246 S.W. 257 | Mo. | 1922

Lead Opinion

Personal injury suit. On July 12, 1911, plaintiff, with his father, John E. Myers, lived at Browning, Linn County, Missouri. He was fourteen years old on the 23rd day of October following. He was working for the defendant railroad company as a section hand under his father who was foreman of the crew. On that day in the afternoon, in attempting to prevent the spread of fire from a fireguard which he and other members of the crew were engaged in burning in a meadow adjacent to defendant's right-of-way, his clothing caught fire and he was severely burned.

The petition in the suit before us was filed October 10, 1919, and alleged that plaintiff was ordered by defendant railroad company "to burn the grass and combustible substances adjacent to said right-of-way for the purpose of preventing liability against said defendant railroad company from accruing by reason of damage to property of persons or corporations resulting from injury or destruction of such property by fire communicated directly or indirectly by locomotive engines in use upon said railroad owned and operated by said defendant corporation." Among other specifications of negligence the said petition charged: "That defendants furnished plaintiff with a defective bucket, which appliance was not reasonably safe so as to enable the plaintiff to perform said work with reasonable safety *253 to himself, which appliance was a leaky bucket containing a highly inflammable substance known as coal oil, which coal oil dripped from said bucket upon plaintiff's trousers while he was engaged in obedience to defendants' orders in burning said fireguards, and thereafter notwithstanding defendants knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known that plaintiff's said trousers were so saturated with said coal oil, said defendants ordered and directed plaintiff to engage in fighting fire which theretofore had been set out so as to prevent the spread of the same to certain hay stacks located on the lands of a landowner adjacent to said right-of-way," whereby plaintiff, without fault on his part, was seriously burned, etc.

Defendant John E. Myers made default.

The answer of defendant railroad company put the allegations of the petition in issue. Alleged that defendants' railroad extended from the towns of Carrollton and Laclede in the State of Missouri to the city of Centerville, in the State of Iowa, and that all trains, freight and passenger, running through Browning, Missouri, were interstate trains; that defendants' locomotives emitted sparks which would ignite combustible matter on and adjacent to its right-of-way, and that it was necessary to burn such material for a distance of 100 feet from its track within and without its right-of-way, in the operation of its interstate line, to facilitate and prevent undue burden upon interstate commerce; that unless such vegetation along its track was so destroyed said sparks from said engines would destroy property on adjoining lands to the value of thousands of dollars, and thus cast upon interstate commerce a great burden, and the lives of passengers on its interstate trains would be endangered, and interstate commerce interfered with by the destruction of its bridges, fences and telegraph poles; that plaintiff was injured while burning such vegetation and was then and there engaged in interstate commerce; that his said injuries occurred more than two *254 years before filing this suit, and his cause of action was barred by the Statute of Limitations applicable thereto. The answer further pleaded contributory negligence and assumption of risk.

The reply was a general denial.

Prior to instituting the suit before us, plaintiff had brought three other suits, and in the first two the petition alleged in effect that when he was injured he was engaged in burning off the right-of-way of defendant to protect its property and that of adjoining owners from injury by fire, and in the third, that plaintiff was assisting in burning fireguards on the outside of the right-of-way for the purpose of preventing the spread of fire from its right-of-way to adjacent lands and from adjacent lands to its right-of-way. There was no charge of negligence in furnishing a leaky bucket in the first petition, but such charge was contained in the subsequent petitions. These petitions were all read in evidence by defendant railroad.

In this case, plaintiff, on his own behalf, testified in substance, as follows:

