99 Kan. 765 | Kan. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by Charles S. Ergenbright against the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company to recover for personal injuries sustained while he was in the service of the company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $5000 and from the judgment thereon the defendant appeals.
The first contention is that jurisdiction of the defendant
The principal contention is that the evidence did not support the charge of negligence made against the defendant and that there was no basis in the evidence for the verdict of the jury. It appears that the plaintiff on the night of his injury was employed as a bfakeman on a freight train of the defend
It.is insisted by the defendant that the finding was without any substantial support in the evidence and that there was no basis for holding the defendant liable for acts of one not in its employ and over whom it had no control. The one who threw the mail sacks which struck the plaintiff was not the servant or employee of the defendant and it is conceded that the doctrine of respondeat superior does not apply. He was an agent of the government and as to the manner of handling the mail was answerable to the United States and not to the defendant. A railroad company is not liable because of a single negligent act of the postal agent, but may become liable if it knows or should know of a custom or practice of the delivery of mail sacks in such a way as to endanger those rightfully at or near the place of ^delivery, without doing what it can to prevent a continuance of the negligent practice. The fact that the postal agent negligently threw the sack against the plaintiff on this occasion is not of itself sufficient to render the defendant liable.
In the early case of Muster v. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R’y Co., 61 Wis. 325, it was held that the negligent act of the postal clerk could not be imputed to the railroad company unless the company itself was negligent and it was added:
“We conclude that the mere act of the postal employee in throwing off the mail-bag at the depot, conceding it to have been a negligent act, was not negligence on the part of the railway company.” (p. 331.)
In Galloway v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 56 Minn. 346, the basis of the liability of the railroad company for an injury occasioned by a postal agent was stated as follows:
“To render it liable, as negligent, for the negligence of the mail agent, this government employe must have practiced a dangerous method of discharging mail sacks on the platform at this station so habitually, or so frequently, as to charge the company, as part of its duty to its passen*769 gers and others occupying its depot platform by its invitation or license, with notice, actual or implied, of his' negligence or recklessness. While the railway company had no power to interfere with the mail agent in the discharge of his official duties, yet it was its right, as well as duty, to prevent him, while on its cars and on its premises, from continuing any negligent practice, of which it had notice, which was liable to cause injury to passengers and others lawfully there.” (p. 347. Notes, 6 L. R. A., n. s., 581; 13 Ann. Cas. 78.)
The mail sacks, as we have seen, were thrown frpm a fast mail train which ran past the station at a rate of about fifty-miles per hour. No claim is made that there was negligence as to the speed of the train on this occasion or at other times in passing the station. Neither is there any basis for a charge of negligence as to the place at which the sack was delivered. It was discharged about sixty feet from the mail crane arid the rule of the postal department is that it is to be delivered near the crane. Plaintiff testified that the sacks were delivered from 250 to 300 feet away from the platform, but other witnesses stated that the sacks were delivered from fifty to sixty feet from the crane, and the jury found that it was about sixty feet. The testimony was that delivery of sacks within that distance of the crane from a fast-moving train was good practice. It appears that the plaintiff left the east side of the track where he might have walked with safety as far as the risk of danger from the delivery of mail sacks was concerned, and went over on the west side of the track where the mail sacks were to be thrown. He walked close to the mail crane, and he knew the purpose for which cranes were used. He testified that he did not know that mail was delivered from train No. 119, although he had been a brakeman upon that train. At the stations along the line danger notices which he had seen had been posted, stating: “All persons are warned not to be or remain on the depot platform while mail trains are passing. Beware of mail sacks or packages thrown from trains.” The conductor of the freight train who was a witness in behalf of the plaintiff, testified that after the plaintiff crossed over to the west side of the track he walked along about as far from the rails as the mail crane stood, which was about eight feet, and that when he was picked up he was about the same distance from the track. The same witness at another time stated that the plaintiff was walking ten or twelve feet from the
The judgment of the district court will therefore be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.