206 Mo. 471 | Mo. | 1907
This suit was brought in the circuit court of Jasper county by W. A. Edge against the defendant for the recovery of the sum of $25,000 for personal injuries received by him in jumping from a car, caused by the alleged negligence of defendant in permitting a collision to occur on its road between two of its cars.
For his cause of action, the plaintiff states that the defendant is now, and at all times hereinafter mentioned was, a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Missouri; that as such corporation, it is now, and at all times hereinafter mentioned was, engaged in the operation of an electric railway between the city of Carthage, Missouri, and the city of Galena, Kansas, running through the cities of Joplin, Webb City, and Carterville, Missouri; that the railway of defendant has now, and at all times
Plaintiff further states that his time on and prior to August 17, 1903,. was worth not less than fifty dollars a month, and that by reason of his injuries, as aforesaid, he has lost the value of his time from August 17, 1903.
Wherefore, in consideration of the premises, plaintiff is damaged in the sum of twenty-five thous- and dollars, for which he prays judgment.
At the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant offered a demurrer to the evidence, which was, by the court
Defendant then filed an affidavit of surprise, and stated it was not prepared to meet the new issues made by the amended petition, and asked for a continuance, which was, by the court, refused, and defendant excepted.
Defendant then filed its amended answer, which, omitting formal parts, is as follows:
“Now comes the defendant and for answer to amended petition of plaintiff herein, admits that the-defendant is now, and at all times hereinafter mentioned in plaintiff’s petition was, a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Missouri, and was engaged in the operation of an electric railway between the City of Carthage, Missouri, and the City of Galena, Kansas, running through the cities of Joplin, Webb City and Carterville, Missouri. Admits that on the 17th day of August, 1903, plaintiff was a motorman and Burén Moad was a conductor on one of defendant’s ears and in charge of car No. 30 of
“Defendant further answering says that the injuries, if any, received by plaintiff were caused by the negligence of plaintiff and the negligence of his conductor, Moad, who was a fellow-servant. That plaintiff was negligent and careless in running his car around the curve at Dewey station at too fast a rate of speed and was negligent and careless in not keeping a lookout for objects on the track ahead of him, and negligent and careless in talking and carrying on conversation with other people and not giving' his full attention to his duties as a motorman, and that but for the negligence and carelessness on the part of plaintiff he would have seen oar No. 29 in ample time to have prevented any collision between said cars. That said conductor Moad, a fellow-servant of plaintiff, was negligent and careless in receiving his orders from Lawrence Havens, car-starter, and in misunderstanding and mistaking his orders. That said Lawrence Havens ordered him to meet 29 at Morgan and go to Motley, and that said Moad negligently and carelessly failed to obey said order and left Morgan station with 30 without waiting for car 29 to arrive' there.
“Defendant further answering says that Lawrence Havens, car-starter,' and plaintiff were fellow-servants and both engaged in the operation of said car Nó. 30 of defendant company, and defendant is not liable for any mistakes or negligence of said Lawrence Havens, if any there were. That plaintiff, if he had been attending strictly to his duties, and looking out for objects ahead of him on the track of said road, would have seen car No. 29 in ample time to have stopped his car No. 30 before any collision occurred. The plaintiff
“And defendant says that collision between said cars was caused by the negligence of plaintiff in failing to perform his duty in keeping a lookout for objects on the track and running around Dewey curve at too rapid rate of speed and carrying on conversation with other people on said car instead of keeping his attention directed ahead of him on the track of said road, by reason of all of which defendant says plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this cause; that the accident and injuries, if any, received by plaintiff, were caused by the negligence and carelessness of plaintiff as above set out, and if there was any negligence on the part of Burén Mo ad, conductor, and Lawrence Haven, car dispatcher, said negligence was the negligence of a fellow-servant of plaintiff, and plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action.
“Defendant having fully answered, asks to be discharged with costs.”
The reply was a general denial.
