113 Minn. 350 | Minn. | 1911
Plaintiff was employed as fireman on engine No. 1917 at La Crosse, Wisconsin, and he claims that the engine, pulling a string of freight cars, left Grand Crossing, near La Crosse, on the evening of February 19, for St. Paul, and that the tender became derailed near Prescott, resulting in injury to him. Negligence was charged in failing to provide the tender and engine with proper safety chain connections and proper brakebeam supports. Plaintiff recovered a verdict of $11,000, and the appeal presents three questions for review:
1. Was there any trustworthy evidence to establish negligence? Two witnesses testified for plaintiff that they were employed to do some repairing on the engine at Grand Crossing about eight o’clock on the evening of February 19, that the proper chains were missing at that time, and that the engine was moved out before being repaired. To meet this testimony, defendant introduced in evidence a record purporting to contain a correct statement of the time every
A paper purporting to be the train dispatcher’s record was also introduced in evidence by defendant, which showed that the train to which engine 1917 was attached left Grand Crossing at 5:20 p. m. February 19, 1906. This record also showed where the train was at various points on its passage north. The engineer testified that the train left La Crosse at five o’clock in the afternoon. There was some testimony tending to corroborate plaintiff’s claim that the engine did not leave the roundhouse until later than the records show. Attention is also called to some apparent omissions in the train order record, apparently bearing on its accuracy. We are asked to hold that these railroad records must be received with absolute verity as establishing the fact that the engine left Grand Crossing prior to the time it was claimed to have been examined by plaintiff’s witnesses. The trial court was of the opinion that the accuracy of the records and the veracity of the witnesses were for the jury, and submitted the question with proper instructions. While records of this character are entitled to careful consideration, and cannot be lightly brushed aside, we cannot say in this instance that they must be accepted as final on the disputed point.
2. This action was commenced against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Bailroad Company, and the complaint alleged that plaintiff, at the time of injury, was in the employ of that company, which was duly organized under the laws of Illinois, and was engaged in operating a railroad. The answer admitted that plaintiff was in defendant’s employ on the nineteenth day of February, 1906, denied liability, and alleged as a separate defense that long prior to that date the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy ■ Eailway Company had organized a benefit relief association, known as the Belief Department of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Eailway; that plaintiff had become a member of the association in 1903, and continued to be a'
We agree with the trial court that the admission in the answer that plaintiff was employed by the railroad company at the time of the accident is not controlled by the special defense that he was employed by and released the railway company from all liability. The admission was definite, and plaintiff was justified in relying on it at the trial without proof. If defendant intended to prove that plaintiff was in fact employed by the railway company, that issue should have been squarely raised by a denial, and not by an admission. While the evidence offered and rejected may have tended to prove that plaintiff had received benefits from another corporation, it did not necessarily prove that plaintiff had released the defendant railroad company. It does not appear from the pleadings that the two companies are identical, and, if they were, the admission controls. No motion was made to amend the answer, and appellant is in no position at this time to complain of the construction put on the pleadings by the trial court.
3. Was the verdict so large as to indicate passion and prejudice ? The medical testimony was conflicting, as in most cases of this character. The injuries claimed were supported principally by what are known ¿s subjective symptoms; but that the plaintiff was seriously and permanently injured can hardly be disputed on the evidence. The charge that the jury were actuated by passion and prejudice is not sustained, and the facts in Johnson v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 107 Minn. 285, 119 N. W. 1061 were quite different. Our views of this question cannot be better expressed than in the words of the trial court: “These cases where the immediate injury is comparatively small, but which involve nervous disorders, are among the most difficult of any with which the court has to deal. In Johnson v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 107 Minn. 285, the court makes clear the necessity of the utmost circumspection in such cases. On the other hand, the opinion in the case of Galloway v. Chicago, M. &
Affirmed.