We had worked on the track up until noon that day; there were six or seven in the bunch; John E. Myers (father) was foreman. He said he was going to burn fireguards that evening. That morning we had worked on the track just north of Browning. He (John E. Myers) said he had instructions to do so "and had to protect the company's or adjoining people's property, and to get at it at once and get it done." It was a dry season. We went to work at one o'clock that afternoon burning these fireguards in a hay field outside and about fifty feet from the right-of-way fence. We burned a space about fifty feet wide in the meadow. He (John E. Myers) said he would have to make it that wide to keep any sparks from going over. He wanted to protect some hay in the meadow; it was about a hundred yards from the right-of-way, in stacks. We were burning the fireguard about a hundred feet from *255 the railroad track. Well, he (John E. Myers) told us he wanted to burn a fireguard and wanted to protect these hay stacks. He had a bucket of coal oil and some cobs in it. The cobs had a wire about three or four feet long stuck into their ends, and somebody would light the cob and start out with it and drag it along with the bucket in his hand and set the fire. The foreman gave us instructions not to let it (the fire) get away if we could possibly help it. A.E. Austin first used the bucket and set out the fire. I got a rag to fight with (to keep the fire from spreading beyond the intended limits); I got so hot fighting I was advised to set fire instead of fighting, which I did when this man let me have the bucket, cobs and wire. John E. Myers told him to. I set the fire out about fifty feet from the fence and these men were to stop it when it got wide enough, not to let it get away any further. It was a gallon bucket. After I set quite a strip on fire the foreman said, Don't set any more; he said, "Quit setting out," and, "Boys, don't let it get away." He told me to quit setting and set the bucket away, and I set it on a fence post; followed his directions. I started back to help fight the fire; he said not to let it get away. He handed me a rag, an old pair of overalls, which was betwixt wet and dry. I fought the fire with it; I tried not to let it get away. I was fighting when I noticed I was afire. "Q. Now this bucket that you used in setting out fire, had it leaked on your trousers? A. Well, I dont know." Don't know what caused me to catch fire. The flame flashed up all at once in my face before I could get to my legs, before I could fight it. I burned my fingers along there (indicating), and began to scream and holler. "Q. How did the blaze flash up as compared to how coal oil will flash up? A. Well, it all come up at once around my waist before I knew it — seemed like the wind was hitting it hard and burning fast." It made me excited to keep out of it, and I was screaming and making a noise. It burned fast, and the blaze of *256 the smoke was black and just puffing. Don't know how long that bucked had been on the place. The blaze spread all over my face; it seemed like my tongue was dry and my throat. Somebody throwed me down. My father began to holler to help me. They just jumped into me and pulled my clothes off. A man came along in a buggy, and they took me home. My left leg from the sole of my foot up to the hips was burned and sore; my heel was burned and sore for a long time; my whole left leg was burned, just wouldn't heal some way. I lay there on the davenport, and people seen me and said, Get a doctor, and someone said, There wasn't a doctor in town, and a young man got some linseed oil, which he said he had heard was good and he poured that all over me. My right leg was also burned, about half way from the knee to the ankle, on the inside, for a space about the size of both my hands, but not so bad as the other; the skin rolled up and pealed off. But my left leg seemed to be raw all over from my ankle to my hip and on both hips. My back even was hot, and my back bone seemed to be sore there; both of my hands were burned, but I have recovered from that. It seemed like my throat — I couldn't drink enough water to take the burn out of it. It was about six months before I was out of bed. I had to lay flat on my back, and they tied my arms so that I wouldn't tear this leg open in my sleep. Kept my left foot on a pillow about a foot high over the bed. I would be doctored twice a day during that time, just laying there — screaming and yelling, I was so bad at times — suffered pain the whole six months. The doctor would inject stuff in my arm to make me sleep; sleep still disturbed on account of this burn. It hurts so I get nervous. When I was hurt was in good condition, extra stout and big, weighed more than I do now, about 150 pounds, and now about 142; was earning $1.60 a day then. Have to dress my leg twice a day now, sometimes three times. Witness here unbandaged his leg and showed it to the jury from the knee down, also removed trousers *257 and showed jury his hip. The following questions were asked and answers made on plaintiff's cross-examination: "Q. Was the cob in the bucket? A. Yes, sir. Q. And then you would just lift it out of the bucket? A. Yes, sir; just jerk it out. Q. You would jerk the cob out of the bucket of oil? A. I took it out, yes, sir."

John E. Myers testified for plaintiff, substantially as follows: That he got orders from the superintendent at Centerville, Iowa, to "get busy at once and burn grass or plow or scalp grass to protect the company hay, or burn guards." Had done that for a number of years before, to protect the farmers' property — hay. When plaintiff was injured he was engaged in burning fireguard on Frank Maggert's meadow, which had been mowed some weeks before and had dry material of different kinds, weeds, etc. The burning of this fireguard was supposed to prevent the fire from spreading over the meadow in case an engine would throw a spark over the fence. We got permission from Maggert to do this work. Just before I saw plaintiff afire I had handed him a rag, and told him to help the boys, and not let the fire get to the hay, and that there was another rag hanging up back on the right-of-way fence, probably 150 yards, and I would go and get that and return and help. The fire was then burning towards this hay. I heard him holler, and turned and seen him coming towards me, with the flames all around his legs and claiming up towards his body. I went running and meeting him, I clinched him and we went to the ground, and by that time some of the other boys were there and we got his pants and undersuit off as quick as we could. Witness then described the burns of the plaintiff substantially as stated by the plaintiff himself, and that plaintiff's injuries had never healed, and that he was not able to work more than a day a week since his injury.