The facts disclosed by the record are but few, and are, substantially, as follows:
On August' 17,1903, the defendant was operating a single-track railway between Carthage, in this State, and G-alena, in the State of Kansas, a distance of thir
“10. Cars must be run as closely to schedule time as possible, and each conductor must communicate, by telephone, with the car dispatcher at time of leaving car house and at each passing point and terminal wherever there is a telephone, and must govern the movement of his car strictly by orders received from dispatcher, proceeding from station to station only on orders. He must not allow his car to go beyond any meeting point without orders, whether he meet another car or not. When the cars meet the conductor of the' car first to arrive will report, and repeat orders, received, to both his own motorman and conductor of connecting car, and motorman of latter must not proceed until ordered or signaled so to do by his conductor. No extra car or work-car must leave car house without reporting to and receiving orders from dispatcher, and all such cars must move only in accord
At the time of the injury plaintiff was in the employment of the defendant as a motorman, and had charge of car No. SO1, which left Carthage at 2:10 of the afternoon of that day on its regular trip. Burén Moad was also an employee of the company, and was the conductor in charge of that car at the time of the injury. When the car left Carthage, the conductor, Moad, called up the dispatcher and received' orders to go to Morgan station, which was a station about three miles from Carthage. The car arrived there on time, and the 'conductor called, by ’phone, the dispatchers for orders. After the car left Carthage and before reaching Morgan, Harbaugh, one of the car dispatchers, went off duty, but remained in the office, and Havens, the other dispatcher, answered the telephone at Morgan. The last order Harbaugh gave before going off duty was for car No. 29, which was en route from ‘Galena to Carthage, and which had arrived at the station Motley, about five miles west of Morgan, to proceed to Morgan, which was a regular place where it should have met car No. 30. That was the last order given by Harbaugh; and the first given by Havens after coming'on duty, was to Conductor Moad when he called in at Morgan.
The telephone box is in the open and the car, while
Moad, over the objections of the defendant, testified that when he reached Morgan he called the dispatcher for orders, and that “Havens said, ‘Hello,’ and I said, ‘30 Morgan,’ and he says, ‘30 pass 29 at Syracuse, look out for 17 at Lakeside. I don’t know whether they are on the main track or not, but they are coming ahead of you, and! you will then come on to Motley,’ and 1 repeated the order back, and said, “30, pass 29 at Syracuse, look out for 17 at Lakeside — don’t know whether they are on the main track or not, but they are coming ahead of you, and come on to Motley. ’ Havens said all right or something like that.”
He also testified that he then boarded his car and gave the signal to go ahead, and walked to the front of the car and repeated the order to the motorman, and he said, “All right, we’ll do it.”
Moad’s. testimony was fully corroborated by the testimony of the plaintiff and three passengers who were on said car, who testified to hearing the words of Moad.
As soon as the signal was given the car proceeded toward Syracuse, which is a mile or so west of Morgan. Between Morgan and Syracuse there is a tract of land .owned by one Ropp, and the car line, if it proceeded directly from Morgan, would pass through the Ropp land and cut a long narrow strip off of the south ■side thereof. To avoid that the road curved to the south and then passed down grade for a short distance to a point where there was rather a steep up-grade, and after reaching the top of the up-grade the track proceeded a short distance and then curved back to the north about the same distance it had curved to the south. The time between Morgan and Syracuse, including stops,- was about five minutes. After plaintiff’s car curved to the south and started back up-grade
On the south side of the track of the Ropp land was a row of fruit trees, six or eight feet from the track, the limbs of which extended out to or near the passing cars. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that cars meeting each other on said track as it makes the curve to the north could not have been seen on account of said curve and said trees, on the day of the injury, by the motorman, if standing at his post of duty on the front end of the car, for a greater distance than one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet; while defendant’s evidence tended to show that it could have been seen from one hundred and fifty to nine hundred feet.
About the time car No. 30 reached the top of the grade mentioned, and while going from twenty-five to thirty-five miles an hour, car No. 29 came east from Motley, around the curve and from beyond the trees, at a rate of speed from twenty to thirty miles an hour. When No. 29 was first seen by plaintiff, the evidence tended to show it was somewhere between one hundred and fifty and two hundred feet away. He testified that he was looking down the track all the time and as soon as he saw the car he reversed his car and attempted to apply the brake, but, believing a collision was inevitable, he leaped from the car and received the injuries complained of. Almost instantly after he jumped the cars came together with terrific force, and killed the motorman on car No. 29, and injured some of and threw many of the passengers on both cars to the floor. After the collision occurred, plaintiff was found in an unconscious condition in the rear of car No. 30, from fifty to ninety feet therefrom, lying between the rails.
