39 F. 174 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Arkansas | 1889
(after stating the facts as above.) How did the employes of the defendant, or, more properly speaking, the conductor, as he was in charge of that train, and responsible for its management, make the switch at the time of the accident? The evidence shows that the engine and four loaded cars, they being loaded with gravel, were stopped on the main track. The engine was detached and run up the road to pass a switch, and when it was run past this switch it was backed and attached to 10 cars loaded with gravel which were standing on the switch. It was then run far enough up a steep grade of the track to pull the cars off the switch and place them on the main track. Then the engine was detached from the 10 cars, and they were let go down a steep grade until the front one of the 10 struck the rear one of the four left on the main track; and this was done with but one brakeman using one brake to check the increasing velocity of these 10 loaded gravel-cars. The witness Kinney says: “The cars came down pretty hard,—pretty fast,— and the further they came the faster they came, and struck pretty hard. I think it struck harder than usual. It was down grade. Was a steep grade. It is harder to hold on a down grade.” The brakeman Gifford says: “ Grade was steeper than he thought it was. Cars got start of me a little, and when I saw they were going to hit a little too hard I hallooed to the men ‘ Look out!’ ” He further says: “Question. You say you were going to strike harder than you ought to? Answer. Yes, sir; harder than cars ought to strike to be safe on making a coupling.” In describing how the switching was done Gifford says: “ Pulled ten loaded cars, loaded with gravel, off the switch, took them up a steep grade, cut the engine loose, and let them go down the grade.” Again he says; “The grade
On a careful review of the evidence in this case, I conclude the place on the car that plaintiff fell from was a position of danger. The conductor was aware of Shumaeher’s presence on the car, and only a short time before, if not at the very time of the injury, he knew of his presence on the very spot from which he fell, or had good reason to have such knowledge; that any place on the car was a place of danger; that Sliumacher was guilty of negligence in being where he was; that the injury to plaintiff could have been prevented by the use of ordinary care on the part of the conductor, who was the man in charge of the train at that time, and who had the control of plaintiff and all others on that train while it was in transit from the gravel-pit to where its load of gravel was discharged; that he failed to exercise this care. This care, under the circumstances, he must exercise. Sullivan v. Railroad Co., 10 S. W. Rep. 852. The conductor was aware of the peril of plaintiff, or might, by the exercise of ordinary care, have discovered it in time to have avoided the injury to plaintiff. He permitted the danger to be created. He thereafter, and up to the time of tho collision, failed to use the means within his power with a proper degree of care consistent with the safety of those on board the train to avoid the infliction of such injury to them as would spring as a probable and natural consequence from the act. This state of case indicated such a degree of indifference to
“‘Willfully or intentionally,’ as used in the instructions, means either a speci fic purpose to do the plaintiff an injury, or a grossly reckless management of the car or cars after plaintiff’s position on the car was discovered by defendant’s agent, the conductor. To make the management of the car or cars a grossly reckless management the position of plaintiff on the car must have been known to the conductor sufficiently long before the injury to have enabled him, and those under him in the management of the train, to have prevented the injury. If such management was grossly reckless, after plaintiff’s position was discovered in time to have prevented the injury, such recklessness is equivalent to willful or intentional mischief. ”
The court, in the light of the evidence, was justified in giving such instructions as were asked by plaintiff on the subject of the injury being produced by an act that was in law willful. Of the other instructions in the case I think the defendant has no right to complain. Those given at the request of its attorneys are more favorable than I think the facts warrant, but it cannot complain on this ground. I was at one time inclined to the opinion that the damages were excessive. Whether they may be or not, before a court can interfere with a verdict on that ground the same must be so excessively large and disproportionate as to warrant the inference that the jury were swayed by prejudice, preference, partial-ity, passion, or corruption. St. Martin v. Desnoyer, 61 Amer. Dec. 494; Schlencker v. Risley, 38 Amer. Dec. 100, note, 106. It is complained by defendant that the theory of the case presented by the instructions, that the act which injured the plaintiff was legally willful, was not alleged' in the complaint. It is charged in the complaint to have been a negligent act. I do not think it necessary to specifically allege the degree of negligence. When it is charged to have been a negligent act the defendant must take notice that the plaintiff can rely upon his right to prove negligence of any degree. It is now well settled, as I believe, by the English cases, and generally by the American courts, that a plaintiff may recover, notwithstanding his own negligence exposed him to the risk of injury, if the defendant, after becoming actually aware of the plaintiff’s ■danger, or if, under the circumstances, it was defendant’s duty to know it, failed to use ordinary care to avoid injuring him. Such a case is one of legal willful injury. Shear. & R. Neg. 36.
I think all the facts out of which spring the true legal aspects of this case are alleged; but, if not, after all the evidence has been heard, the •case submitted to the jury, a verdict rendered, and the right result, as