As to the bucket containing the coal oil, the witness testified: Supposed to be a gallon bucket. I fetched it from home; had a candy bucket with water in it in which *258 they would wet the rags to put out the fire; struck the flames with the wet cloth to put it out. He was 75 to 100 yards from me when I first saw him afire. It was the duty of the section crew to burn the fireguards outside the right-of-way. We mowed the right-of-way before we burned that once each season. Whenever hay along the section was supposed to be in danger we usually got orders from the road master or superintendent to burn fireguards and protect this hay. Think we paid Mr. Maggert something for the privilege of burning fireguard on his land. Sometimes sparks from locomotives would light on the right-of-way and start fire, and sometimes light beyond the fence and start fire. The plaintiff worked regularly as a section hand in 1911, before his injury. Did the regular work of a section man and received the same wages. Ever since his injury, since he was burned, the plaintiff has kind of fainting spells, and when he gets tormented he doesn't seem to realize what he is doing, has the fainting spells two or three times a day. Never had trouble of that kind before he was burned. Cannot remember a day he didn't have such spells since his injury; have to dress his sores twice a day. His mother and himself do the dressing. The doctor is treating him now. He has discharges from his leg, a running sore now. The fainting spells are increasing. He never worked over a day or two a week since he was burned, and has done no work for the last four years. It was a mighty hard proposition for him to work; he suffers agony in this leg, and cannot sleep, and he will be in this sinking "capacity" and kind of unconscious, don't know what he is about or anything of the kind.

Three other witnesses who were working with the plaintiff at the time he was burned testified for plaintiff to burning the fireguard outside the right-of-way for the purpose of protecting the stacks of timothy hay in this meadow, and that no burning was done inside the right-of-way at all. *259

As to the gallon bucket one of the witnesses for plaintiff, C.H. Wood, said it had been around there a good while in the car, and used to carry water in to grind tools; been around there all spring and summer. It was an old rusty syrup bucket; it was rusty in the bottom and leaked. It leaked on his pants and shoes the day that plaintiff was injured when they set the fireguards; when he carried the bucket it leaked from the bottom; that was before plaintiff was injured. They used it once before, and it leaked just like it did when plaintiff was injured; this was a few days before, four or five or six, something like that, while it was being used to grind tools. It leaked ever since plaintiff began to use it, in the spring before plaintiff was burned. They had the coal oil and the cobs in this bucket the day plaintiff was injured, and plaintiff had used it in setting out the fire, before his injury. The witness had used the bucket, and it had leaked on his shoes and pants shortly before plaintiff was burned. He noticed it leaked. The foreman told plaintiff to set the bucket up and get a coat and help put the fire out. He noticed the condition of plaintiff's trousers at that time and that something had leaked upon them; he noticed that when plaintiff took the rag to fight the fire, which his father gave him about ten minutes before he was burned. It was coal oil on his trousers, about from his knee down. When plaintiff caught fire, it flashed up all at once, just like coal oil.

The other two witnesses for plaintiff, members of the crew, said they did not notice any leak in the bucket, although they saw it and handled it; that it did not leak. Three witnesses for defendants, who were members of the section crew and who were working with plaintiff when he was burned, also testified that they were burning the fireguards to prevent the hay of Mr. Maggert from catching fire from sparks from passing engines. That no fire was set inside or upon the right-of-way, although it would run over there in places. The purpose *260 was not to burn the grass or weeds on the right-of-way, but to burn a strip or a fireguard on the adjoining meadow. These witnesses, including Fogel, also testified that they saw and used the coal oil bucket the day of the fire and before that day, and it did not leak.

Defendant also produced a paper purporting to be signed by plaintiff's witness Wood, in which he stated that the bucket did not leak, but he, in effect, denied signing said paper. Plaintiff produced a paper which defendants' witness Fogel admitted he signed which contained a statement that the bucket did leak, but he said that he did not see that in it when he signed it. It was also shown by defendant that there was a bridge over a creek on the right-of-way near this meadow, and several other bridges on the section maintained by defendant John E. Myers as section foreman. Defendant also showed that it had paid out to farmers and town people for damages caused by fires, in the previous thirteen years $442,890, the smallest payment for any year being $13,950, and the greatest $69,156. Also that once a tree outside of, but near the right-of-way, burned and fell over on the right-of-way, and its branches struck and broke the windows in a passing car and injured a passenger. Other section men testified for defendant that fires had been communicated to bridges, telegraph poles and fence posts from fire on the right-of-way. Other railroad men testified for defendant that the object of burning the fireguards and the right-of-way was to keep the adjoining crops and also the fences, bridges and telegraph poles of the railroad company from being set on fire by sparks from engines. That the burning of fences would let stock on to the track, and might derail trains. Also that all trains of the defendant railroad running through Browning were interstate trains, running from Missouri into Iowa, and from Iowa into Missouri. They also carried local or intrastate traffic.

