55 Kan. 336 | Kan. | 1895
Tlxe opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by James C. Murray against the Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railroad Company to recover damages on account of personal injuries alleged to have resulted to him as an employee of said railroad company while in the per--formance of Ms duties as such employee, by reason of the fault and negligence of a coemployee. He was employed as a bralceman on a freight-train which ran between Fort Scott, Kas., and Kansas City, Mo., and on August 31, 1889, the train upon which he was working arrived at Miami station, where the Rich Hill branch unites with the main line of the railroad. The train was backed in upon the branch line in order to let a passenger-train which was about due to pass, and the conductor went to the depot to get bills of lading, etc., leaving the train in charge of Murray. Foxxr cars loaded with coal and standing upon a side-track were to be taken into the train at this point, so the locomotive and a car were cut off from the train, and, it being in the night-time, a red light was placed on the end of the train from which the locomotive and car were taken. In the abseixce of the conductor, Murray had charge of the train, and under his direction the locomotive and car were run forward some distance' and then backed in upon the side-track where a cotxp-ling was made with the four cars of coal. The rear car of coal was an open one loaded above the level of the side and eixd boards with fine coal, and there was a
■ Testimony was offered in behalf of the railroad company that there was no sudden stop or jerk of the train, but that the engineer, believing that he was close to the stationary part of the train, merely slackened the speed to avoid a collision; and there was also some testimony to the effect that Murray’s injury was the result of his own carelessness. The jury, however, found that Murray was in the discharge of his duty, and was using due care at the time of the injury ; that he was thrown from the car by the unnecessary action
The next contention is that error was committed in the admission of testimony that, under the rules of the company, the engineer was not authorized to apply the steam-jam and stop the train without a signal from Murray. The objection was that this was not a proper method of proving the rules, and that they should have been introduced to tell their own story. It does not appear, however, whether the rules were written or printed in whole or in part. If they were written or printed, of course they should have been introduced; hut as there may have been rules not committed to writing, it cannot be said that material error was committed in receiving the testimony.