145 Mo. App. 332 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This action is to recover damages for personal injuries which plaintiff alleges Avere caused by the negligence of the defendants. A trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $7500, against all of the defendants. An appeal was granted to the Supreme Court where jurisdiction on appeal was lodged, but during the pendency of the cause in that court, the General Assembly approved an
The injury occurred about 8:45 p. m., January 14, 1905, at Altamont, at the junction of defendant railway company’s St. Joseph branch road with its main line. Plaintiff was a “hostler” employed in the yards and it was one of his duties to go between the cars of the passenger train scheduled to arrive from St. Joseph at 8:45 p. m. to uncouple the safety chain, steam, air-brake and signal hose. A Pullman sleeping car running from St. Joseph to Chicago was brought in by this train and transferred to the through train which came from Kansas City. Usually the necessary switching of the sleeping car was done by the locomotive of the St. Joseph train which was detached and run back for that purpose, but on this occasion, owing to the crowded state of the yards, this locomotive was so hemmed in that it could not be used for switching without delaying the departure of the through train and the locomotive of a freight train was detached and employed to switch the sleeping car. Plaintiff knew the engine of the St. Joseph train had not been uncoupled but did not know that the freight engine had been assigned to do the switching. The trainmaster (defendant Eeed) who had control over the movement of trains at Altamont, happened to be there and ordered defendant Barrett, who was foreman of the yards, to use the freight engine to do the switching. Without telling plaintiff, who was a subordinate, of the order, Barrett proceeded to have it executed and, aided by plaintiff, started to do the necessary uncoupling between the cars of the St. Joseph train. Barrett went between the cars on one side, plaintiff on the other. While they were at work be
The petition alleges “it was usual and customary and was the rule at the Altamont railroad yards to uncouple the engine of the .St. Joseph passenger train, run it down to the cut-off between the St. Joseph track and passing track, and back the engine onto the passing train, and np to the point where the passing track connects with the St. Joseph track, and thence easterly onto the. St. Joseph track, so as to couple on the Pullman sleeping car from the St. Joseph train, and to place it on the Kansas City track and attach it to the Kansas City eastbound train. It was also the rule and custom in said yards not to couple the said engine onto said Pullman car until after the plaintiff had completed his work in uncoupling the cars and the safety chain, and air-brake, steam and signal hose, between each of the cars of said train, including said Pullman car and it was also the rule and custom to begin at the engine and proceed toward the back of the train with each successive coupling. . That it was also necessary and was the rule and custom in said yards to disconnect all of the cars of the St. Joseph train and switch them so that the train would be headed west for its departure in the morning. ... That the said freight engine was a very large and heavy. engine, and was backed and pushed against said passenger train, negligently and with great force and violence, so that the slack between the cars where the plaintiff was at work was entirely taken up, and the cars were removed violently and suddenly, and without notice to the plaintiff and without any opportunity on his part to escape from danger.
The defendants answered separately, pleading assumed risk and contributory negligence in addition to a general denial. Before answering the railway company filed a petition and bond for the removal of the cause to the United States Circuit Court. This defendant was an Illinois and Iowa corporation; plaintiff was a citizen and resident of Missouri, as were also the individual defendants. The grounds alleged for removal were, first, that the action between plaintiff and the petitioner is a separable controversy and that the petitioner is entitled to a removal on account of diverse citizenship and, second, because the individual defendants, Barrett, Novak and Reed “were joined in this action by the plaintiff for the sole and fraudulent purpose of defeating and preventing this defendant, your petitioner, from removing his action from the State court in which it is now pending, to the United States Circuit Court, . . and for the sole and fraudulent purpose of defeating said jurisdiction of' said United States Circuit Court in this action.” It is alleged, among other things, that the individual defendants “are men of small means, and have no, or but little property from which a judgment against them, or either of them, in this action, if such were recovered, could be collected, and that this defendant is, and was at the time of the institution of this action, entirely solvent and able to pay any debts that may exist against it, and to pay any judgment which might be recovered against it in this action; that it had a large amount of property, and more than sufficient to pay the amount sued for in this action within the jurisdiction of this court and according to the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, any act of negligence on the part of the defendants, Martin A. Barrett, Frank Novak and H. L. Reed, alleged to have produced the injury to this plaintiff, was an act of this defendant, and accordingly this defendant is responsible and liable for the same.”
