57 F. 283 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota | 1893
This case is submitted upon the following agreed statement of facts;
“That the plaintiff is the duly-appointed and legally-qualified administratrix of the ('slate of Prank B. Mase, deceased, and is the widow of said deceased; that, at ail fimos hereinafter mentioned, plaintiff’s intestate, Prank B. Alase, was in the employ of the defendant as an engineer on one of its passenger trains, and was, on the 3d day of October, 1890, engaged as such engineer upon the engine of a certain train, mentioned and referred to in the testimony hereto annexed as passenger train No. 2; that on said 3d day of October, Í890, while so engaged in the performance of his duties as such engineer upon said train, said Prank B. Mase was killed in an accident occurring at or near Butler, in the state of Montana, caused by said train on which xdainiiff’s intestate "was so employed running upon a certain side track or safety track, by reason of a misplaced switch, and thus colliding with certain cars and a certain engine, mentioned as engine No. 483, which stood upon said side track or safety track; that said switch was so misplaced or left, open by one E. R. Short, the conductor of the train mentioned as No. 58, of which said engine No. 483 was a part; that the circumstances of said accident are as stated in the testimony of ATarshall Nixon, given at the coroner’s inquest on the body of said Prank B. Alase, a copy of which is hereto attached, and made a part of this stipulation; that the trains referred to herein or in said testimony were trains owned or controlled by defendant*284 in operating its lines of railway in said state of Montana and elsewhere, and that the persons engaged in and about said trains were in the employ of the defendant; that said accident was caused solely by the carelessness and negligence of said B. L. Short in permitting said switch to remain open and out of place, and said carelessness and negligence of said B. L. Short was the proximate cause of said accident and of the death of said Frank B. Mase; that said Frank B. Mase was free from all carelessness and negligence whatever in the premises.
“It is further agreed and stipulated that all the rules set forth in the complaint, and any and all of the rules contained in defendant’s rule book, hereto attached, may be read and referred to by either party, in all proceedings that may be had in this case, with the same force and effect as though the same were fully set out herein, and the adoption and promulgation of «aid rules for the guidance of its employes is hereby admitted on behalf of the defendant; that the statutes .of the state of Montana may be read and referred to by either party, in all proceedings that may be had in this case, from the printed copies thereof generally in use, without further proof of passage, and with full force and effect. It is further stipulated and agreed that, by reason of the matters herein set forth, the plaintiff, as ihe personal representative of said Frank B. Mase, deceased, has sustained damage in the sum of $4,000. Said B. L. Short had no control or direction whatever over said plaintiff’s intestate, other than as given by thp rules of the company, if is further stipulated and agreed that a jury is hereby waived in all proceedings that may be had herein in which either party would otherwise be entitled to a jury, and that the court may order judgment' herein in accordance with the facts admitted by the pleadings, and herein stipulated, and the law of the land.”
Marshall Nixon, being duly sworn, says:
“I live at Missoula. I am a railroad brakeman. At the time of the accident, on October 3d, I was at Butler. I was braking for Conductor Short, on train No. 58, bound for Helena from Missoula. Our train broke in two in the tunnel. We tried to back her up, and couple her together again, but the train was too heavy for the engine, and we could not got it together. Then we came down to Butler with the front part of the train, and put her in on the side track, on the left of the main line coming down. I cut the engine off, and took it out on the main line, and Mr. Short said to back it up, and put it on the safety switch, and I did so, and closed the switch after me, and put Hie lock in the keeper of the switch. Then I went to' the telegraph office after Mr. Short. I was there about twenty minutes, then Mr. Short came out, and I followed after him, and he says to me, ‘Go down, and tell that engineer [meaning our engineer] to back out, and come down on the head end of the train.’ And he said, T will let him out.’ Then he (Mr. Short) went right across the track, and opened the switch, and he says to me, ‘Fly down, and turn all the retainers down back of the furniture cars;’ and I did so, and as I went down I told the engineer that Short wanted him to back up, and he said there was not room to clear down there. Then I holloaed, and told Short they could not clear down there. Short gave me a rough answer, and said for me to go and see. I went and seen, and did not think-there was room there myself. Then I went back, and went into the offee, and asked him what he was going to do. He said he was going to unload some stuff if we ever got out of there, and was kind of mad, and did not talk much after that. About that time he stepped out of the telegraph office, and the passenger train was coming down the hill, and Short said just as soon as I come on the platform, ‘My God, that switch!’ Just then No. 2 came past the platform, and ran into safety switch. There was Harry Cromwell’s engine (engine No. 483) first and another engine and some cars on that track. I just threw down my brake club, and ran down to the wreck. I heard a man holloa, and I ran on to the fireman of No. 2. I pulled him out of the hot water, and he said, ‘Where is Frank?’ Then I heard another man holloa right below me. I went down to him, about 20 or 30 feet from his engine, where I found Engineer Frank Mase lying in a pool of water that had run out of the engine. From there I pulled him back, and ran to get some help.*285 His fireman, as I passed Mm, said. ‘Get a board for me, quick.’ I went right up, and told a lot o£ boys belonging to other irains that wore in and passengers to come down and give me some help; that two men were dying. That crowd rushed down, and begun to take care of them. I went to look if somebody else was hurt. I went; to see Alase three or four times. He died within half an hour. There was no light on the safety switch.”
