82 S.W.2d 69 | Mo. | 1935
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff as administratrix of her deceased husband recovered judgment for his death while in defendant's employ as head brakeman on an interstate freight train running from Afton, Oklahoma, to Kansas City, Missouri. The death occurred at Baxter Springs, Kansas, where the deceased fell from the rear end of the tender attached to the locomotive and was crushed by the wheels of the freight cars following it. The case is bottomed on a violation of the Federal Boiler Inspection Act, U.S.C.A., Title 45, Chapter 1. The petition charges negligence substantially in the general language of the United States statutes in that defendant used in interstate commerce a locomotive engine "when the tank or tender and the appurtenances thereof at the rear end and on top of the tender, where plaintiff's deceased husband was required to be in his work, were not in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which the same were being put, and so that the same could be employed in the active service without unnecessary peril of life and limb." It is then charged that at the time, March 27, 1929, and place mentioned, "the deceased fell either from the rear top portion of the tender or he fell from the rear lower portion of said tender, and that either one or the other is true and that plaintiff does not definitely know which is true," but that in either event he fell and lost his life "either because the rear of the tender was not in proper condition and safe to operate or the top of the tender was not in proper condition and safe to operate in said service." Defendant filed a general denial and went to trial on this petition, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff, from which defendant appeals. *949
The facts developed that this freight train of some fifty cars arrived at Baxter Springs and after doing some switching left there about eight thirty o'clock P.M., going north. The train crew consisted of the engineer, fireman, head brakeman (who was killed), rear brakeman, and conductor. It was then dark, had been raining and was yet misting rain. The next stop of the train was at Scammon, Kansas, some twenty miles north, and on arriving there it was discovered that the head brakeman was missing. The other trainmen at once made search and investigation but could find nothing except that the missing brakeman had left his lantern on the back end of the tender at the head of the rear ladder and his raincoat on his seat in the "dog house." a structure built about the middle of the tender and back of the coal bin for his use. Word was sent to the agent at Baxter Springs and search was made there, resulting in the dismembered body of the deceased being found on the track at the west rail about one thousand feet north of the depot at Baxter Springs. When the fate of the deceased was ascertained the train proceeded from Scammon, Kansas, passing through Cherokee, to Ft. Scott, a division point on defendant's railway system.
The evidence as to how and why deceased met his death is largely circumstantial. No one saw him alive after the train left Baxter Springs. The engineer testified for plaintiff that when the train was about ready to start from Baxter Springs the deceased lined up the switch connecting with the main line and signaled the train to proceed; that the engine was then four or five car lengths from the depot and that as it passed the depot, which was on the east, engineer's side, of the track, the deceased with his lantern boarded the rear east end of the tender, passed between the tender and the head freight car, and that he saw him no more, supposing, of course, that he crossed over to the ladder near the west side of the tender on which he would go up on the tender and to the "dog house" where he usually stayed between stations. This witness corroborated another witness, Gordon, called by defendant, in that deceased and Gordon, a fireman of a yard engine, were talking together on the depot platform shortly before the train pulled out. Gordon testified not only as to seeing the deceased getting on the tender at the right rear end, but that he mounted the tender, waved his lantern on top and started toward the "dog house" as the train was pulling out, having both his lantern and raincoat. The fireman testified that he saw the deceased in conversation with someone on the platform just as the engine was starting up. This evidence, together with the fact that the deceased's lantern was found on the tender and his raincoat in the "dog house" when the train reached Scammon, Kansas is the substance of the evidence as to *950 whether the deceased ever reached the top of the tender and fell from there or fell while still at the foot of the rear ladder of the tender.
The evidence discloses that in getting on the tender at the right rear end the deceased grasped the vertical handhold there, stepped on the stirrup and then to the sill of the tender, twelve or thirteen inches wide, on which he would walk till reaching the rear end ladder and ascend to the top of the tender. The equipment of the tender and arrangement of the appliances will be shown by the following exhibit (Defendant's Exhibit 2):
[EDITORS' NOTE: EXHIBIT 2 IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]
There are two men shown here in the act of mounting the tender from the rear, but the one on the right shows the position of the deceased as he passed out of sight of the engineer. *951
When found, the body of the deceased showed that he had fallen just inside of the left or west rail. His body was severed with the lower part inside the west rail and the upper part outside. He was dragged some distance but the first mark showed him to have fallen just inside the west rail. The clear inference, and that is all we have, is that the deceased reached the ladder, or certainly very near thereto, and fell from the sill of the tender or from the top of the tender on or near the west rail of the track. The question to be considered is whether deceased's fall was due in whole or in part to some violation by defendant of the Boiler Inspection Act.
