either that such evidence is not material on the issue of whether a defect existed, or that the trial court may take from the jury the right to consider all of the evidence in determining whether under all of the facts and circumstances a defect may be said to exist. The erroneous impression created by the first portion of instruction No. 20 herein cannot be said to be overcome by another portion thereof which itself is subject to criticism for invading the province of the jury.
[3] From a review of the record we are not prepared to say that omission of instruction No. 20 from the instructions given to the jury would have resulted in a verdict for the defendant. The jury was otherwise properly instructed on all the issues, including the question of proximate cause. No other error prejudicial to the defendant appears in the giving or refusal to give any instruction nor in any other ruling made by the trial court. The testimony on the issue of negligence under the first cause of action, although conflicting to some degree, did not present a close question in view of the physical facts presented substantially without dispute, and which were sufficient to support a charge of negligence. (Ft. Worth D.C.R. Co. v.Stalcup, (Tex. Civ. App.)
[4] The defendant contends that nevertheless reversal is compulsory by virtue of the presence of the issue of assumption of risk under the first count, which, by the provisions of the Safety Appliance Act, is not an issue under the second count. (March 2, 1893, chap. 196, sec. 8, 27 Stats. at Large, 532; 45 U.S.C.A., sec. 7; April 22, 1908, chap. 149, sec. 4, 35 Stats. at Large, 66; 45 U.S.C.A., sec. 54; Seaboard Air Line v. Horton,
[5] The defendant argues that there was open to the plaintiff a choice between two methods of doing the work and that the plaintiff chose the more hazardous. This argument is properly addressed to an issue of contributory negligence which does not appear to have been raised. Moreover, no showing was made that in the ordinary course of his duties the position taken by the plaintiff was one which he was not entitled to choose. He was obliged to take an appropriate position to perform his duties in braking the string about to be disconnected and the testimony of the defendant's witnesses shows that his position was known to them. The contention is therefore answered by the foregoing decisions in connection with the question of assumption of risk. Under these cases, in the absence of any warning or notice that the position taken was unusually hazardous, and unusual risk attendant thereon was not assumed by the plaintiff.
[6] The defendant makes the further contention that, as a matter of law, assuming a defective coupler, the defect merely created a condition of the injury and was not the proximate cause thereof, relying on St. Louis S.F.R. Co. v. Conarty,
[7] A review of the entire record leads us to the conclusion that the effect of the giving of instruction No. 20 was to create such an impression on the minds of the jury as to result in an excessive verdict. Evidence of some malingering or at least exaggeration on the part of the plaintiff as to the permanency of the effect of the injuries was shown on his cross-examination. This evidence would doubtless have been weighed more closely by the jury were it not for the apparent opportunity afforded by the erroneous instruction to impose punitive damages. We also conclude that the prejudice suffered by the defendant by the giving of said instruction does not necessarily require a reversal, but that a final disposition of the case may properly be made by the following order:
It is ordered that if the plaintiff within thirty days from the filing hereof file with the clerk of this court his written consent to a modification of the judgment by a deduction therefrom of the sum of $15,000, leaving the judgment to stand for the sum of $20,000 and costs of suit, said judgment be modified accordingly; such modified judgment to bear interest at the legal rate from the date of the entry of the original judgment in the superior court; but if such consent be not so filed within said time, the judgment shall be reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. I think the judgment should be reversed.
Langdon, J., and Thompson, J., being disqualified, did not participate herein.
Rehearing denied.
Preston, J., dissented. *498