The petition for removal was verified by an agent of the petitioner but no other affidavits or proof of any kind were offered in support thereof. The court overruled the petition and defendant company duly excepted. Our first concern shall be the contention of the railway company that the trial court erred in denying the petition for a removal and in proceeding to exercise jurisdiction over the causé.
The well-settled rule, often recognized by the courts of this State, is that upon proper application being made for a removal of a cause from a State to a Federal court, the State court should proceed no further with the cause and any attempt in that direction will be pronounced cormi non judice. [Berry v. Railroad, 64 Mo. 533; Stanley v. Railroad, 62 Mo. 508.] “The record closes so far as the question of removal is concerned when the petition for removal is filed and the necessary security furnished. It presents then to the State court, a pure question of law and that is whether, admitting the facts stated in the petition for removal to be true, it appears on the face of the record, which includes the petition and the pleadings and proceedings down to that time, that the petitioner is entitled to a removal of the suit.
“That question the State court had the right to decide for itself and if it errs in keeping the case, and the highest court of the State affirms its decision, this court has jurisdiction to correct the error, considering*346 for that purpose, only the part of the record which ends with the petition for removal.” [Railway v. Dunn, 122 U. S. 513.]
“The mere filing of a petition for the removal of a suit which is not removable^ does not work a transfer.” [Crehore v. Railway, 131 U. S. 240.]
Under these rules, the trial court had the right to examine the papers and, if they did not disclose on their face the existence of a removable cause, was justified in refusing to surrender jurisdiction. Counsel, to maintain their contention that the action is severable, not joint, point out that liability of the railway company exists, if at all, by virtue of section 2875, Revised Statutes 1899, commonly called the Fellow Servant statute, while the liability of the several individual defendants rests not on that statute but on the common law. But nothing is lacking to complete the analogy in principle and rule between the present case and those cases determined by our own Supreme Court in Lansing v. Railway, 196 Mo. 647; Johnson v. Railway, 203 Mo. 381; Stotler v. Railway, 200 Mo. 107, and by the Supreme Court of the United States in Railroad v. Rixie, 179 U. S. 131; Railroad v. Thompson, 200 U. S. 206; Railroad v. Bohon, 200 U. S. 221.
Perhaps the most instructive of these cases is Railroad v. Thompson, where the plaintiff sued the railroad company and the engineer and conductor of the train. The following questions were put to the court for decision : “1. May a railroad corporation be jointly sued with two of its servants, one the conductor and the other the engineer of one of its trains, when it is sought to make the corporation liable only by reason of the negligent act of its said conductor and engineer in the operation of a train under their management and control, and solely upon the ground of the responsibility of a principal for the act of his servant, though not personally present or directing and not charged with any concurrent act of negligence?
The court noticed with apparent disapproval the sometime rule followed by Federal courts “that a joint action could not be sustained against master and servant for acts done without the master’s concurrence or directions, when his responsibility arises wholly from the policy of the law which requires that he shall be held liable for the acts of those he employs in the prosecution of his business.”
That rule must be the mainstay of the defendant-company’s argument here since, in the present case, as in those to which we are referring, the liability of the individual defendants rested on their wrongful acts while that of the corporation defendant sprung from the rule of respondeat superior. The only office of the fellow-servant statute was to include fellow-servants among those for whose torts the master would be liable. Neither in character nor in the rules and principles by which it is controlled does a cause of action for the tort of a fellow-servant differ from any other cause falling within the purview of the rule of respondeat superior. The central idea of the Thompson case is that “a defendant has no right to say that an action shall be several which the plaintiff seeks to make joint,” and in the application of that rule, the Supreme Court decided that since the face of the papers disclosed the assertion of a joint action, there was nothing in the relationship of master and servant to preclude them from being held jointly liable for the tort of the servant. But, invoking the rule that “all issues of fact made upon the petition for removal must be tried in the Circuit (Federal)
We think the petition rightly construed does plead the specific facts from which the pleader draws the conclusion that the joinder was fraudulent, but that the facts pleaded do not reasonably support the conclusion the pleader would draw from them. We have disposed of the averments to the effect that the liability was not joint and find that, in substance, the only remaining facts on which the conclusion is founded are that the individual defendants are men of small means and that thejlefendant company is solvent and of great wealth. These facts alone would not support a conclusion of fraud. A person injured by the wrong of another has a right to seek a judgment at law against the wrongdoer regardless of the question of whether he can collect the judgment if one should be recovered. [Stotler v. Railroad, supra.] A plaintiff’s motives should not be impugned from the bare fact that he chooses to join solvent and insolvent defendants in the same action. With all of the facts alleged conceded to be true, the conclusion of fraud still would fail for lack of support. We conclude that the learned trial judge was right in holding that the petition for a removal fails to disclose a removable cause.