The trial court, at the close of all the evidence, overruled a demurrer thereto and submitted the case to the jury on both theories set forth in the petition, that is, (1) that deceased fell from the sill or rear of the tender in making his way along the sill or getting on the ladder, or (2) that he fell from the top of the tender after ascending the ladder.
The instruction for plaintiff covering the first theory first stated in general terms that the Acts of Congress make it unlawful for defendant railroad to use a locomotive on its line unless same, including the tender and all its parts and appliances, is "in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which the same was being put, and so that it could be employed in the active service of such company without unnecessary peril to life or limb." Following this definition, which is in substantially the language of the Congressional Act, of what is unlawful for a railroad to do, the court then applies the law to the facts of this case in these words: "If you further find from the evidence that the defendant had placed on top of the tender the dog house and did so for the use of the head brakeman, and expected or intended that the brakeman should reach the same by passing along the rear end of the tank and up the ladder, and that such was a service to which same was being put by defendant;" (Note: We may here say that the evidence showed that the engine in question was manufactured by the Baldwin Locomotive Works, a standard and one of the largest builders of locomotives in the United States, and that the engine in question was a standard locomotive built by that company and had been in use some two years. It was not built, however, with what is termed the "dog house" near the center on top of the tender. That was placed there by the defendant at the request of the Switchmen's Union or some such organization. Originally the head brakeman was provided with a seat in the engine alongside of the fireman, but this was discarded when the "dog house" was built, warmed and made comfortable for his use. He could, of course, yet mount the engine at the front of the tender and reach the "dog house" by climbing over the coal bin, and steps were so provided, but we think it is clear that the brakeman was not only *952 permitted but was expected to and did habitually mount the tender at the rear end, as did the deceased on this occasion. This involved the use of the twelve or thirteen-inch sill at the rear end of the tender as a walkway in reaching the other side or the ladder leading to the top.) Plaintiff's instruction then proceeds: "And if you further find from the evidence that the rear of the tender was not in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which it was being put and subjected Satterlee to unnecessary peril in getting along the rear from the right side and onto the ladder referred to for the purpose of going into the shanty called the `dog house;' and if you further find from the evidence that Satterlee fell while making his way along the rear portion of said tender or in getting onto said ladder, and that such violation of said law by the defendant, if you find from the evidence it was so violated, either caused said Satterlee to so fall, or directly contributed to his injury and death, then you must return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff herein, and against the defendant railway company, and this would be true regardless of every other fact, circumstance or inference you may find shown by the evidence herein."
[1] We think that the evidence, though largely circumstantial, is sufficient to warrant a finding that the deceased "while making his way along the rear end of the tender or in getting onto said ladder" fell to his death, and that the instruction rightly required that there must be a further finding that his so falling was due to "such violation of said law." In other words, there must be shown both a "violation of said law" and a causal relation between that and the deceased's fall and injury. The only violation of law mentioned in the instruction and to which the jury's attention is directed is that "the rear of the tender was not in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which it was being put and subjected plaintiff's deceased husband to unnecessary peril in getting along the rear from the right side and onto the ladder referred to for the purpose of going into the shanty called the `dog house.'"
[2] Defendant insists that this instruction is too indefinite and general to be a proper guide to the jury and leaves the jury to decide both questions of law and fact. In this connection it is well settled that the Interstate Commerce Commission has power to and has made orders and rules with respect to the installation and maintenance of safety appliances such as handholds, which have the force and effect of law, and that any violation of the same constitutes negligence per se. [Fryer v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry Co.,
While it has been ruled that for some purposes, especially under the Safety Appliance Act, the word "car" or "cars" will be construed to cover and include the engine and tender (Johnson v. Southern Pac. Co.,
[4] We do not agree, however, that because plaintiff did not prove a violation of a specific order or rule of the Commerce Commission as to installing and maintaining safety appliances, or that some such appliance installed and in use was defective or insecure, plaintiff failed to make a case for the jury and that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. That is not the only method of making a case for the jury under the act in question. The plaintiff may show a violation of the standard of safety required by the act itself as well as of orders and rules prescribed by the Commerce Commission, the latter, however, when applicable, being paramount. Section 2 of the Boiler Inspection Act, as amended, provided that it shall be unlawful "for any carrier . . . to use any locomotive unless . . . its boiler, tender, . . . and appurtenances *954 thereof are in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which same are put, that the same may be employed in the active service of such carrier without unnecessary peril to life or limb." Section 9 of this act provides that any common carrier violating this act or any rule or regulation made under its provisions, or any lawful order of any inspector, shall be liable, etc. There is a general rule of the Commerce Commission, No. 153, Roberts Federal Liabilities of Carriers, p. 2069, which provides that "tanks shall be maintained . . . in safe and suitable condition," but this would seem not to add much, if anything, to the Congressional Act.