As to plaintiff's injuries: Dr. C.E. Jenkins testified for plaintiff, that he examined the plaintiff the first *261 time the fall before the trial; that plaintiff then had a large ulcerating surface on the left leg, about eight inches long and two and one-half inches wide. It occupied the entire middle third and part of the upper and lower third of the leg. The foot was swollen. The scar-tissue extended well up above the middle of the thigh. Above the knee the scar-tissue looked fairly healthy; below, not. Also found albumen in the urine indicating that the man had Bright's disease and inflammation of the kidneys. About one-eighth of his body was burned and covered with scar-tissue; that part of the skin would not function. Scar-tissue does not perform the function of healthy skin, it throws more weight upon the rest of the skin and upon the kidneys. The Bright's disease might have been caused by the burns he received. The witness also examined the plaintiff just before he gave his testimony and stated that he found the same ulcer he found last fall, except that it appeared to be a little deeper; the scar-tissue around the ulcer was rough and not healthy; the foot and ankle swollen; the scar-tissue above the knee looked healthy. He had a temperature of 100 and a pulse of 106, normal pulse is 72. "I noticed that he didn't remember me at all and I had trouble getting an intelligent answer. Normal temperature is 98½. His physical condition was about the same as last fall. The temperature and pulse would indicate the presence of poison in the system from the leg. A burn of a third or more of the skin would cause death. I think there is no permanent cure for plaintiff's injuries. To treat that limb properly and treat him properly he should be in a hospital under the care of a trained nurse with a physician in attendance. That limb should be dressed and taken care of anyway once a day for an indefinite time, might be as long as he lives, don't know. The expectancy of life for a boy twenty-three years old is about forty years. Trained nurse would cost about $35 a week. Physician ought to see him about twice a week, which would cost $4 a week; couldn't tell how long this would be required. *262 Defendants' evidence as to plaintiff's injuries: Five or six physicians testified for defendant, several of whom had examined plaintiff during or just before the trial. The substance of their testimony was that the ulcer on plaintiff's leg was eight inches long and one and one-half inches wide; the scar tissue where the skin was destroyed and would not function embraced one-sixteenth to one-twelfth of his entire body; while this threw an extra load on his kidneys, they hardly thought it sufficient to cause Bright's disease by itself; did not examine his urine; thought with proper treatment his injuries from the burns might be substantially healed, but one said, not without skin grafting, which he could not do; they found him nervous and confused in his mind, and he told one of them he had spells and was sometimes unconscious. Three of said physicians testified plaintiff had epileptic spasms before his injury; one, who testified he was the head of a department in the State Hospital for the Insane at Kankakee, Illinois; that he was formerly the family physician and assisted at the birth of plaintiff, and that plaintiff had epilepsy, both grand and petit mal, from infancy, for which he often treated plaintiff until he was eight or nine years old, when he (Dr. Tripper) moved away from Missouri. These physicians said that epilepsy is incurable and progressive, and was not caused nor aggravated by burns, and that plaintiff's nervous and confused condition of mind and unconscious spells since being burned were, in their opinion, owing to his previous epilepsy, and not to the burns.

John E. Myers and his wife, the plaintiff's father and mother, testified in rebuttal that before this injury plaintiff never had any spasms or fainting spells, and no doctor ever told them or intimated to them that he had epilepsy. In surrebuttal some four or five people testified that the plaintiff's parents told them before plaintiff's injury that he was subject to spells ever since he was a child and was a great care to them. They did *263 not say fits or epilepsy, but just spells of some kind, and that the burn seemed to help his spells.

Among other instructions, the court gave the following for plaintiff:

"1. The court instructs the jury that if you believe and find from all the facts and circumstances proven in this case that the foreman was careless and negligent, as defined in these instructions, in directing and commanding plaintiff, if he did, to engage in working in and about the fire with an appliance handed him by the foreman, and if you find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff was in the exercise of reasonable care for his own safety in obeying said command, taking into consideration his position, age and experience and capacity at the time said command was given, and if you further find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff while working in obedience to said command, if any, as aforesaid, was burned and injured, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff.

"2. The court instructs the jury that the acts, knowledge and information of John E. Myers were the acts, knowledge and information of the defendant railroad company.