All the eye-witnesses testified1 that after the cars
Plaintiff introduced in evidence several photographs of the cars and surroundings taken the same evening of the accident, over the objections of defendant.
Plaintiff’s injuries consisted of a split knee-cap, left arm and shoulder knocked down, and the muscles thereof torn and strained, a fracture of the seventh cervical vertebra, one or two cuts on the shin, and a fracture of the skull. A piece of the temporal bone, as large as a silver dollar, had to be removed, and the brain at that point is protected only by the scalp, and at the time of the trial his arm and neck were stiff ■and he was unable to perform manual labor. He suffered great physical pain and mental anguish. The injury to the head is permanent.
He was receiving twelve and one-half cents per hour at the time of the injury.
Defendant’s evidence tended to show that the run of the cars was kept by a board' with two lines with holes marking the switches on the road — one for cars going west and one for cars going east, the position cf the cars being marked' by pegs, the pegs being changed from one hole to another as they reported and were started for such switch. That on the day of the accident Havens came on duty at 2:15, and he and Harbaugh were both on duty at the time of the accident, and.Havens testified as follows: “The first call I got was at 2:25. I plugged in and said, ‘ Hello, ’ and got "back a reply, ‘30' at Morgan.’ I recognized the voice and said, ‘Wait a minute Moad,’ and pulled my plug. I hadn’t received any instructions from the other dis
Thomas Harbaugh fully corroborated Havens as to the orders given Moad by Havens, and explained the manner of keeping run of the cars.
Defendant also introduced evidence tending to prove that car No. 30 never slackened its speed after coming in sight of No. 29 up to- the time of the collision; that No. 29 had nearly stopped at that time.
Defendant put in evidence rules 64, 66 and 86 of the company (of which it was shown plaintiff, as motorman, had a copy), which rules required motormen to enter and go around curves at a moderate rate of speed and to have car under good control on all grades, and requiring motormen to use due care and caution, and regulate speed to' conform to the character of track, and no. fast running to be indulged in except on open spaces of clear, straight track.
At the close of all the evidence, the defendant asked a peremptory instruction, directing the jury to find for it; also one declaring the conductor and plaintiff fellow-servants;' both of which were refused by the court, and defendant duly excepted.
The court then by proper instructions, to the giving of which there were no objections, submitted the issues to the jury.
•Among other instructions given for the defendant was the following:
The jury found for plaintiff and assessed his damages at the sum of $5,000; and judgment was rendered accordingly.
Having duly filed motions for a new trial and in arrest, which were overruled, defendant saved its exceptions and appealed to this court.
I. The defendant contends that the plaintiff should not be permitted to recover in this case, because:
First. The injury complained of was the result of the negligence of one Moad, and one Havens the conductor of the car on which plaintiff was motorman, and the car dispatcher, who were fellow-servants, and for whose negligence the company is not liable.
Second. That plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
Third. The court erred in the admission and rejection of evidence.
Fourth. That the court should have given the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence; and, ■
Fifth. The court erred in refusing an instruction asked by defendant, declaring Lawrence Havens and the plaintiff fellow-servants.
A duty rests upon railroad companies to establish and promulgate either by time tables or other suitable means appropriate and sufficient rules and regulations for the safe running of their trains, and an employee who is charged with this duty is with respect
The undisputed facts are, the car dispatcher, whose office was at Webb City, had not only control of the plaintiff, but he had control of all the conductors, and motormen, as well as the control and management of all the cars and their operation. There is a broad distinction between the relations that exist between fellow-servants and that which exists between them and the vice-principal of the company.
In discussing this question, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “There is a clear distinction to be made in relation to their common principal, between servants of a corporation, exercising no supervision over others engaged with them in the same employment, and agents of the corporation, clothed with the control and management of a distinct department, in which their duty is entirely that of direction and superintendence.” ' [Railroad v. Ross, 112 U. S. l. c. 390.]
