106 Tenn. 438 | Tenn. | 1901
This is an action for damages for personal injuries. There was a trial before the Court and jury, and a verdict and judgment for $1,999.99, aud the railroad has appealed and ■assigned errors.
The case as presented’ by the plaintiff in his •declaration, is that he was a conductor of a freight train on the road of the defendant company, and that on reaching Slayden Station it became necessary to take into the train a car at that station. Uot having a full crew of train hands, because of the desire of the company to ■operate the road as economically as possible, it was necessary for him to sometimes do the work of a brakeman. On this occasion he had only two brakemen, and while he was coupling and uncoupling some cars, and when he was between them for this purpose, he stepped on a pinch bar or round piece of iron that had been negligently left on the track between the rails. This caused his foot to turn, and threw him between the moving ears, which ran over his foot and crushed it so as to require its amputation. This pinch bar was used to move cars on the side track at the station when there was no engine there for the purpose.
The contention is that this plaintiff and the station agent were not fellow servants, but were engaged in distinct and separate departments. It appeared from the proof that the conductor was required to do not only the duties appertaining to his place, but also some of those which are ordinarily done by brakemen, and this because of a scarcity of train hands.
One of the rules of the company was that station agents should have charge of and be responsible for the company’s books, papers, buildings, sidings, and grounds at their respective stations, and should be responsible for the property intrusted by the company in the transaction of its business to him, and should inspect the station, buildings, and grounds daily, and see that they are in proper condition for the accommodation of passengers and the reception of freight, etc. This rule, .the plaintiff insists, put upon the agent at that station the duty to see that this iron bar, which was used to move cars on the tracks in the depot yard in the absence of an engine, was kept off the tracks when not in use, and the nonperformance of that duty was negligence upon his part, which having caused the
The basic idea of the plaintiff’s pleading, and which was accepted by the Court, as manifested in its charge and refusals to charge, was, that the plaintiff and the station agent were' not “fellow servants, but- were in distinct, separate, and different departments of service, had no association in their employment; plaintiff having no relation to or connection with said agent save to go to the station and take therefrom such cars as he might order, and to do such switching or moving of cars in the yard as he might order done.”
The Court charged the jury as follows:
“The rule that an employee cannot recover for injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow-servant applies where the parties are engaged in one common work in the same department of employment, but where the employment is for separate and distinct purposes, although employed by the same person or railroad company, they would not, in the contemplation of law, be fellow-servants. As an illustration: If one person is employed to operate and run a train of cars, and the other to look after the company’s property at a station, keep the yards and tracks clear of obstructions, and receive and forward freight, these positions would not be the same character and class of responsibilities as would render them
We are cited to quite a number of cases from the United States which can be of little service to ns in this ease, as the decisions of these Courts are not in accord with our own upon the general doctrine of fellow-servants and employees in different departments. Such are the eases of Railroad Co. v. Peterson, 162 U. S., 346; Railroad Co. v. Conroy, 175 U. S., 323; Randall v. Railroad Co., 109 U. S., 478; Touner v. Chicago Railroad, 69 Wis., 188; Hodgkins v. Railroad, 119 Mass., 419.
We are also cited to the case of Railroad v. Gurley, 12 Lea, 46. It was this: Gurley was an engineer on the road, pulling a train from Knoxville to Chattanooga, and in his run had to pass Cleveland. The rules, of the company required the yardmaster at Cleveland to inspect the switches ten minutes before the arrival of each train. .On this occasion the yardmaster had* not inspected the switches for two hours before the arrival of Gurley’s ' train,, and one of them, a
The trail Judge charged the jury that the engineer and yardmaster were fellow-servants, and no exception was made to the charge, but it does not appear that the decision of this case rested upon that question as feature in the case.
We are also cited to the case of Railroad v. Rush, 15 Lea, 145. In that ease the train to whose creAV Rush belonged arrived at a station in the night time, and had to wait for a passenger train to pass. Rush was sent out on the railroad, in the direction from which the passenger train was to come, for the purpose of .signaling to the engineer, that he might know a freight train was waiting for him to pass. He put his lamp down on the track, sat down on the end of the cross-ties, and went 'to sleep. 'The incoming engineer, it being dark, ran against 'him and injured him, and Rush sued the company. The Court said: “Eor another reason the .statute ought not to apply. . . . We have held, and his Honor, the trial Judge, charged the jury in this caso, that an employee of a railroad com
The argument is: If the yardmaster in the' Ghu’ley case and the engineer pulling a train are fellow-servants for the purpose of bringing the-train safely into the depot yard; and if the'
AVe are of opinion that the conductor and station agent cannot be considered fellow-servants. Their departments are entirely distinct and separate. The duty of one, the conductor, pertains to the physical moving of trains, and in this case also the coupling and uncoupling of cars when necessary. The station agent’s duties did not extend to this, but only to the care of the station buildings and grounds and the transmission to the conductor of such orders as might be sent over the wires for the movement of trains. AVhile in a certain sense both were concerned in the moving of trains, the duty of the one was confined to the physical exertion and personal oversight necessary to move the train, while the other’s duties pertained alone to the transmission of any orders or directions that may have been intended for the guidance of the conductor; but the agent was not to execute such orders or aid in executing them. But in transmitting these orders he was really acting as telegraph operator, and this Court has held that such operator is not , a fellow-servant with the conductor. E. T., Va. & Ga. R. R. v. Dearmond, 2 Pickle, 73.
■ The Court gave this charge, with the addition of the following: “Hut if you find, on the other hand, that the defendant’s agent knew that persons were loading and unloading cars at this station before the arrival of the train, and that this company’s agent did not investigate to see if the track was clear of obstructions, then the company would be liable.”
It will be seen that the question presented by this request is independent of the question of fellow-servant, and the point made is that the duty of the master is not absolute, but relative only, and that only reasonable care could be exacted of the station agent, and that reasonable care was exercised in this instance. It is a matter of doubt as to vfho left this bar on the track. The station agent, Batson, says that the bar was used by persons having cars to load, for the purpose of pushing them along the track; that he gave instructions that it must be kept off the track, and he had never seen it on the tracks but two or three times, and then he laid it off or liad it done: that he examined the yards in the morning, just before the train came in, and saw nothing on the tracks, neither the bar nor any other obstruction.
Nelson, the clerk of Batson, says: “I was clerking in Mr. Batson’s store, and assisted as depot agent at the time of the accident; was at the station that day. I had the crowbar that morning, using it in moving some cars about two hours before the train arrived. I left it on the I rack when I got done with it, perhaps on the
Further on this witness says that he let the Hays boys have the pinch bar that morning to use in moving ears, but does not know whether it was before or after he used it. It clearly appears from other evidence that it was after-wards. The instructions of the Court applied to the facts of the case made it incumbent on the agent to see whether shippers who had been moving the cars in the yards had left the bar on the track or removed it, and the question is, Was this too great a degree of diligence to be required of the master ?
We think that it was not error in the Court to give the additional instruction. The agent must have expected these shippers to use the bar, and ■ he might reasonably presume they would leave it where they used it, and it is not shown that the agent gave any caution against leaving it. It was a very dangerous thing to have, especially if left on the rail, and •would in all probability have derailed any car that struck it. It was not so dangerous left between the rails, and yet even there it was not free from danger, as is shown by the result in this case. It is described .as a short iron bar, and would not appear to
We think, upon the evidence of the station agent himself, that he did not exercise that care that was necessary and required of him and that he knew that it was his duty to observe. ■
We therefore see no reversible error in the record, and the judgment of the Court below is affirmed with costs.