"3. The court instructs the jury that if you believe and find from the evidence that on the 12th day of July, 1911, the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad Company, and that the defendant, John E. Myers, on said date was in the employ of said defendant, Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad Company, as its foreman, in charge of plaintiff and plaintiff's fellow workmen mentioned in the evidence; that defendants negligently furnished plaintiff with the bucket mentioned in the evidence and that before and at the time said bucket was so furnished, if it was, the said bucket was leaky and was not in a reasonably safe condition for the purpose for which it was furnished to plaintiff, if it was; that said bucket contained coal oil at said time and that said *264 coal oil was leaking from said bucket; that at and before said time said defendant, Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad Company, acting through its foreman, John E. Myers, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have known of the said leaky condition of the said bucket, if it was leaking, and that said bucket was not reasonably safe for the purpose for which it was being used, if you find that it was not reasonably safe for said purpose; that the plaintiff in obedience to the orders of the said foreman, if you find that plaintiff was so ordered, while plaintiff and said foreman were acting within the scope of their employment, engaged in setting out the fire mentioned in the evidence, and that while plaintiff was so engaged, and while exercising such care for his own safety as a boy of his then age, intelligence, experience and capacity would have ordinarily exercised under the same or similar circumstances, coal oil leaked from said bucket upon plaintiff's trousers and that plaintiff's said trousers thereby became saturated with said coal oil; that said John E. Myers while acting within the scope of his employment and performing the duties thereof by the exercise of ordinary care might have known that plaintiff's said trousers were so saturated with said coal oil, if they were; that thereafter the said John E. Myers while acting within the scope of his said employment as foreman negligently ordered and directed the plaintiff to engage in fighting the fire mentioned in the evidence for the purpose of preventing said fire from spreading to the hay mentioned in the evidence on a farm adjoining said railroad right-of-way; that the only purpose of the work in which plaintiff was engaged at the actual time of his injury in fighting fire, if he was, was to prevent injury to property on farm land adjoining said railroad right-of-way; that in obedience to said order and direction, if any, the plaintiff engaged in fighting said fire for the purpose aforesaid, and that while plaintiff was so engaged and while exercising such care for his own safety as would be ordinarily *265 exercised by a boy of his then age, intelligence, capacity and experience his trousers were set on fire by reason of the coal oil with which they were saturated, if they were, coming in contact with the fire which the plaintiff was engaged in fighting, if he was, and that plaintiff was thereby burned and injured, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff.

"5. The court instructs the jury that if you find for the plaintiff you will assess his damages at such sum as you believe from the evidence will reasonably compensate him for the injuries, if any, received as a direct result of the burns suffered by him on the 12th day of July, 1911, and in arriving at the amount of the verdict you should take into consideration the nature and extent of plaintiff's injuries, if any, also all pain and suffering, both physical and mental, which you believe and find from the evidence the plaintiff has suffered or is reasonably certain to suffer as a direct result of said injuries in the future; also, his inability, if any, to earn a livelihood in the future; also, for the reasonable value of the medical attention and nursing which said injuries are reasonably certain to occasion in the future, if any, not to exceed, however, in all the sum of two hundred thousand dollars."

The court refused a demurrer to the evidence requested by defendant railroad at the close of plaintiff's evidence, and also at the close of all the evidence.

The court gave fifteen instructions for defendant, and refused five, which will be referred to in the opinion.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $20,000, and after being refused a new trial, defendant railroad appealed to this court.

I. Was the plaintiff, as a matter of law, engaged in interstate commerce when he was burned, as contended by appellant? We think not. The evidence, of all the witnesses engaged in the work, tends to show: *266

That the fireguard was being burned solely to preventInterstate sparks from defendant's engines communicating fire toCommerce. the adjoining meadow and thereby spreading to the hay stacks of Maggert, the adjacent proprietor. That at the very time of plaintiff's injury the setting of the fire had been stopped, and he and all others ordered to and were engaged in putting out the fire which was spreading away from the right-of-way and towards the hay stacks, and that plaintiff was then wholly engaged in preventing the said hay stacks from destruction, and not in preventing anything on the right-of-way from injury and in saving defendant railroad from liability for damages under Section 9954, Revised Statutes 1919, which is as follows:

"Sec. 9954. — Each railroad corporation owning or operating a railroad in this State shall be responsible in damages to every person and corporation whose property may be injured or destroyed by fire communicated directly or indirectly by locomotive engines in use upon the railroad owned or operated by such railroad corporation, and each such railroad corporation shall have an insurable interest in the property upon the route of the railroad owned or operated by it, and may procure insurance thereon in its own behalf for its protection against such damages. [R.S. 1909, sec. 3151.]"