We say, as a matter of law, that Reed is not shown by the evidence to have been negligent. He was guilty of no breach of duty towards plaintiff. As trainmaster, he wras the company’s ranking official at the scene and gave the order which, in being ■ executed, resulted in the injury to plaintiff, but he was not required to follow that order through the details of its execution. The order implied directions to those charged with its execution to exercise reasonable care and it was not incumbent on this general officer to follow in the footsteps of each subordinate to see that he properly performed his duty. Railroads could not be operated if executive officers were duty bound to stop and work out the details of every movement to be executed in the handling of trains. As is well said by the court of appeals in Cullen v. Norton, 126 N. Y. 1: “The manner of the performance of each of the various details of the work by which, as a whole, it is to be conducted, rested necessarily upon the intelligence and care and fidelity of the servants to Avhom these duties were entrusted.” To the same effect is the decision of our own Supreme Court in Relyea v. Railway, 112 Mo. l. c. 95, wffiere it is said: “It wras necessary and proper for the conductor to go to the station, and to give orders as to the movement of the train, but it was out of all reason to say that he was in duty bound to follow up each brakeman and
Nor does the evidence accuse Novak of negligence. He acted as the pilot of the freight engine and gave the signal for it to come for the sleeping car. He knew that Barrett and plaintiff were at work between cars, but Barrett, the foreman of plaintiff, also knew of the order and that the engine would be moved on Novak’s signal. The increased danger to plaintiff consisted not in making the coupling while he was between the cars hut in making it without warning him, and we think that Novak was entitled to act on the presumption that Barrett had warned plaintiff and that plaintiff, though between the cars, was expecting an ordinary shock and was prepared to meet it as was Barrett. It would be unreasonable to say that Novak should have assumed that Barrett might fail to perform his duty towards plaintiff. To so hold would be to announce a rule which, if observed, would greatly interfere with the practical and efficient operation of railroad trains.
As to the negligence of Barrett, there can be'no doubt under the evidence of plaintiff. He should have told plaintiff of the order that the latter might protect his safety either by refusing to go between the cars while the coupling was being made, or, if he went in, by keeping his body from places where it might he caught by the contraction of the space it occupied. He was given no opportunity to look out for himself and Barrett is the man whose duty it was to see that he had such opportunity. Whether Barrett was a fellow-servant of plaintiff or a vice-principal of the defendant company, his negligence was also the negligence of their common master.
We cannot say, as a matter of law, that plaintiff was'guilty of contributory negligence. Under all the facts ánd circumstances disclosed, his conduct is presented as an'issue of fact for the triers of fact to solve.
The principal objection to the instructions given at the request of plaintiff is that “each of the instructions given for plaintiff tells the jury that if the freight engine was used to do the switching without notice to or knowledge of the plaintiff, the act amounted to negligence, per se. This was error. So far as this act was evidence of negligence, it was for the jury to determine its effect.”
The hypothesis on which the instructions directed a verdict did not omit the specific finding that the failure to warn plaintiff of the change in the custom by which the freight engine was substituted for the engine of the St. Joseph train, was negligence, but we think the state of facts submitted, if found to exist, would indisputably lead to the conclusion of negligence.
The rule cannot be gainsaid that “Negligence cannot be conclusively established, as a matter of law, upon a state of facts on which fair-minded men of ordinary intelligence may differ as to the inferences to be drawn from it; and when the question of negligence arises upon even a conceded state of facts from which reasonable men might arrive at different conclusions, it must be submitted to the jury and if the inferences to be drawn from the evidence are not certain or incontrovertible, the question of negligence cannot be passed upon by the court.” [Gratiot v. Railway, 116 Mo. 450.] But where, as here, the facts included in the hypothesis will admit of no other reasonable inference than that of negligence, the court as a matter of
Other objections urged against the instructions have been examined and are ruled against the contention of defendants. We find no prejudicial error against the defendants Barrett and the Railway Company and, as to them, the judgment is affirmed. As to defendants Reed and Novak, the judgment is reversed.