The rules of the corporation that relate to this case, and as admitted by the stipulation, are as follows: *
“A switch must never he left open for another train or engine, upon the sujiposition that its conductor will close it, unless such conductor ¡assumes its charge. Conductors, brakemen, or others handling switches must stand by them unlil relieved, or until switches are, closed.” “The conductor who uses a switch Is responsible for its position, unless the switchman or another conductor or engineer personally assumes its charge.” “Conductors have full authority over the employes of trains they are placed in charge of; and such conductors are held responsible by the company l'or the safe management of their trains, and for the strict performance of tlheir duties on the part of the men engaged with them.”
Section 697, div. 5, of the Compiled Statutes of Montana provide» as follows:
“That in every case Ihe liability of the corporation to a servant or employe acting under the orders of liis superior shall be the same as in case of injury sustained by the default or wrongful act of his superior, or to an employe not appointed or controlled by him, as if such servant or employe were a xxasscnger.”
Upon this state of facts, the only questions which arise are: First, whether the defendant corporation is relieved from liability to the plaintiff by reason of the claim by the defendant that Conductor ¡-short was a fellow servant with the plaintiff’s intestate at the time the injury occurred; and, second, whether the statutes of Montana relied upon by the plaintiff create any greater or different liability on the part of the defendant than the liability created or recognized by the general law.
Whether Conductor Short was at the time of the injury a fellow servant of Mase, ihe deceased, is the real question to be determined in this case; and in its determination I do not deem it necessary to endeavor to reconcile the conflicting opinions of the various courts upon this question. I am very much impressed with ihe language of Justice Miller in the case of Garrahy v. Railroad Co., 25 Fed. Rep. 258, in which that eminent jurist, says:
“The question thus ¿¡resented is one which has been much considered of late In the courts of last resort of all the states, and much discussed at the bar in these and in the inferior courts. There is no unanimity in the decisions of the courts, nor in the opinions of the profession.”
It would seem that the decision in the Ross Case, 112 U. S. 377, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 184, settled that the conductor of a railway train was, by reason of the superiority of his position, a vice principal. and not a fellow servant, of the employes under Mm. But defendant claims that by the decision by the same court in the case of Railroad Co. v. Baugh, (June 5, 3893,) 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 914, the doctrine of the superiority of one employe over another, constituting him a vice principal, and not a coservant, as laid down in the Ross Case, is eliminated, and that the latter case, as far as it
After due consideration of the various decisions which may be characterized, at least, as conflicting, I am of the opinion that this case must be decided upon the question as to what duties devolved upon Conductor Short at the time of the 'injury, under the facts and circumstances of this case. If such duties were assigned to him as made him the representative of the defendant, for the time being, then he was the vice principal, and not a fellow servant. The rules of the company make it imperative upon him that, when he opens a switch, he must stand by it until relieved, or until such switch is closed, and it holds him responsible for its position until •another conductor assumes its charge; and, while this may not be considered as a part of the duty of the defendant to provide a safe roadbed, instrumentalities, and appliances, yet it was a delegation by the defendant to the conductor of a duty of the same kind and character that it owed to the employe. This duty might have been delegated by the defendant to a brakeman or a switch-man; but I am of the opinion that, when the defendant selected any qne person to discharge this duty, he must be considered in law as a vice principal, and not a coservant. It does not depend upon the question of superiority, but* upon the question of the delegation of a duty that originally devolved upon the principal to that person; for the rules of the company are very strict in holding the conductor responsible for the position of the switch, and delegate that important duty to him.
It is true it may be said that the performance of the duty of properly setting the switch depends upon the care of an employe, and that, therefore, it is his negligence alone which prevents its proper performance. But this is equally true of any of the positive duties of the employer. Competent servants cannot always be obtained, and reckless and incompetent ones cannot’ be discovered and discharged, without the exercise of care on the part of those whose duty it is to hire and discharge the men. Proper and safe cars cannot be built without due care on the part of the master mechanic and men in charge of the car shops. Cars cannot be kept in proper repair except by the exercise of diligence on the part of the inspectors. The roadbed and all 'its appurtenances cannot be kept in repair and in safe condition except by the exercise of care on the part of the employes and servants upon whom that duty devolves. Yet, if an accident is caused by the
Under the foregoing statement of facts, and in this view of the case, it is unnecessary to consider the effect of the statute of Montana upon this case. I might say, however, that the language is not very clear, hut it seems to refer to a servant or employe acting under the order of his superior, and would seem to he an attempt to graft the principles laid down in the Boss Case upon the statutes of that state, and adds nothing to the general law as applicable to this case.
Let judgment be entered for the plaintiff in the stipulated sum of |4,000.