A very similar question was decided by the Court of Appeals of New York in Matter of Plass v. Ry. Co. 226 N.Y. 449. The New York statute required all railroad companies to cause "all Canadian thistles, white and yellow daisies and all other noxious weeds growing on lands owned or occupied by it, to be cut down twice in each and every year." Plass was a track laborer, and while engaged in mowing grass upon the railway right of way was poisoned by some noxious weed. The officials of the railroad testified that the nature and purpose of the work was "to prevent fire to bridges and trestles and spreading to adjacent property." The court said: "Whether or not the weeds on *267 the right-of-way were cut solely to comply with the railroad law and prevent fire to adjoining property or to protect bridges and trestles was a question of fact," for the jury. The court ruled in that case that, if Plass was cutting the grass and weeds simply to comply with the state statute, he was not engaged in interstate commerce. So in this case if plaintiff when injured was solely engaged in preventing fire spreading to the adjoining proprietor's hay, he was not then engaged in interstate commerce. This question was properly submitted to the jury by plaintiff's instruction numbered 3.

The validity of our statute, supra, has been upheld by this court in Mathews v. Railway, 121 Mo. 298, and other cases and by the United States Supreme Court in Railway v. Mathews,165 U.S. 1, as a proper police regulation, to prevent the destruction by fire from sparks of locomotives of the property of others adjoining the railroad's right-of-way. In other words, the statute was not passed to protect the railroad's right-of-way or any structure upon it, but to protect adjoining properties.

The burden of proving that plaintiff at the very time of his injury was engaged in interstate commerce was upon the defendants (Osborne v. Gray, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 486; 1 Roberts on Fed. Liability, secs. 449 and 466), and where the evidence is conflicting in that regard, it is a matter for the jury to pass upon. The most that can be said in this case, owing to the admissions in the petitions in the plaintiff's former suits, is that the evidence was conflicting as to whether when plaintiff was injured he was solely engaged in saving the farmer's hay. But such prior pleadings are not conclusive evidence, and the probative force thereof was for the jury.

A few other authorities: In Delaware Railroad v. Yurkonis,238 U.S. 439, a miner was injured while preparing to mine coal which was to be transported from one state to another, and it was held he was not engaged in interstate commerce when injured. So an employee in a machine shop where engines used in state *268 and interstate commerce are repaired, is not engaged in interstate commerce when repairing the machinery in such shop. [Shanks v. Railroad, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 188.] Or when repairing in such shop an engine used in both state and interstate commerce. [Railroad v. Winters, 37 Sup. Ct. Rep. 170.] In Illinois Central Railroad v. Behrens, 233 U.S. 473, and Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad v. Harrington, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 517, 518, it was held that when an employee is engaged in work pertaining to both classes of commerce, the railroad company is not liable under the Federal statute for his injury unless the particular service in which he was employed at the time of the injury was a part of interstate commerce, even though upon completion of such work the employee was to engage in work which was a part of interstate commerce. So that the fact in this case that plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce in the morning before his injury in working upon the track as a section man and expected to return to such work after burning said fireguard, does not make the work of burning said fireguard interstate service. In New York Central Railroad v. Carr, 238 U.S. 260, l.c. 262, it is said: "Owing to the fact that during the same day railroad employees often and rapidly pass from one class of employment to another, the courts are constantly called upon to decide those close questions where it is difficult to define the line which divides the state from interstate commerce." "The true test is the nature of the work being done at the time of the injury." [Railroad v. Welsh, 242 U.S. l.c. 306.]

In this case if plaintiff had been injured while setting fire to the grass on the right-of-way to prevent fires from consuming the bridges or trestles or fences or telegraph posts of the railroad it might be well said that he was engaged in interstate commerce, the same as if he had been engaged in repairing the track, in which case it is well established by many authorities cited by the learned counsel for appellant that he would have *269 been engaged in work which was a necessary part of interstate commerce. But if, when injured, he was engaged simply in burning a fireguard outside the right-of-way to prevent the destruction of the adjoining farmer's hay and save defendant from liability under our statute, as there was evidence tending to show and the jury found the fact to be, he was not engaged in interstate commerce when injured, and the Federal statute is not in the case.

