59 Mo. 495 | Mo. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought by the intestate who was the plaintiff below, to recover damages for the loss of a leg while serving as brakesman on defendant’s road.
The petition alleged that on the 15th day of June, 1869-, plaintiff was injured while in the discharge of his duties as brakesman in coupling cars, without carelessness or negligence on his part, through the negligence, carelessness and want of proper care and prudence of defendant in the management of its railroad, in this: that it permitted deep and dangerous holes to remain' open in the ground and road bed,, between its side track and the main track, into which plaintiff stepped, whereby he was thrown downward, his foot-was thrown upon the track and run over, and crushed by the wheel of the car. It was further alleged, that the existence of the hole into which the plaintiff stepped was not known to him, but that the hole was left by defendant after it was notified of its existence, and knew, or ought to have known,
The answer denied negligence, carelessness or want of care on the part of defendant, in permitting deep and dangerous holes in the ground aud the road bed, between the main and side track; admitted that plaintiff received injuries from having his foot run over by the cars, but denied that the same was caused by the negligence of the defendant, and averred that it was occasioned in part by an unforeseen and inevitable casualty, and in part by the carelessness and want of prudence of the plaintiff directly contributing thereto.
The answer also denied that defendant’s road bed was in a dangerous condition, or that it permitted deep and dangerous holes therein, but stated that, whatever its condition, it was well known to plaintiff at and before the happening of the injury; denied that there was any hole in the ground near the side track of its road, or that it had any notice of any hole being there, before the happening of the injury, and denied that the plaintiff stepped into any hole.
The evidence, in brief, showed, that about daylight, on the morning of the 15th of June, 1869, the train, composed of freight cars, and called the dispatch train, arrived at the “ore switch,” a switch or side track on defendant’s road, between St. Louis and Carondelet. The train was in charge of T. J. True, as conductor, and plaintiff and one Jones were the brakemen. On arriving at the “ ore switch,” the train was cut in two. One half was backed down on the side track, where plaintiff stood ready to couple the cars to some cars that were standing on the side track. Between the side track and the main track, a hole had been dug, about two or two and a half feet from the side track. There were loose ties lying about, and some of these ties laid over aud partially concealed the hole. When the cars came together plaintiff did the coupling, stepped along the cars as they moved, stepping partly forward and partly out towards the rail, until he reached the
The evidence tended to show that the hole had been dug by steamboatmen, for the purpose of placing posts in it to tie their boats at the ore landing; that it had been there some three or four days, and that Jones, the other brakeman, had seen it two or three days before the accident, and complained of it to the section foreman. Plaintiff testified that he did not know of the existence of the hole until he stepped into it, and that he used great caution and prudence, though there was evidence going to show that he had been engaged in working on the switch every day since the hole had been dug.
At the instance of the plaintiff, the court gave two instructions ; the first was as follows :
“If the jury are satisfied from the evidence in this case that there was a dangerous hole between the main track and the side track of defendant’s road, at a place where plaintiff was required or would be likely to step, in the discharge of his duties, whereby the risk of injury to plaintiff was increased, and that said hole was allowed to remain there after defendant knew of its existence, or might by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence have known thereof; and if they further find that plaintiff received injuries in consequence of such hole having remained there after defendant knew or might have known of its existence, and that plaintiff was exercising ordinary care and prudence at the time he received such injury, and did not know of the existence of said hole, then defendant is liable for such injuries.”
The second instruction relates to the measure of damages, and is not objected to here.
For the defendant, the-court declared the law to be:
“If the jury believe from the evidence, that plaintiff was daily in the habit of passing along and over that part of the*502 track of the defendant’s road, where the hole spoken of by the witnesses was situated, and that said hole was plainly visible to a man in the possession of his senses and faculties, the plaintiff cannot recover in this action, although the jury should believe that the plaintiff fell into said hole, and in consequence was run over'and hurt by the cars.”
“If.the plaintiff knew of the exposure to danger in coupling cars upon the “ore switch ” of the defendant, because of the hole or holes alleged to have been dug in the road-bed of said switch, and the danger of stepping into said hole or holes, and with such knowledge consented to and did continue to remain in the service of the defendant as brakeman, and was thereafter thrown down by means of stepping into one pf said holes, and was injured, and crippled as in the petition charged, then the plaintiff cannot recover from the defendant for any negligence in permitting said holes to remain in said road-bed.”
