86 Iowa 368 | Iowa | 1892
“I told him I didn’t know, but I would see; and I went back to help him do his switching. He said he didn’t know how it would be about sending in my time, but he would see Egan. Said he would see me paid, though. The trip I was to make is 'from Hampton to Summer and back. Leave Hampton at eight o’clock in the evening, and get to Sumner about twelve o’clock, as near as I remember. Leave Sumner, on returning, about seven o’clock, and get to Hampton about eleven next morning. One trip from Hampton to Sumner and back each day. When I' started up towards the engine house, when I had this conversation with Mortimer about making the trip with him, he gave me no directions what to do. At this time the train was not made up, and I assisted in making it up by direction of Mr. Mortimer. He told me to go onto the engine and take signals for the wiper, He gave me as a reason why he wanted me to make the trip with him, his brakeman was laid off, and he couldn’t make the trip without one. I was acquainted with the gang of men that run that train. Outside of the engineer and fireman, there were Mr. Mortimer, conductor, Mr. Winn, express messenger and baggageman. Mr. Bailey was the man laid off. I made the trip from Hampton to Sumner, and Mr. Winn and myself acted as brakemen.*371 We got to Sumner about twelve o’clock that night — the seventeenth. When we ran into Sumner, made the first stop at the junction, where the branch , comes in •onto the main line. This is where the Hampton branch strikes the main St. Paul & Kansas City line. We had to stop there in order to throw the switch, and then ran onto the main line right to the depot. To .get from the Hampton branch to the depot we had to' run in on the main line. We unloaded what freight we had at the depot, and then backed in on the Hampton line, over which we came. The first thing we then did was to cut loose the coach, and to kick that back on the Hampton line. I rode the coach back. Mr. Mortimer got off at the switch, and said, ‘Bide her back ten or twelve car lengths,’ which I did to what I thought was about that distance. When I rode the coach back ten or twelve car lengths, set the brake, and ■stopped it, I then went back towards the switch, to •catch another car. While I was riding the coach back, the balance of the trainmen were kicking some more cars in on the main line of the side track branching •off from the direct line of the St. Paul & Kansas City Bailway. They kicked in four. Mortimer, at the time they kicked those in there, was at the switch, managing it. I stopped the coach about twenty or twenty-five rods from where he stood. 'Winn rode the four cars in onto the switch. This is a different track from the one they kicked the coach on. Directly across from where I stopped the coach to where Winn stopped the four cars is about four or five rods. There is another track intervening between the switch the four cars were kicked onto and the line where the coach stood. When I stopped the coach, and started back to the switch, another car was kicked in, and Mortimer hollered for me to catch it. He said, ‘Catch her, Dan.’ I started towards the car, and made an effort to catch it, and that is when my foot was caught. ’ I got the*372 car. It was running about ten miles an hour. The distance it had to run from the switch before it would collide with-the coach is about twenty or twenty-five rods. It is a little down grade the way the car was running. I had a lantern that evening, and as I went to catch the car the draft of the car put out my lantern, and I couldn’t see where to step. I grabbed the car, throwed my foot up on the oil house, and my foot slipped right off, and it was run over. I went.up and set the brake to stop the car, and it struck the coach hard enough to knock me down on it. I had set the brake at that time, and had hold of it. I got down off the car, found my foot was hurt worse than I thought it was, and went straight across to where the other brakeman stood with his lantern, and told him' I had hurt my foot, and he said, ‘I should think you had.’ He showed me where the engine house was, and I went right there. I knew where it was, but it had kind of-turned me around, and I didn’t know which direction was which. I had no light with me at the time, for it had gone out when I caught the car. I went direct from the engine house to Shaw’s house, which is close by. ' The engine house is about forty rods from the point where I got hurt. Mortimer gave me the lantern I had that night, between Hansel and Dumont. It was not in good condition. The wick was loose in the burner, and the least jar would put it out. It went out more than once on the trip, and I pulled up the wick, and lit it again. It went out at about every station we got out at. I made complaint, and asked for another lantern. When we were going into Sumner I set my lantern down on the platform of the coach, Mr. Mortimer standing .there, and it went out. I said to him: ‘That is a dandy lantern. I wish I had’another one or two like it;’ and he said, ‘Make it do until we get down.’ Mortimer was present when it went' out.this time.”
We do not understand counsel for the plaintiff to insist that the jury were not warranted in finding that the testimony of the plaintiff, above set out, so far as it pertained to the employment, is true. But it is most strenuously contended that the conductor had no authority to employ brakemen'. There can be no doubt that he had no such general authority, that is, he was not authorized to hire and discharge the brakemen necessary to operate his train. But it is conceded that there may be such an emergency in operating a train that the conductor would be authorized to procure the necessary assistance to temporarily carry on the service, and it is said by counsel for the appellant that the case was tried in the district court on the theory that it came within the rule rule laid down in Sloan v. Central Iowa Railway Co., 62 Iowa, 728, but it is insisted that the cases are different in fact and in principle. In the cited case, a brakeman was laid off for a week’s re'st, and the plaintiff took his place, with the knowledge and consent of the conductor, and acted as a brakeman for some six days, when he was injured. 'The conductor in that case testified “that to properly manage the train two brakemen were required, and
It is earnestly contended that the evidence in the case at bar shows that there was no necessity to supply the place of the absent brakeman, and that, as the train was run from Sumner to Hampton without the regular' brakeman, it plainly appears affirmatively that there-was no such necessity. It appears to us that this contention of counsel ignores the fact that it must be-conceded that the services of the brakeman Bailey, or-some other brakeman, were necessary for the “proper and safe management of the train.” It surely ought, not to be claimed that the defendant employed Bailey as a mere supernumerary. The very fact that he was-employed as one of the crew was strong evidence that his employment was necessary. It is true it was perhaps physically possible for the train fco be operated from Hampton to Sumner without a regular brakeman, but the jury was authorized to find that a brakeman was necessary to the proper and safe operation of the-train. These considerations dispose of what we regard as the principal question in the case.
The questions we have discussed include every material question in the case. They arise upon the instructions of the court' to the jury, and in rulings upon the evidence, and in refusing to give instructions to the jury requested by the defendant, and in overruling motions by the defendant to direct a verdict. We have not set out the instructions or motions, but have rather addressed ourselves to a consideration of the questions as they are raised in argument. We find no reason to disturb the judgment of the district court, and we may say in conclusion that the motion filed by the appellee attacking the record is not well taken. We need not further allude to that feature of the ease. Aeeiemed.