118 F. 989 | 6th Cir. | 1902
after making the foregoing statement of the case, announced the opinion of the court.
Three errors are assigned: First. In the admission of evidence in chief for the defendant in cross-examination of the witness Forney, a witness introduced by the plaintiff for the sole purpose of proving the number of the car from which the plaintiff fell. Second. In the exclusion of the testimony of the witness Richards touching the identification and condition of the car from which plaintiff fell. Third. As to the action of the court in directing a verdict. These may be treated in the order stated.
i. The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was a switchman employed in switching ore cars in a yard assigned to the National Steel Company at Youngstown, Ohio. At about 7 o’clock on the night of December 8, 1899, while attending to his duties, plaintiff opened a switch to admit a train of ore cars being pushed by an engine ; the object being to transfer the cars from one part of the yard to another. After setting the switch for the main track, he gave the signal to the engineer to “come ahead.” When the first car reached the point where he was standing, he attempted to climb on, by reaching out and grasping the handhold, and then springing so as to place his foot in the stirrup at what was the then forward and westward end of the car, the car being the first or front car as the train was then moving. Plaintiff testified that the train at the time was moving at a speed of not exceeding three miles per hour. The tracks at the locus in quo run east and west, and the train of cars was being pushed westwardly. Plaintiff was on the north side of the track. He testified, among other things, as follows;
“I had my lantern on my right arm; put my hand up for the handhold; got it all right, and sprang for the step; X just got a glimpse of it, and saw that there was a step there, and my foot slipped off,—hit the side of the step, and slipped off, and fell on the rail.”
He further said that the step he undertook to place his foot in was on the corner of the car,—the northwest corner as the car then stood; that it was an iron step, bolted on the sill, and hung below the outer edge of the bottom of the car; and that such steps are a part of the ordinary equipment of freight cars. When asked as to the condition of the step and the circumstances of the accident, the plaintiff, among other things, said “that his foot hit the side of the step,” “on the north side or on the west side; and, from the way my foot hit it, it, was slanting way back, the same as I would put my foot up, and felt as though it was slanting back towards the end sill of the car.” For
“Q. Did. you examine the northwest step of the ear? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was that step bent bach on the ear you examined? A. No, sir. Q. What was the position of the step on car 47,923 when you saw it? A. The step was solid. Q. Straight down? A. Yes, sir; bolted on the side sill with bolts.”
All this was objected to by the plaintiff in error as not legitimate cross-examination, but evidence in chief. It was, however, admitted, over objection, as proper cross-examination. This statement as to the condition of the step on the car examined by the witness was plainly evidence in chief. The witness should have been recalled if the defendant so desired, and thus made the witness of the defendant as to the condition of the step of the car he had identified by number and name as the car from' which plaintiff fell. Montgomery v. Insurance Co., 97 Fed. 913, 38 C. C. A. 553, 557; Wills v. Russell, 100 U. S. 621, 625, 25 L. Ed. 607; Houghton v. Jones, 1 Wall. 702, 706, 17 L. Ed. 503. The cases cited above are all cases where the trial court had properly applied the rule limiting the cross-examination to the matters opened up by the examination in chief, and in Wills v. Russell the court calls attention to the fact “that the mode of conducting trials, and the order of introducing evidence, and the time when it is to be introduced, are matters properly belonging very largely to the practice of the court where the matters of fact are tried by a jury.” “Cases,” said the court, “not infrequently arise where the convenience of the witness, or the court, or the party producing the witness will be promoted by a relaxation of the rule to enable the witness to be discharged from further attendance; and if the court, in such a case, should refuse to enforce the rule, it clearly would not be ground of error, unless it appeared that it worked serious injury to the opposite party.” While we are disposed to concede to a trial judge wide limits in the suspension or enforcement of the rule in reference to the proper limits of a cross-examination and in respect to the order in which evidence is to be introduced, yet we must reserve to this, as a reviewing tribunal, such authority in respect to even such questions of practice as that any serious injury to the rights of the party complaining of the relaxation of the rule may be corrected by granting a new trial, if necessary. In the instance before us the case turned upon the question as to whether the
2. The evidence of the plaintiff’s witness Watkins Richards touching the defective condition of a step on the corner of Erie car No. 47,923 was erroneously excluded. The plaintiff’s' witness William Edwards had already testified that on the morning after the injury ' to O’Connell he and Watkins Richards had together examined Erie car No. 47,923, and found the step on the northeast corner of the car, as it stood when examined, bent backwards against the sill. Richards was then called. He did not remember the number of the car, and could only identify the car examined as an Erie car in the yards of the defendant company, and the same car which witness and William Edwards had examined together. We think this was enough to permit the witness to testify as to the condition of the car step thus examined. Neither do we think the examination made by Richards was so remote from the time of the accident as to justify its exclusion altogether. The injury had occurred at about 7 p. m. of the previous evening, and this inspection by Edwards and Richards occurred between 8 and 9 the following morning. The time which had elapsed between the injury and this inspection was matter for consideration in respect to the probative effect of the evidence, and was a question for the jury under proper instruction. But the inspection was not so remote as to justify its entire exclusion. The court had already, over objection, admitted the evidence of the witness Edwards, whose inspection was made at the same time; and we cannot think the very cautious trial judge could have rested his ruling upon this question of remoteness, but rather upon the supposed insufficiency of the identification of either the car examined, or of the particular step as the step in question.
3. It follows, from the error in excluding the evidence of the witness, Richards, that the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant. Independently, however, of the excluded evidence referred to, we think there was a case for the jury. The plaintiff was an employé of a railroad corporation, and claims to have been injured in Ohio by a defective appliance upon a railroad car in use upon the
We have deemed it necessary to present this view of the deductions of fact which may be legally drawn from the evidence actually submitted on the trial, because the evidence of the witness Richards was only corroborative of the testimony admitted from the witnesses Edwards and Rosevear. If the testimony of the witnesses named did not amount to a contradiction of the evidence of the witness Forney that all the steps of car No. 47,923 were sound, and not defective, at 11 or 12 o’clock the night before,—that the northwest step was particularly examined, and found sound,—there was in fact no such conflict as required a submission to the jury. On the other hand, if the jury should believe that the car examined by Edwards and Rosevear was the car examined by Forney, and the step found defective the step nearest plaintiff when injured, there would be a contradiction, unless the other circumstances would justify an assumption that the injury to the step described by the first-named witnesses had occurred after the accident and before those witnesses saw it. This, too, was a question for the jury. Upon the whole case we think there was something more than a bare scintilla of evidence tending to show that plaintiff’s injury was caused by the defective step inspected by Edwards, Rosevear, and Richards.
Reverse, and remand for a new trial.