16 Ga. App. 551 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
H. E. Puckett sued the Southern Railway Company for damages, based on injuries alleged to have been sustained by him in August, 1911, while at work for the defendant company in its Atlanta yard, as car-inspector. On the night on which he was injured he had been engaged in inspecting cars in an interstate train (to wit, train No. 75) which ran between Atlanta, Georgia, and Birmingham, Alabama; he had inspected some 23 to 25 cars of the train, and there remained to he inspected 12 or 14 cars which were to be placed in the same train. While waiting for these remaining cars to be placed in the train, and while making the entries and necessary data of the inspection of the cars in his inspection book, a collision between other cars of the defendant occurred in the yard near-by, and several tracks of the defendant were obstructed and blocked by the wreckage. An employee of the defendant, one O’Berry, was caught in the collision and pinned beneath a car and the engine. In obedience to the printed rules of the company the plaintiff immediately went to the scene of the wreck, to render what assistance he could, and was there instructed by an employee of the company, superior to him in authority, to get a jack to assist in raising the wrecked car, so as to extricate O’Berry and clear the tracks of the wreck. The remaining cars not placed
The 8th and 9th headnotes alone need elaboration. It is earnestly argued by learned counsel for plaintiff in error that the evidence in this case did not show any actionable negligence by the railroad company. The allegations of negligence in the petition were, (1) that three large clinkers were on the road-bed, (2) that two old cross-ties, 'overgrown with grass, were lying alongside and near the track, and (3) that grass had grown upon the road-bed. It is the duty of the master to furnish his servant with a safe place in which to work, and he is charged with the exercise of ordinary care in the selection and maintenance of such a place. Counsel cite the ease of Lee v. Central Railroad Co., 86 Ga. 231 (12 S. E. 307), where it was held that the presence of one clinker of unusual size on the margin of a railway-track where switching is done, and upon which a brakeman accidentally steps in descending from a moving engine, will not render the company liable for a personal injury thus sustained by him. In Georgia Railroad v. Hunter, 9 Ga. App. 384 (71 S. E. 681), it was held that, ‘a cause of action was stated by a petition which alleged that the railroad company was negligent in having a pile of clinkers near its track. The ruling in Zipperer v. Seaboard Air-Line Railway, 129 Ga. 387 (58 S. E. 872), is not in conflict with the holding in the Hunter case, or with our holding in the instant case. There the defendant, a track-hand, while walking along the side of the railroad-track, struck his foot against a steel rail which lay in his path, and was injured, and the court held that he could not recover, for the rea
The petition alleges that certain individual agents of the defendant company, to wit, E. L. Cowan, Samuel Smith, and J. N. Biddy, were guilty of the negligence that caused jplaintiff’s injury. The defendant introduced in evidence a printed rule of the company, 'addressed to yardmasters, which required its yardmaster to keep the yards of the railroad clear of all obstructions, and it is insisted that if any particular agent of the defendant was negligent in this case, it was the yardmaster, against whom 'no negligence was alleged in the petition. The evidence showed that E. L. Cowan was track-foreman, Samuel Smith, track-supervisor, and J. N. Biddy, road-master for the defendant. The company’s rules introduced in evidence, however, addressed to track-supervisors and track-foremen, require them also to see that there are no obstructions on or near
There is no contention in this case that at the time the plaintiff was injured the railroad company was not engaged in interstate commerce; the sole contention on that point being that the plaintiff was not so engaged. It is not denied that while the plaintiff was inspecting the cars in the interstate train, and while he was making entries of that inspection in his car-inspection book, he was engaged in interstate commerce, hut the contention of learned counsel for th'e plaintiff in error is that when the collision between the other cars occurred, and when the plaintiff went to the wreck, to assist in jacking up the train to release O’Berry, he was not then so engaged. We can not agree with this contention. The plaintiff had not completed his work of inspecting the interstate cars, and while so engaged a sudden emergency, caused by the wreck, arose, and,, in obedience to the rules of the company, he hastened to the
It is insisted that the intention of the plaintiff, at the time of the injury, in jacking up the wrecked ear, was to release O’Berry from his perilous position, and not to free the tracks from the obstruction so that the remaining cars to be placed in train No. 75 could be transported over the obstructed tracks. We think it immaterial that the primary object of the plaintiff may have been the rescue -of his fellow employee, O’Berry. If the plaintiff helped to jack up the wrecked ear and engine, though he did so primarily for the purpose of releasing O’Berry, it was nevertheless the first step to be taken in clearing the obstruction from the tracks so that over these tracks, could be transported the remaining cars to be placed in train No. 75. In our opinion his work facilitated the interstate commerce of the railroad, and consequently he was engaged in interstate commerce when injured. It is immaterial that the tracks were not cleared in time for the remaining cars (that went into train No. 75) to be switched over them, and that these cars were detoured over other tracks.
In Pedersen v. Delaware &c. R. Co., 229 U. S. 146 (33 Sup. Ct. 648, 57 L. ed. 1125, 33 Ann. Cas. (1914C) 153), the defendant was operating a railroad for the transportation of passengers and
We think that under the ruling in the Pedersen case, the plaintiff in the instant ease, when he was engaged in helping to remove obstructions from the railroad-tracks of the defendant company, where these tracks were being constantly used to transport cars in both, interstate and intrastate commerce, was clearly engaged in interstate commerce. The tracks obstructed by the wreck were “instrumentalities” used indiscriminately for both interstate and intrastate commerce. In other words, cars going into both interstate and intrastate trains were constantly switched and transported over these identical tracks; and when these tracks became obstructed, the clearing of the obstruction certainly facilitated both the interstate and intrastate commerce of the railroad. In railroad $ards both “lead” and “switch” tracks are indispensable to interstate commerce. Such tracks are just as important to carry on the business of the railroad as are the main tracks, or tracks outside' of the yard. These yard-tracks are necessary in making up trains and in switching, and in classifying and distributing the different cars that make up the completed interstate or intrastate train.
See also, in this connection, Central Railroad v. Colasurdo, 192 Fed. 901 (113 C. C. A. 379). The case of Illinois Central Railroad
Note. A writ of error from the Supreme Court of the United States was granted in this case.