And this court quoted the above language approvingly in discussing a like question, and added: “In Sheehan v. Railroad, 91 N. Y. 332, and Railroad v. McLallen, 84 Ill. 109, the superintendent and assistant superintendent acting as train dispatchers, were held to be vice-principals. In the case last cited it is said, that, as between the conductor and the company, the assistant superintendent, to whose orders the trains are all subject, is the representative of the corporation, and that the rule applies as well to all orders issued by his assistants and in his name.” And, continuing, this court said: “That a train dispatcher is to be regarded as the representative of the company is, in effect, held in the following cases: Booth v. Railroad, 73 N. Y. 38; Railroad v. Henderson, 37 Ohio St. 552;
This court then concluded by holding that a train dispatcher of a railroad in charge, and control of the movements of the trains, and to whose orders the conductors and engineers were subject, was a representative of the company and not a fellow-servant with those engaged in operating and moving the trains. [Smith v. Railroad, 92 Mo. l. c. 369.]
And Judge Taut said in an opinion he delivered m the case of Railroad v. Camp, 65 Fed. 959, 960 and 964: “He [the train dispatcher] is a vice-principal for two reasons: First, because he is pro tempore in supreme control of a distinct department of the railroad, namely, the running department of the company for his division; and, second, because the work which he is called upon to do is the discharge of a positive duty owed by the company to its employees. . . . Again, the railway company is bound to provide general laws and general time-tables for the reasonably safe operation of its railway system and also rules applicable to emergencies likely to arise. It is inevitable that at times and in sudden exigencies the general time-table must be set aside. It then becomes the duty of the company to construct a temporary time-table with such care and skill that it may be reasonably adapted to secure the operation of all trains on the road without accident or injury to passengers or employees. The person who devises this temporary time-table for the company and issues telegraphic orders to carry it out is the train dispatcher. He acts, it is true, under certain rules, but he is entrusted with a wide discretion and absolute control. . . . That he is the representative of the company and not the fellow-servant of those required to obey his orders, is held by many courts.”
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Lewis v. Seifert, held, “that a train dispatcher of
Judge McCrary held, that “the negligence of the persons who are employed by the railroad company to direct the movements of trains, by telegraph or otherwise, as, for example, the train■dispatcher, train master, or whoever the persons are — is not chargeable to a person occupying, as this plaintiff did, the position of fireman, and the negligence of such persons is the negligence of the company.” [Crew v. Railroad, 20 Fed. 87-92.]
The Supreme Court of Michigan, in discussing this question, said: “This cannot be applied when the superior causing the injury represents the master, and it is always a subject of inquiry to ascertain the nature and extent of the authority of the superior whose negligence caused the injury. If his authority and duties are such as the master must necessarily, either personally or by another, exercise and discharge, then this rule does not apply.” In such case, “he is the corporation for the time being, and exercises powers which neither the superintendent nor the president nor any other officer or agent of the corporation can interfere with,” and cites the case of Smith v. Railroad, 92 Mo. 359, among many others; and then held that the dispatcher was not a fellow-servant with the employees who were engaged in the operation of the train. [Hunn v. Railroad, 44 N. W. 502; also, Hankins v. Railroad, 37 N. E. 466.]
It was held in the case of Clyde v. Railroad, 69 Fed. 678, that “the only legal question involved is as to ■ the finding of the special master, that the train dispatcher is the alter ego of the defendant. The correctness of this finding is too clear for discussion. He is not, either upon principle or authority, a fellow-
The same rule is stated by this court in the following language: “This duty of course, in an extensive business, the master cannot attend to in person, but must intrust to servants, but the servants to whom it is entrusted act in the master’s place and perform Ms duty; and if they are negligént, it is his negligence. It is necessary to observe a distinction between the performance, on the one hand, of the work for which the business is undertaken, and the furmshing, on the other, of the appliances and field of operation with which and in which to do the work; in the one, the servants are working for a common master; in the other, the master, either per se or per alium, is performing his duty to Ms servant. And whether he acts per se or per alium, if he fails to exercise reasonable care, he is negligent.” [Jones v. Railroad, 178 Mo. l. c. 544.]
