Nelson H. Trout brought an action under both the Safety Appliance Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq. (“SAA”), and the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S. C.A. § 51 et seq. (“FELA”), to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while he was attempting to brake a car in the course of his employment for defendant Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The district court granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict on the SAA claim on the basis that plaintiff failed to establish that the brake proved inefficient while being operated in a normal, natural and usual manner. The jury returned a verdict for defendant on the FELA claim. The plaintiff’s basic complaint is that there was enough evidence in the record to require sending the SAA claim to the jury.
In Myers v. Reading Co.,
The plaintiff testified that while braking the car, as he was required to do,, he pumped the brake eight or nine times.. The brake was pumping firm and returning hard, as is usual, when he decided: to give it one more pump to make certain that the brake held. While doing so, the brake pump handle unexpectedly returned without resistance, thus causing him to be thrown back against the edge of the car. In response to questions by his counsel, plaintiff attempted to explain why he was thrown back against the car when he said: “All of a sudden the chain busted or dirt got in the cogs or something that took place that it just left loose, there wasn’t no leverage there.” He later gave similar testimony when questioned by the court. Upon cross examination by defendant’s counsel, plaintiff again testified that the brake was defective. From this evidence, the jury reasonably could have concluded that the plaintiff was operating the brake in a normal, natural, and usual manner, and that the brake was inefficient. The fact that plaintiff did not expressly testify that he was operating the brake in a normal, natural, and usual manner is unimportant, for as this court said in Draper v. Erie Railroad Co.,
In submitting the FELA claim to the jury, the district court required it to answer certain interrogatories. One of them was as follows:
“Was plaintiff injured on August 20,1957, because of
“(a) an inefficient brake?
“(b) a defective brake handle?”
The jury answered no to both parts of the question. Defendant argues that in effect the SAA claim was thus submitted to the jury and the grant of a directed verdict, if erroneous, was thereby cured. The plaintiff, however, says that the interrogatory was meaningless, for the district court failed to charge the jury on the SAA claim, limiting the charge solely to the claim of negligence. A careful reading of the charge indicates that this was so. Of course, we agree that under that circumstance the interrogatory was of no avail.
The district court was under a duty to separate the two causes of action and to make it clear to the jury that neither evidence of negligence nor due care could be considered in determining defendant’s liability under the SAA. O’Donnell v. Elgin, J. & E. Ry. Co.,
The plaintiff also calls to our attention several alleged procedural errors that require discussion. In charging the jury, the district court said: “* * * We must all have sympathy for this plaintiff; of course, we have sympathy for him in his tragic circumstance, but remember that if cases were to be decided on the basis of sympathy, what good would a big award that you give be to Mr. Trout, because somebody else in a more sympathetic situation, with perhaps ten children and even worse cancer, could sue him and take it all away from him again?” In addition to being-confusing, misleading, and unjustified by any comments made by plaintiff’s counsel during the trial, this part of the charge was extremely prejudicial. Although a precautionary charge is within the discretion of the trial judge, it. should not be framed and given without regard for what happened during trial. Here the record discloses nothing to warrant such a charge.
The district court admitted into evidence a summary of car inspection reports, prepared and offered by the defendant, on the basis that it was a record made in the ordinary course of business. Plaintiff contends that the summary was inadmissible as the original reports were not made available to him, and further that the business record rule does not apply here because the summary was prepared expressly for litigation. The defendant argues that plaintiff is-now precluded from raising the question in this court because he failed to properly object, or to assign its admission as-a ground for a new trial.
The record, however, discloses that plaintiff properly objected and requested production of one of the original' reports. Nor was it necessary for plaintiff to assign as grounds for a new trial the ruling of the district court in order to have us review it, Morgan Electric Co. v. Neill,
The Supreme Court made it clear in Palmer v. Hoffman,
Lastly, plaintiff contends that the district court erroneously refused to allow him to call an expert medical witness because of a failure to list the witness in a pretrial memorandum. That question is now moot, however, for the district court clearly indicated that in the event of a new trial plaintiff would be permitted to amend his pretrial memorandum to list the expert as a witness.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions that plaintiff be granted a new trial.
Notes
. Defendant contends that our decisions in Quinones v. Township of Upper More-land,