“ In, determining the question of carelessness ;and negligence on the part of the plaintiff, the jury will take into consideration all the facts and circumstances proved, including the condition of the track between the “ ore switch ” and the main track, the quality and quantity of light at the time the plaintiff attempted to couple the cars, and if, from all the evidence, they believe that negligence or want of ordinany carp and prudence on the part of plaintiff directly contributed to the happening of the accident which caused the injuries sued for, they will- find for the defendant.”
And of its own motion the court gave this additional declaration :
“The court instructs the jury that the plaintiff, as a servant of defendant, assumed all the risks attending the employment he undertook. If, therefore, the jury believe from the evidence, that the’ plaintiff was injured by and through the negligence of his fellow servant in the same general employment, the plaintiff cannot recover.
Defendant asked for six additional instructions, which the court refused. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff,
During the pendency of the appeal in this court, the plaintiff died, and his administrator now comes in and asks to be made a party, and this is resisted on the ground that the suit abated on the death of the plaintiff. This preliminary question must therefore be first disposed of.
It is insisted that the action died with the person, and as the judgment in his favor was reversed, it was thereby entirely destroyed or annihilated, and nothing was left but a simple right to recover, which would abate at his decease. Had the reversal been in a court of last resort, where it would have been necessary to have had' a new trial on the merits, this effect might have been ascribed to it. The judgment in that event would not only have been annulled, but all the subsequent proceedings would have been on the original cause of action. But now if the judgment of the intermediate court —the General Term — is reversed, the effect is to restore the judgment of the trial court. (Rankin vs. Perry, Adm’r, 5 Mo., 501; Strouse vs. Drennan, 41 Mo., 289.)
The operation of the judgment is suspended, but new life and validity may be imparted to it. Where in a* transfer of a suit from the Circuit Court to the Supreme Court, the plaintiff died after it was removed to the latter court, a motion to abate the suit was denied, and it was revived in the name'of the personal representatives. The court said that by the recovery in the lifetime of the injured party, the claim for damages was merged in the judgment, and became a debt, with which the personal representative was chargeable; that there was a difference between a simple appeal and an appeal in the nature of a writ of error, the latter merely suspended the judgment of the inferior court, but did not annul it. (Kimbrough vs. Mitchell, 1 Head, 539.)
The correct doctrine seems to be, that where an appeal is in the nature of a writ of error, and only carries up the case to the court of appeals, as an appellate court for the correction of errors that may have intervened bn the trial of the case below, and for its adjudication'upon the question whether
The instruction given for the plaintiff is the material question complained of as error in this cause. It is contended that it was wrong, because it told the jury that defendant was responsible if the risk of injury to plaintiff was increased by the hole being there, and it was allowed to remain after defendant knew of its existence, or might by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence have known thereof, and that the injury was received in consequence of the hole remaining after defendant knew, or might have known, of its existence. The instruction, however, declares at the same time, that it was necessary that the plaintiff should have exercised ordinary care and prudence in order to enable him to recover.
The rule has long been established, and it is founded in justice and reason, that it is the duty of railroad companies to keep their road and works, and all portions of the track, in such repair and so watched and tended, as to insure the safety of all who may lawfully be upon them, whether passengers or servants or others. They are bound to furnish a safe road, and sufficient and safe machinery or cars. The legal implication is, that the roads will have and keep a safe track, and adopt suitable instruments and means with which to carry on their business. They can provide all these by the use of the requisite care and foresight, and if they fail to do so, they are guilty of a breach of duty, and are liable for the consequences. (Gibson vs. Pac. R. R. Co., 46 Mo., 163; Chicago & N. W. R. R. Co. vs. Sweet, 45 Ill., 197.)
Under this rule it is held, that the companies are liable for the existence of all defects, which they knew, or by reasonable care and diligence might have known. (Gibson vs. Pac. R. R. Co., supra; Ryan vs. Fowler, 24 N. Y., 410; Noyes vs. Smith, 28 Verm., 59; Hayden vs. Smithfield Manf. Co., 29 Conn., 548.)
