186 Iowa 312 | Iowa | 1918
I. Plaintiff brought this action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, and his right to maintain it is challenged by counsel for defendant, upon the ground that he was not, at the time of the accident, engaged in interstate commerce.
He left Clarion in the morning, in charge of Extra No. 130, composed of an engine, caboose, and several cars loaded with ties, to be distributed at various places along the track. Having finished unloading the ties at Thornton, in obedience to orders from the chief dispatcher, plaintiff and crew were returning to Clarion. The train at this time con
“The true test of employment in such commerce in the
See, also, Shanks v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., 239 U. S. 556; McBain v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 52 Mont. 578 (160 Pac. 654); Karras v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 165 Wis. 578 (162 N. W. 923); Pedersen v. Delaware, L. & R. Co., supra.
Plaintiff, it is true, was not, at the instant he was injured, engaged in distributing ties along the defendant’s track, but was in charge of the train and the instrumentalities employed by him immediately preceding the time when the return trip was entered upon, and was proceeding therewith to the defendant’s shops at Clarion. Under the holding of the cases cited, plaintiff and defendant were, at the time of the injury, engaged in work so closely related to interstate commerce as to be a part thereof. The question has been so often and elaborately discussed that we content ourselves with the simple statement of the rules, and the citation of a few of the authorities. Pedersen v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., supra; Lamphere v. Oregon R. & N. Co., 116 C. C. A. 156; San Pedro, L. A. & S. L. R. Co. v. Davide, 127 C. C. A. 454; Knowles v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 164 App. Div. 711 (150 N. Y. Supp. 99); Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Walker’s Admr., supra; Alabama G. So. R. Co. v. Skotzy, 196 Ala. 25 (71 So. 335); Peery v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 123 Minn. 264 (143 N. W. 724); Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Kornhoff, supra; St. Louis, S. F. & T. R. Co. v. Seale, 229 U. S. 156.
Much difficulty was encountered by the engineer of the train No. 130 in keeping up steam during the day. During the forenoon, stops were made at different places, while extra fuel was carried by the crew and section men. The engine and caboose returned to Clarion at noon, and plaintiff informed the chief dispatcher of the defective condition of the engine, and requested another. No engine was available at that time, and he was directed to proceed, and do the best he could with the engine in question.. The difficulty to keep up steam continued during the afternoon, and the stop at Cornelia, where the accident occurred, was due to the failure of the engine. At 5:35, plaintiff received an order at Thornton to return to Clarion ahead of No. 87, the local running from Hay-field, Minnesota, to Clarion, Iowa.
Under the rules of defendant, it was the duty of the dispatcher to deliver a copy of this order to the crew of No. 87, but for some reason, this duty was neglected. Plaintiff, at the time he received the order, was informed of the whereabouts of No. 87. None of the crew of this train knew of No. 130, or that it was running in backward motion ahead of it. There was no turntable at Thornton, and the engine from that point and to Clarion was required to
The rear brakeman is generally the flagman, under the rules of defendant, and it is his duty to protect the train from the rear, by going back a sufficient distance with a light, torpedoes, or other means provided and in use for that purpose.
The grounds of negligence charged, which were submitted to the jury, were, in substance, that defendant was negligent in failing to order its crew in charge of No. 87 to proceed with caution, prepared to stop within their vision; that, after notice of the defective condition of the engine attached to No. 180, it was negligent in permitting No. 87 to follow so closely at a dangerous rate of speed, in not providing the crew of No. 87 with a copy of the order to plaintiff to proceed to Clarion ahead of it, and in not warning its crew of the location of No. 130, in permitting No. 87 to run at a high and dangerous rate of speed around a sharp curve at Cornelia, and in the vicinity of embankments partially obscuring the vision .of the engineer, and in not proceeding with the engine under control and prepared to stop in time to avoid collisions; and other grounds of substantially the same import.
