103 Neb. 719 | Neb. | 1919
This is an action by John W. Siebert, plaintiff, to recover from the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, defendant, damages in the sum of $10,000 for alleged negligence resulting in personal injuries. Defendant denied negligence on its part, and pleaded that the injuries of which plaintiff complains were caused by his own negligence. From a judgment on a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $8,250, defendant has appealed. »
Plaintiff, when injured, was a railroad conductor in the employ of the White Sulphur Springs & Yellowstone Park Railway Company, a corporation operating 23 miles of railroad in Montana between Ringling and White Sulphur Springs. Under a lease, both plaintiff’s employer and defendant used the latter’s railroad tracks and switch-yards at Ringling. There a line of live stock cars were standing on a side-track, where they had been switched and left by defendant. Plaintiff and his train crew in the performance of their duties undertook to switch some of these cars to another track. After the locomotive had been attached to the line for that purpose, plaintiff mounted a car near the
Tbe principal assignment of error is the failure of the trial court, after both sides bad adduced their proofs, to sustain a motion by defendant for a peremptory instruction in it’s favor on the ground that tbe evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict for plaintiff on tbe issue, of negligence in setting the brake. On this point counsel for plaintiff summarizes bis case thus:
“Plaintiff was thrown from tbe top of a car and injured by a tremendous brake-recoil. He declared that such a recoil could only have been produced by tbe brake being improperly set when tbe car was set in. Two experts support this declaration, and defendant, with all its available experts, neither made any attempt to deny it nor to show that such a recoil could have been made by any customary or proper way of setting th@> brake when the car was set in, nor by the way they testified they had set the car in. ’ ’
Should the jury have been permitted to find that defendant negligently set the' brake*? Defendant’s train-crew switched the string" of live stock cars onto the side-track several days before plaintiff was injured. There is no evidence that any employee of defendant in the meantime touched any of those cars. Neither plaintiff nor any other witness who testified in his behalf saw the switching or the braking. The inference of negligence rests alone on the force of the brake-recoil, as described by plaintiff, and the expert opinions of himself and two other trainmen that such force was, or
“While switching out stock cars in west end of Ringling yards, to be sanded, was on top of car letting off hand-brakes, and while doing so his handhold slipped, throwing him off balance and causing him to fall to the ground.”
In the light of all of the evidential facts which appeal to the reason and convince the judgment, plaintiff’s description of the recoil and his opinion that it was caused by the work of two men in setting the brake, or by the use of a brake-stick, or by the application of air, are mere conjecture and speculation. His experts did not strengthen his case. Such testimony is not sufficient evidence of the negligence charged to support a verdict in favor of plaintiff. The contrary was implied, if not declared, by the submission of the case to a jury whose sympathies would naturally be aroused by the age of plaintiff, by his service as brakeman and conductor, and by his injury, suffering and loss. It is sometimes difficult to escape such promptings of the human heart, even where there is judicial responsibility for an impartial analysis of the evidence and for an unfaltering application of the law. Under the circumstances the verdict
REVERSED.