In the case of Snow vs. Housatonic R. R. Co., (8 Allen, 441) it was decided that a railroad company might be held
There the plaintiff was injured in coupling cars, and in coming out from between the cars, he stepped into a hole which was permitted to remain on the side of the track, and the train caught his other foot and it was crushed, and the amputation of a leg became necessary; The plaintiff himself swore that he had known of the existence of the hole for some time, and had complained of it to the repairer of the track, and it was urged in the argument for the defendant that the omission to repair the defect which occasioned the injury, was the result of the negligence of the person whose duty it was to see that the track was kept in a safe and proper condition, and that the accident was therefore caused by the carelessness of a fellow servant. But this position was denied by the whole court. Bigelow, C. J., in writing the unanimous opinion, said : But this argument leaves out of sight the real ground on which the liability of the defendants rests. If the argument is well founded, then it would follow that as a corporation can only act by agents or servants, it would escape all responsibility for every species of injury caused by the defective machinery and apparatus, or badly constructed' tracks, or insufficient bridges and other similar causes. So' an individual could avail himself of asimilar immunity if lie' conducted his business exclusively by agents or servants.' But the rule of law does not lead to any such absurd result. The liability of the master or employer in such cases is founded, as has already been said, on the implied obligation of his contract with those whom he employs in his service. This requires him to use due care in supplying and maintaining suitable, instrumentalities for the performance of the work or duty which he requires of them, and renders him liable for damages occasioned by a neglect or omission to fulfill this obligation, whether it arises from his own rvant of care, or that of his agents to whom he intrusts the duty.”
The same principle has recently been reiterated in the same court, (Ford vs. Fitchburg Railroad Co., 110 Mass., 240) and the doctrine extended even further. The plaintiff was an
The same principle is decided in a recent case in the New York Court of Appeals, (Flike vs. Boston and Albany R. R. Co., 53 N. Y., 549,) Avhere it is held that a corporation is liable to an employee for negligence or Avant of proper care in respect to such acts and duties, as it is required,to perform’ as master or principal, without regard to the rank or title of the agent entrusted with their performance,’and that as to such acts the agent occupies the place-of the corporation, and the latter is deemed present and consequently liable, for the. manner in which they are performed. -
Mr. Bed field, in the last edition of his Treatise on Railwavs, expresses the opinion that corporations should always be re
It was the duty of the section foreman to keep the track in repair and see that every thing was safe. He was notified of the existence of the hole, and complaint was made to him about it, but he negligently omitted to act and failed to remedy the defect. Notice to him was notice to the company, and his negligence was the company’s negligence. (Harper v. Indianapolis & St. Louis R. R. Co., 47 Mo., 567; Brothers v. Cartter, 52 Mo., 372.)
The same doctrine prevails in England as to the liability of the master. In Holmes vs. Clark (6 Hurl. & N., 319), it was held that where machinery was required to be protected and kept in a certain way, and it was permitted to get in an unsafe condition, and complaint was made by a servant or employee during the period it was so out of repair, the master took upon himself the risk, and was responsible to a servant for any accident that happened. Assuming then that the jury found the facts to exist as stated in the instruction, the conclusion of law predicated thereon was more favorable to the defendant than many of the best adjudged cases would warrant.
Under the first instruction given for the defendant, it is evident that the jury must have found that the hole was not so plainly visible that the plaintiff must have known of it by using his senses and faculties ; and this finding is sustained by the evidence, as it is shown that old ties were allowed to 'accumulate and remain there and partially cover up the hole. The second instruction precludes a recovery if the plaintiff knew of the danger and exposure of coupling the cars because of the hole being dug, and the verdict negatives any knowledge on his part. The next permits the jury to take into consideration all the facts and circumstances existing at the time, and surrounding the event, to determine whether the plaintiff was guilty of carelessness ofnegligence, or whether he contributed to the happening '.of the accident. Under these instructions the jury must have found that plaintiff, by
This was going a great deal further than some of the cases require.
In Filke v. Boston & Albany R. R. Co., supra, the plaintiff knew there was a deficiency of brakeman, and in Snow v. Housatonic Railroad, ubi supra, the plaintiff was well aware that the hole which caused the injury existed, and yet in both cases the courts held that a recovery was proper, on the ground that it was the duty of the companies to furnish the necessary number of hands, and to keep the track safe and in good order, and that a failure to do either, was a violation of their contract with their servants or employees.
The instruction given by the court told the jury that the plaintiff, as a servant of the defendant, assumed all the risks attending the employment he undertook. If, therefore, they believed from the evidence that he was injured by and through the negligence of his fellow servant in the same general employment he could not recover.
There is an admittedly correct abstract proposition embodied in this instruction, but I doubt greatly whether it was correctly applied.
It is true in one sense, the section foreman whose duty it was to superintend the track and keep it clear and safe, was a fellow servant, as all are to a certain extent fellow servants who are engaged in the same business’or enterprise; but he represented the company in the line of his duty — he was the company in that regard — and his negligence was the company’s negligence in a matter in which it owed a duty and obligation to its servants. If a mistake was committed, it was a mistake in favor of the defendant.
The instructions given covered the whole case, and were directed to every issue that could arise therein.
It is unnecessary to enter into an examination of those refused. Some of them had already been given in substance, and the others were incorrect.