Murphy v. Baltimore & Ohio S.-W. R. R.

114 Ky. 696 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903

*698Opinion op the court by

JUDGE SETTEE —

Reversing.

The appellant, John F. Murphy, while in the service of the appellee, Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad, as a brakeman upon one of its freight trains, in attempting to make a coupling had his arm caught between two cars-, wounding and mangling it to such an extent as to require amputation between the elbow and shoulder. The petition alleges, in substance, that his injuries were caused by the negligence of the appellee in providing a defective engine for pulling its train of cars, and in failing to provide a good and sufficient coupler for one of the two cars which he was attempting to couple; that is, that the coupler on one. of the cars was defective, and the chain belonging thereto broken, which defect made it dangerous for use. It is further averred in the petition that the defective condition of the coupler was known to appellee, but unknown to appellant, at the time of the injury. The answer denies the negligence complained of in the petition, and pleads contributory negligence on the part of appellant, which is denied by the reply. Upon the conclusion of appellant’s evidence, the jury, under a peremptory instruction from the special judge, found for appellee; and, appellant’s motion and: grounds for a new trial having been overruled, he prosecutes this appeal.

No effort was made in the trial court to show that the engine was defective, but appellant sought a recovery upon the sole ground that the coupler was defective and dangerous. The coupler complained of was what is known as a “Buckeye Automatic Coupler,” which, when in good condition, is operated by a rod running across the end of the car, at right angles to the track. On the, end of the rod a lever or crank is attached. A brakeman standing outside of the track may pull the lever, and thereby move the rod, *699which in turn draws a chain attached to an iron pin, which is raised by the use of the lever, and when so raised the only remaining duty is to open the knuckles on a plane with the earth’s surface. If the coupler is in order, all this may be done in a moment, and the stationary car is thus made ready to automatically grasp the approaching car. It is manifest, therefore, that when the Buckeye coupler is in good order there can be little or no danger to the brakeman in making the coupling. Although the answer denies that the coupler was in a defective condition, in the brief of counsel for appellee it seems to be admitted that it was in fact defective, in 'that the chain attached to the pin was broken, and besides it is overwhelmingly shown by the evidence introduced in the court below that such was its condition. The proof also conduces to show that when in this defective condition the only practical way to make the coupler do its work is to insert' the arm between the bumpers, take hold of the pin with the thumb and fingers, and lift it up, and at the same time pull the knuckles out with the hand; and it is further shown that, while attempting to operate the coupler in this way, appellant’s arm was caught between the irons of the two cars when they came in contact. It is, we think, also conclusively shown by the evidence that the defective condition of the coupler was known, or by the use of ordinary care could have been known, to appellee’s agents and servants whose duty it was to give attention to such things, some time before, appellant’s injuries were received. Upon the other hand, the evidence also shows that its condition was not known to the, appellant until in the act of making the coupling. The coupling was done at Flora, 111., under the following circumstances: At that point the conductor desired to take in its train some loaded cars standing on the side track. These cars were *700stationed behind a flat ear loaded with lumber. By order of the. conductor, appellant opened the switch and signaled the engineer to back the engine, to which was attached one freight car. The engine and car slowly backed down the grade, while appellant ran ahead, and he reached the lumber car when the backing train was about 25 feet away. He kept outside of the rails, and, when he reached the lumber car, pulled the lever out. As the chain was broken, the effort failed, of course, to draw the pin. This was the first warning that he received of the broken condition of the coupler. By this time the backing train had gotten in about 12 or 14 feet of him. It appears that about 20 feet behind the lumber car were two cars wholly or partly loaded with live stock, with one or more persons on them or at them, loading the stock. This fact was known to appellant, who doubtless also knew that if he failed to make the coupling the lumber car would probably be driven down grade against the cars upon which were the men and stock, by the collision with the backing train. Upon discovering the condition of the coupler, appellant placed one foot inside the rail, reached- over the dead irons, and with his hand opened the knuckles and raised the iron pin, and in this position his arm was caught by the colliding cars and crushed as stated.

