135 Mo. App. 643 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This is a suit for damages alleged to have accrued to tbe plaintiff as a result of personal injuries received while in defendant’s employ as a section band on its railroad. Plaintiff recovered and tbe defendant appeals. Tbe plaintiff bad been in tbe defendant’s employ on tbe section between two and three months prior to the date of bis injury. Tbe negligence relied upon for a recovery is an alleged careless act of tbe defendant’s section foreman in applying tbe brake, without warning, on tbe car on which tbe plaintiff and others were riding, in such a manner as to occasion tbe sudden stopping of tbe car, whereby plaintiff was precipitated onto tbe center of tbe track and tbe car run upon him. It appears tbe gang was in two parties working together on defendant’s railroad. At about five-thirty o’clock in tbe afternoon, they ceased their labors and embarked on two separate handcars for their homes in tbe town of Rhineland. There were three men .and numerous tools on tbe first,or. foremost
There is no question of fellow-service in the case. Aside from our statutes, sections 2878 and 2874, Mo. Ann. St. 1906, and the construction placed thereon by our Supreme Court in Callahan v. St. Louis Mer. Bridge, etc., Ry. Co., 170 Mo. 473, to the effect that the
The chief argument advanced for a reversal of the judgment is that the court erred in refusing defendant’s request at the close of the plaintiff’s case and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, to peremptorily direct a verdict for it. It is insisted, first, that the evidence fails to show a negligent act on the part of the foreman in checking or stopping the car. It is said it does not appear the car was stopped in such an unusual manner as to show a breach of the obligation to exercise ordinary care for the plaintiff’s safety. There can be no doubt that the section hand, upon entering the service, assumed the risks ordinarily incident thereto; and among these, he should be adjudged to take the risk of injuries which might occur as a result of the ordinary and usual jerks and jars incident to the operation of *a handcar with which he undertakes to work. It is to be presumed that those engaged in such work are reasonably alert to the circumstances surrounding the employment and are on the lookout to protect themselves against such jerks and jars as ordinarily attend the usual stopping of a car. In other words, negligence ought not to be affirmed on the act of the foreman in checking the speed of a handcar unless it be in an unusual and extraordinary manner. This we believe to be the sound doctrine deduced from the authorities. [Bartley v. Met. Ry. Co., 124 Mo. 124, 140; Hedrick v. Mo. Pac. R. R. Co., 195 Mo. 104; Saxton v. Mo.
It is next insisted that the judgment should be reversed for the reason it does not appear that the foreman, Koch, could reasonably have anticipated that plaintiff would be hurled from the car as a result of his act in suddenly applying the brake. As a subdivision of this argument, it is urged that the act of the foreman in applying the brake without warning and the consequent checking of the speed, was remote in the eye of the law, when considered with reference to the
It is next urged that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in assuming the position he did on the car and holding the lever bar with one hand only. We are not so persuaded. It does not appear his situation was one which threatened imminent peril. Indeed, it is one usually occupied by section men, and a reasonably' prudent man might believé he could thus stand with entire safety.
There appears to be nothing in the facts of this case indicating that the position assumed by the plaintiff was one of imminent peril had the car been managed or stopped in the usual manner, and the fact that he was using one hand only in' pumping the car, does not so materially change its aspect as to render him guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
The judgment will be affirmed. It is so ordered.