The fact that the destruction of the farmer's hay imposed a liability on the railroad company which the plaintiff was endeavoring to prevent, is of itself strenuously argued by appellant's learned counsel as sufficient to make his work interstate commerce, because, if not prevented, a great burden and expense would be imposed upon interstate commerce in which the defendant railroad was engaged, as well as being engaged in intrastate commerce. If this argument was sound every service of any employee of a railroad company intended to save it harmless from damages under police regulations of the State, or torts at common law, would be interstate commerce if the railroad was engaged in both state and interstate commerce. This cannot be true. The connection of the work being done with interstate commerce must not be too remote. [Shanks v. Railroad, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 188.] We have examined the cases cited by appellant, and they are all cases where the employee at the time of his injury was actually engaged in some service that was a practical part of interstate commerce, as, for instance, the cases just mentioned of section men working upon the railroad track itself. The main case relied on by appellant's learned counsel is Southern Pacific Co. v. Ind. Comm. of California, 174 Cal. 8, approved in P. R. Ry. Co. v. Di Donato, 41 Sup. Ct. Rep. 516. In that case it was held that a gate man in the employ of a railroad using its tracks for both state and interstate commerce at a point where the tracks crossed a public street, who was killed by an intrastate *270 train when he started across the track to back away a horse and wagon so that he could lower the gate, was engaged in interstate commerce, because his work was to prevent collisions between vehicles and all trains passing over the crossing, so as to prevent blocking traffic at the crossing, which would have delayed trains at other points including interstate trains. In other words, that he was then engaged in keeping "the tracks at the crossing clear and unimpeded for the passage according to schedule of interstate passengers and freight carried by" the railroad. In the case before us the burning of the hay stacks which plaintiff was endeavoring to prevent when injured, would in no way interfere, directly or indirectly, with the operation of trains upon the track of the defendant, either state or interstate trains. We must rule this point against the appellant.

II. Appellant also contends that there was no evidence of negligence in furnishing a leaking bucket, and no evidence that the oil leaked on plaintiff's trousers. If the positive evidence of plaintiff's witness Wood, that the bucket did leak that day and had leaked for some days before andLeaking Bucket: that he saw coal oil on plaintiff'sSufficient Evidence. trousers just prior to his injury, and the circumstantial evidence that the flames suddenly flashed up on plaintiff's trousers, making a volume of black smoke like the burning of coal oil, is to be credited — which was for the jury — there was abundant evidence to go to the jury as to the negligence of defendant in furnishing a leaky bucket which caused the injury.

III. As to defendant's refused instructions:

(a) Instruction B was properly refused because it told the jury to entirely disregard the fact that plaintiff was a minor, less than twenty-one years old, when injured. He was then about thirteen or fourteen years old and we cannotMinor Plaintiff. say as a matter of law that he was in all respects to be regarded *271 as an adult in passing on his contributory negligence. [Jackson v. Butler, 249 Mo. 342; Moeller v. United Rys. Co., 242 Mo. 721.]

(b) Instruction C told the jury there was no evidence that defendant negligently furnished plaintiff a leaky bucket. This point has just been disposed of against appellant.Leaky Bucket.

(c) Instruction D was simply a cautionary instruction to the effect that the jury should determine the case according to the instructions which it was their duty to obey andCorporation. the evidence, regardless of the fact that one of the parties was a corporation and one an individual and without prejudice towards one or sympathy towards the other. The giving of such an instruction, which is usual, would perhaps not have been reversible error, but neither was its refusal reversible error. [Stauffer v. Railroad, 243 Mo. l.c. 335.]

(d) Instruction E told the jury that if plaintiff's burns were caused by the work he was doing, and not because of any negligence of defendant, the jury should find for defendant. The refusal of this instruction was not reversible error, because it was, in substance, embraced within otherPredicated Facts: instructions given for defendant.Included in Defendant's given Instruction 5 told theOther Instructions. jury that if plaintiff's trousers caught fire by reason of coming in contact with the fire plaintiff was fighting, and not by reason of coal oil on his trousers, plaintiff could not recover. Defendant's given instruction numbered 7 required the jury, before they could find a verdict for plaintiff, to find that defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that the bucket containing the coal oil was leaking, in time to have secured another bucket before plaintiff's injury occurred. Defendant's given instruction numbered 11 put the burden on plaintiff of proving the negligence of defendant in furnishing a leaky bucket and that it was the direct cause of plaitiff's injury without any negligence on his *272 part contributing thereto. Instruction numbered 12 given for defendant told the jury that plaintiff, by engaging in work as a section hand for defendant, assumed all the ordinary risk and danger of his employment, not only so far as known to him, but so far as could have been known to him by the exercise of ordinary care.