The, lower court, in granting the peremptory instruction, seems to have proceeded upon the idea, not that appellant was guilty of negligence in the manner of operating the defective coupler, but that his injury resulted from his negligence in failing to get out of the way of the approaching train after he discovered that the coupler would not work by the action of the lever; and this conclusion seems to have been reached because of an answer made by appellant to a question upon cross-examination, to the effect.that he might have stepped back after the discovery of the defect in the. *701■coupler before the cars met. We do not agree with this conclusion of the trial court, for, in our opinion, the question of whether the appellant was or not negligent should not be, made to depend altogether upon whether it would have been possible for him to have escaped by stepping back from between the cars after he discovered the defect in the coupler, but whether, in the emergency presented, confronted as he was with the necessity for immediate action, and knowing of the danger to- himself from attempting to make the coupling, and of the danger of injury to the men and stock in the cars a few feet beyond him from his failing to do so, he acted with ordinary care in the, performance of his duty. On this point appellant testified as follows: “The whole thing didn’t consume but a few seconds, the engine and cars were moving down on me, and I was trying to get the coupling open, because I was on the down-hill side, and I knew the gentlemen below were loading the stock on the two stock cars to go with us; and a man braking as long as I had been (9 or 10 years) didn’t want to miss a coupling. Q. What would have been the consequence of doing nothing? A. I was trying to do that because if 1 missed the coupling the cars would roll on down onto the stock cars, and cripple some one. A person has to look out for that. Q. Was that part of your duty? A. Yes, sir.” Tt must be borne in mind in this connection that the entire transaction consumed, as appellant stated, “but a few seconds.” At the time he went in to adjust the coupler, the backing car had gotten within 10 or 12 feet of him. The cars were moving very slowly — not faster than two' miles an hour. Tt can not be said that, in reaching over the irons with his hand to open the knuckles or to release the iron pin, appellant was guilty of negligence, for, according to the evidence this was the only way to open the *702coupler in its defective, condition; and, besides, he doubtless believed that the coupler could be thus prepared for performing its office in time for him to avoid the backing train, if it continued the same slow movement until it got to the car to which it was to be coupled. But according to the evidence, when the backing train was only four or six feet off it gave a sudden lurch, as if something had let loose, thus attaining an increase of motion, which in all probability could not reasonably have been anticipated by appellant at the time he took hold of the coupler; and, but for this increased- movement of the train, it may, without violence to the evidence, be assumed that he could have adjusted the defective coupler, and stepped back from between the cars before they came in contact, and thereby have escaped injury. So we think that in view of such an emergency as that in which the evidence shows appellant was required to act, with little tim-e for thought or reflection, and having, in view, as he doubtless did, the danger that threatened the men and stock in the cars heyond him, and the danger to himself as well, the lower court erred in assuming that appellant was negligent in failing to step back from between the cars. The jury, under proper instructions from the court, should have been allowed to determine from the evidence whether he was or not guilty of negligence in attempting the coupling, and, if so, whether such negligence contributed to his injuries to such an extent that but for same they would not have been received. We find in Goodrich v. Railroad Co. (N. Y.), 22 N. E., 397, 5 L. R. A., 750, 15 Am. St. Rep., 410, a case not altogether unlike the one at bar. Goodrich, who was a brakeman, in attempting to couple some cars got his hand crushed. The train was slowly backing at the time, and when the cars to be coupled were in a few feet of each other, he stepped be*703tween them for- the purpose of inserting the link in the bumper or drawhead of the stationary car. When the cars were three or four feet apart he discovered that the bumper of the moving car was lower than the bumper of the stationary car. TJe testified that he thought that, by raising the link, it would enter the bumper of the stationary car, but found that it would not do so, and his hand was caught in the effort to raise the link. In discussing the cause of the accident, the court of appeals of New York said: “The defective bumper was thus shown to have been the proximate cause of the accident. It was literally the causa causans. Its immediate effect was to permit the dead-woods of the two cars to come together, and the plaintiff was from that cause exposed to a danger not within the ordinary risks of his employment. This result was- traceable direct ly to the defendant’s failure to provide the moving car with bumpers in good order, and, unless the proof ■showed (which it did not) that plaintiff himself was in some way responsible for the condition of the car, the negligence of the defendant was established. The question as to the plaintiff’s contributory negligence .was, I think, one of fact for the jury. . . . He appears to have thought that the coupling could be made with the straight link that was in the drawhead. He had the right to assume that fact, and that the coupling appliances were in good order. Tt was only at the moment that the cars were about to collide that he discovered his error. The court can not affirm that for .such an error of judgment, induced, as it was, to some extent, by defendant’s neglect, he is to be held to have been careless Under such circumstances, when the whole transaction is the occurrence of a moment, a man is not to be held responsible if he errs as to the estimate of danger that confronts him. If he acts the part of a prudent *704man, willing to and intending to perform the duty to which he has been assigned, he has done all that the law demands of him, and whether he acted such a part under the circumstances of this case was for the jury to determine.” The supreme court of Iowa, in Fox v. Railroad. Co., 53 N. W., 259, 17 L. R. A., 289, in discussing the question of whether a brakeman was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to climb a car to set a brake when the train was in motion, in doing which he fell and his foot was crushed, said: “It is contended that the plaintiff can not recover, on account of the dangerous speed of the train, because he testified that he knew of its speed before he caught hold of the ladder. But he was required to mount the car. It is. true, he might have refused to have done so, because it was. running too fast, or because his lantern was out, or because when he approached the car he discovered that the ground sloped away from the track, so that he could not readily seize the ladder and place his foot on the stirrup. But he was acting under orders, and in an emergency which gave no time for reflection, and the jury might well find, as they did, that he was not chargeable with contributory negligence.” We find nothing in the foregoing authorities that conflicts with any rule of law announced by this court in respect to cases of this character, and an examination of the authorities cited by counsel for appellee will, we think, show that none of them discusses the law in regard to the sudden discovery of dangerous defects, or the duty of a brakeman, in an emergency such as confronted appellant, to protect property or the lives of others thereby imperiled. With reference to the danger that might and doubtless would have resulted to the stock and stockmen near appellant in the event he failed to effect the coupling of the ears, wé find the rule thus stated in 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d *705Ed.), sections 2, 3, p. 396; “He whose duty it is to care for the safety of others may do so, even though his duty leads him into great and visible danger, and not be chargeable with contributory negligence. But the injured person must not have created the danger, or been guilty of negligence from the consequence of which he tried to save others, or his recovery will be barred; and it must appear that lie was in the discharge of duty, and could by the exercise of ordinary care have performed his whole duty, and yet escaped the danger.” The rule stated is manifestly sound in principle and consonant with reason, and by it the. conduct of appellant on the occasion of receiving his injuries should be measured.

We find no error in the rulings of the lower court in excluding certain questions and answers in the depositions, excepted to.

For the reasons herein indicated, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the case, remanded, with directions, to set aside the verdict and judgment and grant appellant a new trial.

Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.

midpage