148 F. 342 | 5th Cir. | 1906
This action was originally brought in the city court of Atlanta, Fulton county, Ga., by Mrs. Ursula E. Shanklin against the Seaboard Air Line Railway to recover damages for the alleged negligent killing of her husband, Calvin A. Shanklin. Upon
“If any person is injured by a railroad company by tbe running of locomotives or cars or other machinery of the company, and the damage was caused by the negligence of another employe and without fault or negligence on the part of the person injured, his employment by the company shall be no bar io a recovery. No contract which restricts such liability shall be legal or binding.”
Chapter 3439, Daws Fla. 1883, p. 59 (Sections 2342, 2313, Rev. St. 3892), provides' for the survival of actions in event injuries result in death, and establishes the right to sue, first, in the surviving widow.
The petition charges that plaintiff’s husband, while in the employ of tiie defendant as section foreman, received injuries resulting in his death because of the careless and negligent operation of two lever or hand cars by the crews thereof, who were also in the employ of the defendant; that the crew of one of these cars carelessly and negligently propelled it so that it ran into and collided with the hand car on which her husband was riding; that because thereof he was thrown therefrom and run over, both by his own and by the colliding car; that the crew of the third of these cars carelessly and negligent ly propelled it so that it ran into the car, colliding with that on which plaintiff’s husband was riding, and that it also ran on and over him; that these things happened without any fault or want of care on his part. The defendant answered, admitting its incorporation and the operation by it of a system of interstate railways, and denying all other allegations material to plaintiff’s cause of action.
Calvin A. Shanklin was a section foreman in the employ of the Seaboard Air Dine Railway at Hampton, Fla. Between sundown and dark on the 12th day of October, 1903, he was returning northward to Hampton from work on his section. He and his crew were occupying and propelling a lever or hand car. Three other crews, one of these being air extra crew, and the other two bridge gang crews, were in close proximity and also propelling lever or hand cars in the same direction, toward Hampton. Shanklin was on the second car. lie sat on a box on the right of the front end of the car. While the four cars were in motion, at speeds estimated variously by different witnesses from 8 to 15 miles an hour, something became wrong with the brake on the front car and its speed was checked. Thereupon its foreman signaled Shanklin to check the speed of his car. Shanklin threw up his hand, and one of his men stepped on the brake and checked its speed. In a few seconds thereafter the third car collided with and jammed into Shanklin’s car. There were either two or three distinct impacts between Shanklin’s and the third car. One witness testified, in substance, that Shanklin was toppled from his seat and thrown to the ground in front of his car by the first of these; that he lit on his feet between the rails and started forward and to the side to get out of
“I can’t say whether any of the hands were present or not. They might have been, or might not have been [meaning when he gave instructions to Shanklin]. Well, sir, at that time [August 4, 1903] I made a trip over the road. On the division I noticed a number of section foremen riding on the front of the hand ears on water kegs and boxes, and I instructed all foremen, together with Shanklin, and told every section foreman 1 came to, that the practice of riding on boxes and water kegs on the front of hand cars must be stopped, as all the injuries that had occurred to them had been caused by that practice.”
Much evidence was introduced by both plaintiff and defendant pertaining to the relative safety of different positions on hand cars as places to ride. It was the opinion of some of the witnesses that it was dangerous to ride seated on a box in front, and of others that such position was safest in event of a collision from the rear, as a person would naturally be thrown backward against the levers, and not forward off the car. Alex Colley, a witness called by the defendant, and who was foreman of the extra gang at the time of the accident' and still in the employ of the defendant at the time of the trial, testified that he did not remember to have received any instructions from the roadmaster, Thomas, not'to ride on the front of his hand car. He also testified that Thomas had ridden on his (Colley’s) car in front
It was clearly the duty of the court to submit the issues of negligence and contributory negligence arising on the proof for the determination of the jury, unless it became its duty to withdraw the case and charge peremptorily because of the evidence relating to the instructions given Shanklin and his violation of them. It is the duty of a company engaged in a complex business to establish and enforce definite rules and regulations for the protection of its employes. It is the duty of employes to obey such rules. McGhee v. Campbell, 101 Fed. 936, 42 C. C. A. 91. Where such rules are established and promulgated in some reasonable and practical way, and employes have knowledge of them, they are as law in the regulation of their conduct. Carroll v. E. T., V. & G. Ry. Co., 82 Ga. 452, 10 S. E. 163, 6 L. R. A. 214; Ga. Pac. Railway Co. v. Dooley, 86 Ga. 291, 12 S. E. 923, 12 L. R. A. 342. The instructions to section foremen not to ride on kegs or boxes on the front end of hand cars testified to by the roadmaster were not printed or in writing, but oral. It is true verbal or oral instructions given emloyés have been held to have the same binding effect as written rules. The A. & S. R. Co. v. Dorsey, 68 Ga. 228; Prather v. R. & D. R. Co., 80 Ga. 427, 9 S. E. 530. 12 Am. St. Rep. 263; Ga. Pac. R. R. Co. v. Mapp, 80 Ga. 631, 6 S. E. 24; McMillan v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 130 Fed. 827, 65 C. C. A. 165. But there are certain infirmities which inhere in oral instructions given as a rule of conduct. The language in which they are framed is passing, and not fixed. They are uncertain, and therefore open to constructions partaking of the bias and disposition of the employes. If carrying with them a disagreeable restriction, they are likely to be ignored and soon forgotten. At last, as here, when their existence, meaning, and import are called in question, when these have a vital hearing on the rights of litigants, it is left to the fallible and imperfect memory of witnesses to say that they existed, what they were and what they meant. The proof concerning the instructions given Shanklin was not of the conclusive nature that would justify the court in withdrawing the. issue of contributory negligence from the jury.
In the court’s general charge the jury was told that if Shanklin was riding on the front of his car sitting on a box in violation of instructions given him by the roadmaster, and if sitting in that position on the front of the car contributed to the accident resulting in his death, the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover, even though the other employes on the car behind Shanklin’s were guilty of negligence in running into his car and causing him to be thrown from it. In view
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.