171 P. 145 | Utah | 1918
The plaintiff instituted this action to recover compensation for injuries alleged to have been sustained by the negligence of the defendant on or about July 21, 1916. The negligence alleged is that, while the plaintiff and other workmen of the
It appears from the record that the plaintiff and one Caccia were repairing defendant’s railroad track as section men and were, on the day in question, tightening or driving spikes which held the rails to the ties. Such spikes, at the place where the plaintiff was working, had become loosened, were pulled out, and standing, some one-half and other an inch Or less, above the tie. It was the duty of plaintiff and his -co-workers to tighten or drive the spikes so that the heads would come in contact with the rails and hold the same in place. Some ten minutes prior to the accident complained of, plaintiff’s fellow workman, G-aecia, had so struck a spike that part of the head thereof was knocked off and passed immediately under plain
It is admitted on the part of defendant that the plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the injury. This action is therefore prosecuted under the federal Employers’ Liability Act.
During the trial an experienced railroad man, one familiar with railroad construction, laying track, etc., was permitted to testify on behalf of the plaintiff as an expert as to the right or proper method to use in driving railroad spikes. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony defendant moved the court for a nonsuit, basing that request on the ground that no negligence either of the defendant or its employee had been shown, which motion was overruled by the court.
At the close of the case defendant requested an instruction directing a verdict in his favor, claiming that the injury was the result of the usual and ordinary risk incident to the service in which plaintiff was engaged. 'The court refused to give that instruction. The admission of the expert testimony, the refusal of the court to grant a nonsuit, and the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in defendant’s favor, are all assigned as error.
In effect, the testimony of the expert on behalf of the plaintiff, as well as that offered in rebuttal on the part of the defendant, was that the right and proper way to drive spikes is by a direct and square blow on the head. That is a matter that is self-evident, and any ordinary man would know that as a matter of common knowledge, and is not a question upon which reasonable men would differ. That spike heads or parts thereof are liable to break off even if struck a
All the members of this court agree that the district court erred in the admission of the so-called expert testimony. The majority agree that the court should have granted the motion of the defendant for a nonsuit for the reasons stated by appellant, and that at' the close of the testimony the
The writer is of the opinion that there is testimony in the record tending to show that the injury was caused by the negligence of a fellow servant, slight as that testimony may be, that, even if it be admitted that the employment is inherently dangerous, and that accidents may happen and do happen in doing such work in a careful manner, nevertheless, when there is testimony showing or tending to show that the injury resulted, not from the inherent danger of the employment or method or manner of doing the work, but from the negligence of a fellow servant in pursuing that particular method or manner, that it is then a question to be submitted to the jury. C. & O. R. R. v. Proffit, 241 U. S. 468, 469, 36 Sup. Ct. 620, 60 L. Ed. 1102.
But, as stated, it is the unanimous judgment of the other members of the court that the contentions of the appellant should prevail and the case must therefore be reversed and a new trial granted. There are other assignments of error which, in view of the conclusion reached, it is unnecessary to consider.
Reversed and remanded, and a new trial granted. Neither party to recover costs on this appeal.