When this Boiler Inspection Act came before the United States Supreme Court in Baltimore Ohio Railroad Co. v. Groeger,
In Gerow v. Seaboard Air Line Ry. (N.C.),
[5] When it can be said that Congress or the Interstate Commerce Commission has acted with reference to adequate and proper safety appliances to meet certain conditions, uses and dangers of locomotive tenders and their appliances, and has designated either by the Congressional Act itself or by the rules and orders of the commission what safety appliances are necessary, and the proper construction of same, to meet that situation and use, then neither a court nor jury can be allowed to say that an engine or tender or any appliance constructed and equipped in conformity with the Congressional Act or the rules and orders of the commission, does not comply with the general provision that the engine or tender shall be in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which same is put. In other words, when the lawmaking power has spoken with reference to a specific status, use or condition and specified what is "a proper construction and safe to operate," then neither a court nor jury can say otherwise under the same or similar conditions or *957
condemn as unsafe the specified appliance or its construction. Such is the holding in Mahutga v. Minneapolis, St. P. S.S.M. Ry. Co. (Minn.),
[6] We think that plaintiff's Instruction No. 1 is in line with the construction placed on this act by the Federal courts and that the evidence here is sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the deceased fell to his death while making his way along the rear portion of the tender or in getting onto the ladder leading to the top of same, and that such fall was due in whole or in part to the fact that "the rear of the tender was not in proper condition and safe to operate in the service to which it was being put and subjected Satterlee *958 to unnecessary peril in getting along the rear from the right side and onto the ladder referred to for the purpose of going into the shanty called the `dog house.'" In fact, we are impressed with the idea that this tender and its safety appliances was not constructed and equipped with a view to safety with this "dog house" constructed on top of same for the almost constant use of the head brakeman, inviting, if not requiring, him to reach same by mounting the tender while in motion at the right rear corner and then using the narrow sill of the tender as a walkway to reach the ladder leading to the top. As shown by the picture of the tender, the automatic coupling rod extended along there some five inches higher than the rear of the tender sill used as a walkway. Several trainmen as witnesses said that in using this sill as a walkway to the ladder they and others walked on this coupling rod. This was doubtless done because it was thus easier to reach the only available handhold provided. Others, for much the same reason, said they used as a handhold the conduit pipe running along the edge of the roof of the tender carrying the electric light wires from the engine to the bull's-eye light on the rear of the tender, itself an obstruction to the passageway. The bull's-eye electric light was about the height of a man's head at the middle of the end of the tender, standing out several inches from the wall, which more or less obstructed this passageway to the ladder. There were other obstructions more or less serious and which the jury was justified in considering on the question of safety. As originally constructed, the head brakeman's seat was in the cab of the engine with the fireman and it was reached by way of the gangway between the tender and the engine proper and safety appliances were constructed with a view to that use. The handhold and stirrup step at the rear of the tender appear to have been placed there for use in riding the tender in connection with switching, coupling, etc., instead of reaching the brakeman's regular place for riding between stations and when not in active duties. There is much evidence that it was difficult and inconvenient for a man the height of deceased to reach and hold to the handhold on top of same in walking along the narrow sill of the tender. We are convinced that the court was justified by the evidence in submitting the case to the jury on plaintiff's Instruction No. 1 and that such instruction properly declared the law to the jury.
The court also gave to the jury plaintiff's Instruction No. 2 covering the theory that the deceased reached the top of the tender in safety and fell from there to his death, the material part of which reads: "Or if you find from the evidence that Satterlee got upon the top of the tender, and further find from the evidence that he fell from the top rear portion of the tender of said locomotive, and further find from the evidence that because of the construction, arrangement and equipment and the condition of the top of said tender at said rear portion, and the use to which same was being put, as you *959 find such to be shown by the evidence herein, subjected the employee to unnecessary peril while using the same in the performance of his duties, and that it was not in proper condition and safe for such use in the service to which the same was being put, then you are instructed that the defendant violated said law in this respect." This instruction further required the jury, in order to find for plaintiff, to find that such violation of law caused or helped to cause the deceased to fall from the top of the tender.