It is the contention of counsel for appellant that it was the duty of the conductor in charge of the train, when, it stopped at Cornelia, to direct the rear brakeman to perform the duties of flagman, and to see to it that the train was fully protected from the rear; and that his failure to attend to this duty upon the occasion in question was the sole cause of the collision. A rule of defendant’s, known as No. 99, provides, in substance, that, when a train is stopped or delayed, under circumstances when it may be overtaken by another train, it shall be the duty of the flagman to go back with stop signals and torpedoes a sufficient distance to insure protection.
It is conceded that plaintiff was the superior officer in
“If I had been advised by message that Train 130 was in backward motion, I would have cut down our speed to the same they were supposed to make, 15 miles an hour: that is a time-card rule, the backing-up rule, and was in force at that time. I had no means of knowing, on that particular occasion, that Engine 130 was in a backward movement unless I was so advised by a train order or message. I didn’t know they were on the road at all.”
The engineer testified that he could not have stopped No. 87 after observing plaintiff’s caboose, had his speed not exceeded 15 miles per hour. It is quite apparent, notwithstanding the duty of the crew of Train No. 130 to protect
Plaintiff and the crew of his train were moving under the orders of the chief dispatcher, and, but for the defective instrumentalities furnished, would not have been in the position of danger shown at the time of the collision. The credibility of the witnesses was for the jury, and, if the jurors believed plaintiff, they must have found that he relied upon the rear brakeman to discharge his duty as flagman. Negligence in this respect upon his part would be chargeable to the defendant, and not to plaintiff. Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Goughnour, 208 Fed. 961.
Testimony was offered to the effect that it was a part of the duty of the engineer, in approaching a curve, under conditions obscuring his vision, to have his engine under control so that same could be stopped within the range of his vision. Plaintiff testified that No. 87, when he first saw it, was running at 10 miles per hour. Its crew, however, testified that it was not running to exceed 25 miles per hour. There was also evidence tending to show that it was the duty, under the rules of the defendant, of a train following another in backward motion to reduce its speed to 15 miles per hour, the speed allowed for the latter. Proper signal lights were displayed on the rear of plaintiff’s caboose. The testimony was in conflict; but the jury might have found therefrom that the engineer or fireman on No. 87 could, by the exercise of ordinary care, have observed the lights on plaintiff’s caboose for a sufficient distance to have stopped the train and avoided the collision.
Plaintiff was, of course, required to observe the rules of the company, with which he was perfectly familiar; but it could hardly be said, as a matter of law, that the proximate cause of the collision and his consequent injuries was his failure to require the flagman to perform a duty connected with his employment, or to perform it himself.
III. The court refused to give certain instructions requested by counsel for defendant. These instructions related to the duty of plaintiff to see that his train was properly protected, if the flagman failed, for any reason, to comply with the rule requiring him to do so, in 'case such failure was known to plaintiff; and were to the effect that, if the failure to display such signals as were necessary to protect plaintiff’s train against the injuries complained of was due solely to his negligence, he could not recover. The substance of these instructions, so far as the request was proper, was, in our opinion, covered by the instructions given. Instructions given by the court were made more directly applicable to the evidence, but embodied substantially the matter covered by those requested. Perhaps the court’s instruction could properly have included other matters included in the requested instructions, but it is quite apparent that no prejudice resulted on account of the failure of the court to more fully incorporate the substance of the requested instruction in those given.
Y. The only exceptions urged in the court below to Instruction 15, now complained of by defendant, are those mentioned in its motion for new trial. We have held that, to entitle exceptions made for the first time in the motion for new trial to be considered, the same must be accompanied by a sufficient showing that the error was not discovered at the time of the trial, and that a mere statement of that fact in the motion is not sufficient. Chumbley v. Courtney, 181 Iowa 482; Dimond v. Peace River L. & D. Co., 182 Iowa 400.
Other objections to instructions need not be considered separately and in detail. They are sufficiently disposed of by what has already been said.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is — Affirmed.