214 F. 737 | 6th Cir. | 1914
This was an action brought by Smith, as administrator, to recover damages for the death of his intestate, James Mason, alleged to have been caused by the joint negligence of five defendant railroad companies. These railroad companies are classified in the declaration into two groups, the first comprising the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad Company, the Iron Mountain Railroad Company of Memphis, and the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, which in terms are alleged to be owned and operated by and under the management and control of what is known as the Missouri Pacific System, and the other comprising the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company and the Kansas City & Memphis Railway & Bridge Company, which likewise are alleged to be owned and operated by and under the management and control of what is known as the Frisco System; that the defendants owmed and operated various interstate lines of railroad; and that, at the time of the wrongs and injuries complained of, the railroads composing the Frisco System owned and operated “the bridge and the lines over the bridge across the Mississippi river,” at Memphis, Tenn.
The cause of action, as stated in the declaration, is in substance this: Mason, while in the employ of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad Company as head brakeman, and on the night of May 28, 1910, left Memphis on a west-bound freight train of that company, and in crossing the bridge into Arkansas was knocked from the top of one of the cars by a low beam spanning the track at the Arkansas end of the bridge, receiving injuries which resulted in his death, and while so at his post of duty met his death through the negligence of the defendants. Further that this beam was too low to permit a man standing upon a large freight car to pass it in safety; that this was due to negligent construction and maintenance on the part of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company and the Kansas City & Memphis Railway & Bridge Company, because these two companies then owned and operated the bridge; that these companies by contract permitted their codefendants to use the bridge in crossing the Mississippi river; that the defendants either knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that the beam was too low, but that the intestate could not; that all the defendants undertook jointly to operate over the bridge the train on which Mason was riding and injured; and that they failed to provide and maintain the usual telltales at the approaches of the bridge, and so failed and neglected to give to Mason this necessary warning of the presence of the low beam. Also that the companies composing the Missouri Pacific System, which included Mason’s employer, failed to furnish Mason with a safe place to work, and that they were negligent in contracting for and using a
The declaration was met and denied by the several defendants under pleas of not guilty; and special pleas of contributory negligence were also interposed. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, directed verdicts were returned in favor of three of the companies, namely, the Kansas City & Memphis Railway & Bridge Company on motion of its counsel, and the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, and the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, on the court’s own motion. On plaintiff’s motion at the close of all the evidence, a nonsuit was granted in favor of the Iron Mountain Railway Company of Memphis. Thus the case was at last reduced to a controversy between the plaintiff and the company employing Mason. The verdict was in favor of that company, and on the overruling of a motion for a new trial the plaintiff prosecuted error.
“ * * * The averment in the declaration is that this company ‘negligently constructed and negligently maintained’ these wires. That this averment was an essential element of the plaintiff’s action is clear, and, being so, it was necessary to prove it, unless, as is now insisted, it was impliedly admitted by the plea of ‘not guilty.’ ”
After discussing the common-law rule touching the effect of this plea, and following the rule laid down by Addison that, “if the defendant is charged with acts of omission, nonfeasance, and neglect of duty, the facts creating the duty must be proved, and the defendant’s neglect established.” (1 Addison on Torts [4th English Ed.] § 290, at page 254), the Chief Justice continued (112 Tenn. 307, 79 S. W. 796):
“So far as we can see, there was not any exception to this rule at common law, and no reason has been suggested why the plea should have a narrower scope under our Code practice. In fact, Shannon’s Code, § 4634, provides that ‘the defendant may enter a general denial of the plaintiff’s cause of action, equivalent to the general issue heretofore in use.’ It certainly would be a curious anomaly in practice should it be held that the plea of not guilty raised the general issue in the present case, yet that its effect was to admit the averment of negligence upon which the plaintiff rests his right to recover. No such result follows. The burden was on plaintiff to make out his case, and, failing in the particular indicated, the judgment is reversed.”'
We ought perhaps to say, by way of precaution, that it is not meant to pass upon the scope of denial that should be accorded to this form of plea, where ownership is not an essential element of the plaintiff’s action, or is not so treated at the trial. See, for example, Chicago
Furthermore, the case made against the company employing Mason embraced issues before pointed out that were, when once determined, practically decisive of the question whether the other companies were guilty of the negligent acts and omissions charged against them. The employing company was charged with negligence involving the alleged low beam of the bridge and the absence of telltales at its approaches ; and these were of the essence of the charges against the other companies. The most that can be claimed in behalf of plaintiff is that the proofs offered, respectively, by him and the defendant employing Mason were in conflict concerning (1) the clearance between the low beam complained of (or any of the- other beams touching which measurements are claimed to have been made) and the tops of the highest cars shown to have been in the train and on any of which Mason could have been standing, and (2) Mason’s own height; and, when the place on the bridge at which plaintiff’s witnesses evidently made measurements as to heights of beams is considered in connection with the place where Mason was last seen on top of the train (no one having witnessed the accident), the jury might well have found that the weight of the evidence was against the theory either of the existence of a low beam or of Mason's injury by a beam at all. '
The charge of the court was such as fully and fairly to instruct the jury of its province in considering the issues made, including its duties concerning the evidence offered by both sides. The charge included the substance of every request, both oral and written, that was made on behalf of plaintiff, except the written request to charge that all the beams between the middle ^if the bridge and its Arkansas end were to be treated as being at that end, and we think, in view of the number of the beams, this was rightly denied; the steel structural portion of the bridge being 2,250 feet in length and comprising 44 beams.
Upon the whole we are convinced that no reversible error intervened; and the judgment is accordingly affirmed, with costs.