Judge Goode of the St. Louis Court of Appeals states the rule clearly in a case where, in obedience to the directions of a foreman, the plaintiff, who was a motorman, started out of the car-sheds with a car,
The case of Miller v. Railroad, supra, was where the conductor of a construction train, who had charge and control of the crew of men engaged in repairing the railroad track, ordered the injured party to perform certain services upon one of the cars, and while he was in the act of stepping from a car the train was, without warning, moved, and threw him down between the wheels and injured him. Judge Black, in discussing that case, said: “Where the master gives to a person power to superintend, control and direct the men engaged in the performance of work, such person is as to the men under him a vice-principal, and it can make no difference whether he is called a superintendent, conductor, boss or foreman. For his negligent acts and omissions in performing the duties of the
The gigantic institutions of our times engaged in ' construction, production and distribution necessarily involve in their operation the use of powerful machinery and multitudes of employees, so that it becomes wholly impracticable for their proprietors or principals to personally superintend, operate and control them, and as a result they are compelled to resort to agents to carry on their business, and these agents are variously called superintendents, general managers, foremen, bosses, etc. Many of those institutions are so large and complicated-that one superintendent cannot control and operate them, and in such case they either have a superintendent and assistants, or divide their business into departments, with a superintendent or foreman in charge of each department. All of these agents, by whatever name or title they may be known or called, represent the principal. From this condition of those institutions, has grown up the wise and almost universal rule of restriction of the fellow-servant law, known as the vice-principal, and the departmental doctrine, which hold the master liable to one servant for the negligent performance by another of these personal duties which every master owes to his employees. There is really no legal distinction between the two rules — in the former the vice-principal is supposed to have charge of the entire business of his principal, while in the latter he has only charge of his department.
The law imposes upon the master certain duties regarding the safety of his servants, which he may delegate to another, but by doing so- he is in no wise discharged from the responsibility of their proper per
The rule may be restated as follows: A servant intrusted with the performance of the master’s personal duties is, in respect of those duties, a vice-principal or representative of the master, and his acts as such, whether of omission or commission, are the acts of the principal; and, if negligently performed, the principal is liable for all injuries that may naturally flow therefrom, and he must answer in damages to the injured servant the same as if he had committed the act in person.
“A distinction is to be drawn between mere telegraph operators and train dispatchers, as well as the other employees of a railroad. A telegraph operator ordinarily is not invested with any control over the running of trains, and it has been held that a telegraph operator does not occupy the position of a train dispatcher merely because he transmits or delivers orders 'for the movement of trains, and that his negligence cannot be said to be the negligence of the company.” [12 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 968.]
Rule No. 10. and the oral testimony in the case leave no room for doubting that Harbaugh and Ha- ' vens, the car dispatchers, had absolute charge, control and supervision of the conductors and mo tormén, and the cars and their movements and operation; and, according to the principle of law before stated, they were not fellow-servants with Moad and Edge, the conductor and motorman respectively, but were vice-principals,- and were representing the railroad company when telephoning and -receiving orders regarding the operation of the cars.
The plaintiff’s evidence made out a prima-facie case and entitled him to go to the jury, and the demurrer to the evidence offered by defendant at the close of the evidence was properly refused.
II. Defendant next makes the point that the court erred in admitting any evidence under the petition, because the Fellow-Servant Law of 189-7 does not apply to street railroads, and assumes that Havens, the car dispatcher, and plaintiff were fellow-servants under the common law.
This point is effectually disposed of by what has been said in paragraph one of this opinion. Clearly they were not fellow-servants, as shown by the numerous authorities there cited and discussed.
While it may not be necessary to notice the suggestion of defendant regarding the Fellow-Servant Law of 1897, because of what has been said before, yet it may not be out of place to say that there is no allegation in the petition or answer that the defendant was a street railroad company,- nor is there any evidence in this record which tends in the remotest degree to show that fact. The petition alleges that it is a corporation, engaged in the operation of an electric railway between the city of Carthage, Missouri, and the city of Galena, in the State of Kansas, and, in the absence of a denial under oath, that fact, under our
We have not been cited to any law which would authorize defendant to construct and operate a street railroad through a rural district, connecting one town or city with another and extending from a point in one State to that in another, nor do we know of the existence of any such law; nor can we presume that such a line of road was constructed and is being operated without,any legal authority.