(e) Instruction F told the jury that if plaintiff "caused the coal oil to drip or drop out of the bucket when he jerked thecobs out of the bucket," and he did not exercise ordinary care and such lack of care contributed to his injury, plaintiff could not recover. This tells the jury that plaintiffAssumption of jerked the cobs out of the bucket. Plaintiff didDisputed Fact. not firmly testify he jerked the cobs out of the bucket, but in answer to the question whether he would "just lift them out," said, "Yes, sir; just jerk it out," and in answer to the further question whether he "would just jerk the cobs out" said, "I took it out, yes, sir." Plaintiff evidently meant the same thing by "jerk it out" as by "took it out." At least, the jury might have so inferred from his testimony. So that it was not justifiable to assume in an instruction that plaintiff "jerked" the cobs out of the bucket, as was done by defendant's refused Instruction F and thus might have caused the coal oil to splash on his trousers. Said instruction was properly refused.

IV. As to error in plaintiff's instructions given to the jury:

(a) Plaintiff's Instruction 1 told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the foreman was negligent "as defined in these instructions" in directing plaintiff to engage in working in and about the fire with an appliance handed him by the foreman, and that plaintiff himself exercised reasonable care, considering his age and experience andReference to that plaintiff was injured while working inOther Instructions. obedience to such command, then plaintiff could recover. *273 The appliance here referred to evidently is the bucket containing the oil, when read in connection with plaintiff's Instruction 3. The instructions must be read together, especially so as said Instruction 1 says "negligent" "as defined in these instructions," and when so read we find no objection to said Instruction 1 given for plaintiff. If the bucket furnished by the foreman was and had been in a leaky condition, as defined and required to be found in plaintiff's instruction numbered 3, then it was negligence on the part of the foreman to command plaintiff to engage in work therewith in and about said fire, as submitted in said Instruction 1.

(b) Plaintiff's said Instruction 1 was not erroneous in requiring the jury to consider plaintiff's age, capacity and experience, he being but thirteen or fourteen years old and not shown to have had much, if any, previousAge and Capacity experience in fighting fires. [Jackson v.of Plaintiff. Butler, 249 Mo. 342; Moeller v. United Rys. Co., 242 Mo. 721.]

(c) Nor is plaintiff's instruction numbered 3 erroneous because it conflicts with defendant's given instruction numbered 1, in that the latter tells the jury "there was no evidence that defendant negligently ordered plaintiff to take a position not reasonably safe in front of the fire." There isConflicting. nothing in plaintiff's Instruction 3 as to defendant's negligently ordering plaintiff to take a position not reasonably safe in front of the fire, as an isolated fact of negligence. We see no conflict between the two instructions.

(d) Said instruction numbered 3 given for plaintiff was not erroneous because it required the jury to consider plaintiff's age, capacity and experience, as already determined. If, therefore, defendant's instructions numbered 5, 6, 8, 9 and 12 conflicted with said Instruction 3, in thisConflict on regard, by omitting to refer to plaintiff'sMatter of Age, etc. age, capacity and experience, they were erroneous, and not plaintiff's said instruction numbered 3, and defendant *274 cannot complain of such conflict as reversible error.

The same thing is true, if plaintiff's said Instruction 3 conflicts with defendant's instruction 2, which told the jury there was no evidence that the foreman knew, or by the exercise of care, could have known that plaintiff's trousers were saturated with coal oil before the injury. As weKnowledge have seen, there was evidence that the bucket leakedof Foreman. that day and for some time before and that the witness Wood saw coal oil on plaintiff's trousers just before his injury. Such evidence was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the foreman knew or could have known by the exercise of due care, that plaintiff's trousers were saturated with coal oil from the leaking bucket prior to his injury. If the bucket leaked at and before plaintiff's injury to the foreman's knowledge, actual or constructive, defendant is charged with knowing the oil might saturate plaintiff's trousers and cause him to be burned.

(f) The objections to plaintiff's instruction numbered 5 are not well founded. It is a mistake on the part of appellant's learned counsel, as a reading of the instruction will show, to contend that said instruction permits a recovery forMedical medical attention or nursing from July 12, 1911, orAttention. before plaintiff was of age, or at any time except in the future after the trial, or that there was no evidence of his inability to work or earn a livelihood, except through his own failure to use proper means to effect a cure. Said Instruction 5 is without error.

VI. As to the amount of the verdict: We cannot say that it is so excessive that all the facts and circumstances considered, the jury did not fairly weigh the evidence as to the character and effect of plaintiff's injuries and as to the amount of his compensation under the evidence and instructions ofExcessive the court. We do not feel justified in interferingVerdict. with the amount of the verdict. *275

Judgment affirmed. Ragland, C., concurs; Brown, C., absent.






Addendum

The foregoing opinion by SMALL, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.

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