71 Mo. 113 | Mo. | 1879
Action for damages for injuries resulting in the death of plaintiff’s husband. Plaintiff had judgment for $5,000. The yards of defendant, where the accident occurred, are about ten acres in extent, and covered with a net-work of tracks, where the switching of cars and the making up of trains was going on almost continuously during the busy season. It seems to be the customary manner of switching cars in the yard of defendant for the engine to take the cars up toward the bridge then kick ” them off, when they are cut off by yardmen to run on the different tracks wherever' wanted; and that cars cannot be coupled at all, without the cars switched have acquired a sufficient momentum to strike the cars to which they are to be coupled, with a considerable degree of force, enough to move the cars with which they come in contact, a distance of several feet. Harris, a car repairer of defendant’s cars, was, at the time of the accident, at the south end of a car recently repaired and engaged in inspecting it. That car stood on a track running near the freight depot, and close to the platform of the depot, which track ’ was used by defendant for transferring freight from defendant’s road to others. There cars would be placed which had to be unloaded into or loaded from, the cars of other roads. ■ This track was entirely distinct and apart from the repair track. South of, and below the car being inspected, on the same track, and distant nearly a car’s length, was a string of fifteen or twenty cars, and
While Hands was engaged in the wox’k of inspection, and either under the south end of the car, or else standing on the track at the south end of the car, Hallihan, who was a car repairer of the Mo. R., Ft. S. & G-. R. R. Company, had been so for several years, and was thoroughly conversant with the custom of defendant’s yards in respect to its method of distributing ears by means of running switches,'being accustomed to being about the yards every day, came along on the freight depot platform, and while there or else near Hams, the latter spoke to him to look how certain repairs had been done on the car being inspected. Hallihan, it seems, complied, or attempted to comply with the request made him, when a freight car switched in the usual way, and not coming down very fast, drove the car Hands was examining a distance of seven or eight feet, ran against Harris and over Hallihan, resulting in the death of the latter. The position Hallihan occupied at the time of the fatal occurrence, it is impossible to determine. Harris says: “ I had no time to look to see what deceased was doing, the accident was so sudden. I should judge that, if he had time after I spoke to him, he was stooping down looking at the car when the accident happened. I don’t know whether Hallihan was stooping down on the the track looking at the car. The accident happened so quick after I spoke to. him that -.1 don’t know what was.
The foregoing was the substance of the testimony, and upon that we are called on to say whether the court below erred in its refusal to give, at the instance of defendant, an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. We think such an instruction should have been given, and these are our reasons therefor: There is nothing in the evidence adduced at the trial to show that defendant was aware of the perilous position in which Hallihan'had placed himself, or that, even if thus aware, the injury complained of could have been prevented; for the testimony of Harris conspicuously shows that the negligent act of Hallihan, and the act of defendant causing his death were, to all practical intents and purposes, simultaneous or concurrent acts. Harris calls to Hallihan, the latter responds, or attempts to respond to the call, and immediately the car being examined is struck. So quickly does the one event succeed the other, that Harris will not undertake to say what the position of Hallihan was when receiving the injury. If Harris, in the immediate presence of, and in contiguity to, Hallihan, was not able to discover his position, would it not be altogether unreasonable to demand that a brakeman, if on the incoming car, should be required to do more? And for failing to do this, to demand that the company be held liable ?
Liability is never created except by the non-performance of duty, but it was not a failure to perform a duty,
These remarks, applicable in all instances where a railroad company is engaged in distributing cars, and making up trains in its own private yards, where it owes no special duty to the general public, as in the case of streets, public crossings and the like, apply with unwonted force in the present instance; for not only was Hallihan not engaged in the exercise of a legal right, but he incurred a special risk by venturing upon the transfer track of defendant, and undertaking to examine a car there, when it must be presumed from the facts in evidence, that he was familiar with the peril his rash act invited. That track was devoted to the particular purposes which the evidence discloses, and there was no ground for the presumption that the track in question would be used for any other purpose than those mentioned, or that defendant’s servants thus engaged in switching the cars, would anticipate the unaccustomed and unwarranted use to which the track was applied. Now, if it be true, as before stated, that liability can only result from a non-performance of duty, and if it be also true that it was not the duty of de