Tullis v. Lake Erie & W. R. Co.

105 F. 554 | 7th Cir. | 1901

WOODS, Circuit Judge,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The specifications of error relied upon all depend upon the bill of exceptions, and, it is insisted, cannot be considered because the bill was not signed, nor time for the preparation and filing thereof extended, during the term at which the trial was had and judgment entered. It appears, however, that a motion for a new trial, and briefs in support of it, were filed a few days before the close of the term. . According to the docket entry, this was done in open court before the judge who presided at the trial; but it is stated in the bill of exceptions that the motion and brief were filed in the clerk’s office, and were not brought to the attention of the judge until an early day in the next term of the court. The briefs were filed in conformity to the rule of court adopted on September 27, 1892, to the effect that all motions, demurrers, or exceptions thereafter filed should be supported by briefs filed therewith in duplicate, of which the clerk should forthwith notify the adverse party, to whom fifteen days should be allowed for filing answering briefs, and that, if oral argument should be desired by either party, it should be asked at the time of filing briefs. Within the time allowed by the rule, but at the ensuing term of the court, the attorneys for the defendant in error filed in the clerk’s office their answering brief on the motion for a new trial, and, neither party ¡having asked an oral argument, the clerk carried the motion and briefs to the judge in chambers. A few days later the motion was overruled, exceptions allowed, and sixty days given the plaintiff in error in ■which to-file a bill of exceptions, the judge stating at the time that, in 'his opinion, the.exceptions and bill would be of no avail. The bill yyas prepared,- signed; and filed within the time allowed, embracing .amendments suggested-.by the attorneys'for the defendant in error, *557who, however, objected to the signing of the bill on the two grounds that the court was then without power to sign a bill, and that the time for taking a writ of error had passed. While it is well settled that a hill of exceptions can be signed only at the term of court at which the trial was had and judgment entered, or within an extension of time then granted (Brooder Co. v. Stahl, 42 C. C. A. 522, 102 Fed. 590), yet if by reason of a motion for a new trial or rehearing or to set aside the judgment, entered at the term, the power of the court over the judgment is retained, a hill of exceptions may be settled or time given for preparing it when the motion is overruled-, whether at the same or a later term (Woods v. Linvall, 1 C. C. A. 34, 48 Fed. 73, 4 U. S. App. 45; Brockett v. Brockett, 2 How. 238, 11 L. Ed. 251; Railroad Co. v. Murphy, 111 U. S. 488, 4 Sup. Ct. 497, 28 L. Ed. 492; Smelting Co. v. Billings, 150 U. S. 31, 14 Sup. Ct. 4, 37 L. Ed. 986; Voorhees v. Manufacturing Co., 151 U. S. 135, 14 Sup. Ct. 295, 38 L. Ed. 101). “Until then the judgment or decree does not take final effect for the purpose of a writ of error” (Smelting Co. v. Billings); and until then there is no good reason for saying that the time for settling a hill of exceptions, the necessity for which could not be known sooner, had passed. This proposition is not affected by the fact that in the federal courts the ruling upon a motion for a new trial is discretionary, and not reviewable. It does result, however, from that fact that section 914 of the Revised Statutes of the United States does not require conformity to the state practice in respect to motions for new trial or bill of exceptions (In re Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co., 128 U. S. 544, 9 Sup. Ct. 150, 32 L. Ed. 508); and it is immaterial to inquire whether, under the practice in the state courts, the filing of the motion in the clerk’s office without calling it to the attention of the court would have been of no effect. Whatever might otherwise have been the proper practice, the rule adopted by the lower court was intended to authorize the course pursued. The attorneys for the defendant in error filed their answering briefs without questioning that the motion had been regularly filed, and the court, without suggestion of a want of power, entertained the motion, and decided it on the merits.

Rule 93 having been read in evidence, the plaintiff in error offered to testify that during the two years of bis employment as brakeman upon the road of the defendant it was not required of any brakeman by any superior officer at any time to be upon the top of cars at any time between stations when going up or down grade, and testimony to the same effect from two other witnesses was offered, but upon objection was ruled out, on the ground, stated at the time by the court, that, this plaintiff having admitted that he signed a contract in which be agreed that he would study and abide by the rules on the time card, that made “a contract between him and the defendant, and, although every other man on the railroad may have disregarded the rule, he was bound by his contract to observe it.” This was erroneous. It was within the power of the company to waive any rule’ of its own adoption, whether the empioyés’ duty to obey it arose from express contract, or by implication from the mere fact of employment and knowledge of the rule- . The testimony offered tended to show such disr regard of the rule by the brakemen and officers of the company, as to *558make the question of waiver one proper to be submitted to the jury. Railway Co. v. Baker, 63 U. S. App. 553, 33 C. C. A. 468, 91 Fed. 224.

The court, over objection, permitted the division superintendent of the defendant, in response to the question whether, if the practice of violating rule 93 were brought to his attention, he would permit it, to answer: “If a man persistently violated that rule, I would order his discharge, if I knew it.” This was not a statement of fact pertinent to the issue, but rather a mere expression of opinion, which could be of no legitimate significance in the trial.

The important, and, indeed, the controlling, question in the case is that of contributory negligence. Error has not been assigned upon the charge given by the court to the jury, but three requests for special instructions, it is insisted, were improperly refused. We have not made such analysis of these requests as to be able to say that they should or should not have been given. The first and second conclude with a declaration that there had been no contributory negligence, when, perhaps, as in the third, the conclusion should have been left to the determination of the jury. Without passing definitely upon the point, we deem it proper, since the question must arise on another trial of the case, to say that we are unable to see just ground for attributing the injury suffered by the plaintiff in error to his own fault. If he was bound by the rules to be on top of the car, and outside of the cupola, which was above the roof of the car, it was not by any rule directly regulating his conduct, but by inference from the rules prescribing the duties of conductors. He was, by an explicit rule, “under" the direction of the conductor at all times when on duty,” upon a train. For brakemen this rule, for manifest reasons, had precedence of all others; and when, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the conductor, the plaintiff in error was in the cupola, just as his train approached or was starting up the grade, it is not to be said, as matter of law, that he was there in violation of duty. The conductor’s authority to excuse him from remaining at the post of duty is expressly recognized in rule 132, and we cannot agree that nothing less than an express instruction or-command of the conductor could justify his presence in the cupola. To say the most, it was a question for the jury. But even if he was wrongfully away from his post, how can it be said that he was thereby guilty of negligence contributing to the injury which he suffered? A collision, such as that which happened, was not likely to occur, and in respect to the dangers reasonably to be apprehended the cupola was a safer place than the top of the car. The requirement that brakemen should be on top of the cars was not for their own safety, but rather for the better discharge of their duties upon an emergency. If in Railroad Co. v. Mansberger, 12 C. C. A. 574, 65 Fed. 196, 24 U. S. App. 551, this court was right in saying that the position of the brakeman on a car, when by the rule then applicable he ought to have been on the ground, “was a mere condition of the injury,” and “not the immediate cause of it, in a judicial sense,” it is difficult to see how, in a more direct sense, the position of the plaintiff in error in this instance could have been the cause of the injury. For the errors pointed out the judgment is reversed, with direction to grant a new trial.