Plaintiff’s counsel states in his brief, under the head of Points and Authorities: “Notwithstanding it was our opinion that on principle the Fellow-Servant Act of 1897 applied to street and interurban electric railways, this case, because of a prior recent decision of our Supreme Court, was tried on the theory that •the Act of 1897 did not apply.” It would seem from this statement, that counsel for plaintiff concludes that the Fellow-Servant Law of 1897 does not apply to the defendant company as declared by this court in the case of Sams v. Railroad, 174 Mo. 53. The answer in the Sams case was a general denial, contributory negligence, “and a special plea that defendant was a street railroad corporation organized for the purpose and engaged in the business only of conducting a street railroad,” etc., and the evidence showed that it was engaged in the street railroad business only, and for that reason it was held the Fellow-Servant Law did not apply. There is no such allegation or proof in the case at bar; and for that reason the rule announced in the Sams case has no application here. That case goes to
III. Burén Moad, the conductor of the car No. 30, testified that when his car- arrived at Morgan he called up the car dispatcher, Havens, by telephone, and reported that his car was at Morgan, and that he was instructed by the car dispatcher to meet car No: 29 at Syracuse, and that he repeated the order back to the car dispatcher, just as he received it.
Over the unsuccessful objection of defendant, the plaintiff and three other witnesses were permitted to testify in corroboration of what Moad repeated back or stated over the ’phone to Havens.' Defendant contends that such evidence was hearsay and that it should have been excluded from the jury, and claims the court erred in admitting it. We are unable to see any merit in the objection. Both plaintiff and defendant testified and admitted that Moad did call up Havens and asked for orders, and that Havens gave them to him, and that he repeated them back to Havens. Now, the plaintiff contends that the order and reply was one thing, and the defendant contends it was another. We know of no other way by which that conversation which took place between them over the ’phone could be proven except by the witnesses who were present at each end of the line when the conversation took place, and heard what each party said. They testified not only to the report of Moad, that he was at Morgan, but they also testify that, after reporting that fact, they then heard him report or state over the ’phone, “30 meet 29 at Syracuse,” etc., and if that was what he said, then Havens was mistaken when he testified that Moad repeated back to him that 30 would meet 29 at Morgan, or words to that effect. The words that were spoken at both ends of the line constituted the order, and it was
Defendant contends that Havens, the car dispatcher, gave Moad, the conductor of car No. 30, an order to meet 29 at Morgan, and that he disobeyed that order and attempted to go to Motley, and that while en route to that plaeq the collision occurred, and that plaintiff’s injuries were the result of Moad’s negligence and not that of the company, and for that reason he should not be permitted to recover in this case. In reply to that contention it is sufficient to state that that was a question of fact for the-jury to pass upon, and it was properly submitted to the jury by an instruction asked by defendant, and the jury found for the plaintiff, so that question is settled so far as this court is concerned.
IV. The defendant contends that the court committed reversible error in permitting plaintiff to amend his petition after the introduction of all his evidence, and not continuing the case on its application, which was based upon' surprise.
The amendment consisted simply in changing the allegation of the original petition, which stated that he was injured by the collision of the cars, to the allegation that he jumped therefrom when he saw his position was perilous. There was no amendment as to any of the allegations of negligence of the .defendant, which he claimed caused his injuries. This did not change the issues. The same witnesses who saw the accident saw . plaintiff jump, and they testified as to the conditions surrounding him at the time he jumped, and no one -else could have thrown any light upon that question except those who saw the collision and' the jump-. So, it necessarily follows that defendant had the benefit of all the witnesses who saw the collision and they were the same ones who saw him jump-.
V. There was no error in the action of the court in admitting the photographs in evidence. They tended to show the physical conditions which existed at the time of the accident; they also threw light upon the rate of speed the cars were moving at the time of the collision. Photographs are admissible in evidence upon the same principle that maps and plats are admitted.
YI. There are several other assignments of error which we have examined and found to be without merit and of so little importance in their bearing upon the issues of the case that we will not discuss them in this opinion.
It must follow from what has been stated that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed, and it is so ordered