As to the construction, arrangement and equipment of the top of the tender, there was first the coal bin next to the engine and extending to and about half the height of the dog house. There was a space of some three feet on either side of the dog house, which was about four feet square and something more than that in height, and there was evidence that some loose coal had fallen from the coal pile into this space. The door or front of the dog house faced to the rear of the tender. Under and back of the dog house was the water tank, the top of which was flat and about ten feet square between the dog house and the rear end. The water intake was two or three feet back of the dog house, slightly higher than the top of the tender, covered and constructed as the law required. By the instruction in question the jury was allowed to find that the "condition, arrangement and equipment and the condition of the top of the tender at the rear portion" subjected the deceased to unnecessary peril while using same in the performance of his duties, and that the top of the tender was not in proper condition and safe for such use.
The only evidence supporting the theory that the deceased reached the top of the tender and fell from there to his death is that of the witness Gordon, who testified that he saw the deceased after he reached the top of the tender, where he waved his lantern and started toward the dog house, and that he then had his raincoat. All the evidence is that deceased fell inside and near the west rail of the track, where his body was found severed on the west rail. If he fell from and after reaching the top of the tender, it must have been from the rear end. It seems impossible for him to have fallen from the top on either side to a point between the rails because of the overhang of the tender and he certainly did not fall from the east side. If he was on top of the tender and fell from there, as this instruction assumed, the fact that his lantern was found some fifteen inches back of the top of the ladder on the rear of the tender shows that he fell from near that point. These facts, therefore, eliminate the suggestion that the loose coal in the space or spaces between the dog house and the sides of the tender could have caused deceased's fatal fall, even though allowing the loose coal to be there was in violation of the order of the Commerce Commission that "top of tender behind fuel space shall be kept clean, and means provided to carry off waste water. Suitable covers shall be provided for filling holes." These last provisions were concededly complied with. Nor *960
is there any force in the suggestion that there was a violation of the Boiler Inspection Act in allowing a long clinker hook to be left lying with prongs down along the west or left side of the tender, over which the deceased might have stumbled in the dark. Even if it was possible that deceased stumbled on this clinker hook and fell from the top of the tender, as he must have done, between the tender and the first freight car, as shown by the physical facts, this was due to nothing but the negligent placement or misplacement of the clinker hook and that does not show a violation of the Boiler Inspection Act. [Riley v. Wabash Ry. Co.,
The only other violation of the Boiler Inspection Act relative to the top of the tender urged by plaintiff is that the defendant could have rendered the flat top of the tender more safe and secure by constructing a railing three or four feet high extending around the deck of the tender near the edge, or at least along the rear end, substantially as the existing railing or handhold except high enough to serve both as a barrier to walking or falling off of the top of the tender and a handhold serving the same purpose, or constructing such a handhold of that height running from the dog house along the middle of the tender to the rear end of same. It is conceded that no such barrier or handhold is specifically required by the act itself or any order of the Commerce Commission. There is apparently no more reason for constructing such a barrier or handhold on the flat top of this tender than there would be on any ordinary freight car. It was not shown that any railroad used a tender equipped in this manner. All that plaintiff proved was that such railing or handhold would make the tender more safe to persons walking on the top and that such railing or handhold would be practical and not violate good railroad construction. We think it is apparent, however, that the placing of the dog house on top of the tender, while it rendered the usual method of reaching the top of the tender by way of the rear end of the same more dangerous than by way of the front end of the tender or vestibule of the engine where the head brakeman normally had his seat, yet when the top of the tender was reached in safety, it was no more dangerous to such brakeman in any work he was required to do than if he reached there by climbing over the coal bin, as he would do if his customary seat was in the engine. So far as the top of the tender is concerned, it was just as safe to operate in the service to which it was put, and there was no more unnecessary peril to life or limb, than if the deceased had reached the top of the tender by way of the front end. We fail to see, therefore, how the construction of the dog house on the top of the tender for the use of the brakeman while not engaged in his active duties afforded any basis for the jury to find that "the construction, arrangement and equipment and the condition of the top of the tender at said rear portion, and the use to which same was being put" *961
subjected the employee to unnecessary peril while using same in the performance of his duties, or caused the top of the tender not to be "in proper condition and safe for such use in the service to which same was being put." With the exception of placing the dog house thereon, the top of the tender was of standard and customary make, built and equipped the same as all other engines in use on this and other railroads and complied with all the requirements and orders of the Commerce Commission. In rejecting and striking out some of defendant's evidence to this effect the court was in error, but such facts clearly appear. The court also went too far in giving Instruction No. 4 for plaintiff telling the jury in effect not to consider for any purpose any of the evidence tending to show that the locomotive and tender in question was manufactured by a large standard builder of locomotives used by railroads generally. This instruction was too board and excluded evidence proper for the jury's consideration. [Ford v. McAdoo (N.Y.),
For the error in submitting the case on plaintiff's Instruction No. 2, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.Ferguson and Hyde, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by STURGIS, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur, except Coles, J., not sitting.