85 Kan. 6 | Kan. | 1911
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Upon the claim that in the former opinion in this case (Turner v. Railway Co., 83 Kan. 315) the defendant’s contention with respect to the law as applied to the undisputed facts had not received the attention which the importance of the case seemed to demand, a rehearing was granted.
Turner, a young man twenty-two years of age, was in charge of the turntable and had been at that particular work about three or four days, having been previously employed at the cinder pit. At the time he received the injuries which caused his death he was assisting in placing a dead engine on the turntable by the use of a pushpole and an engine having steam. The two engines were on adjoining tracks which converged toward the turntable, where they came close together.
“The master is therefore under no duty of warning or instructing a servant as to dangers which are discoverable by the exercise of ordinary care on his part, with such knowledge, experience, and judgment as he actually possesses, or as the master is justified in believing that he possesses.”
The evidence shows and the jury found that Turner was inexperienced and therefore may not have appreciated the danger in which he was placed; nor is it clear from the evidence that the master was justified in believing. that Turner possessed knowledge, experience or judgment sufficient to warn him of the danger. We are led to this conclusion from the fact that it seems clear from all the evidence that it was never intended by any of the employees that the live engine should move as far as it did or that the two engines should come so close together. It moved five or six feet, and there is some evidence tending to show that the two engines actually came together. It was alleged in the petition, that the absence of air on the live engine was one of the causes of the accident, and the jury so found. Nix testified:
“Ques. 'In moving dead engines with the pushpole, is the kick always used or is the engine sometimes pushed slowly and the brake used in stopping the live engine? Ans. Sometimes we kick them and sometimes we push them, either way.
“Q. When they are pushed and not kicked, is there any difference in the handling of the pushpole? A. If you push a dead engine right slow often the dead*9 engine will go a little faster than the live engine and the pole will drop down if it is not held up.
“Q. Then was it customary for the man handling the pushpole in pushing an engine slowly to walk along and keep the pushpole in his hand? A. Yes, sir, hold one end of it.”
He also testified:
“Got up in dead engine and intended to keep dead engine moving on turntable, as we had 25 or 30 pounds of steam. While on engine I noticed that the two cabs were coming closer together. I holloed to Mr. Bull to stop live engine.”
Then he says he heard Turner call out and knew that he was caught. There is much uncertainty in the evidence as to the exact place in which Turner stood at the time the live engine was started. If the plat used by the defendant in the oral argument, which was not introduced in evidence, is correct, the distance between the two engines where he stood did not exceed twenty-four inches; and it is apparent that a man of ordinary intelligence without any previous experience in railroad matters would know that he was in danger of being crushed by the slightest movement of the engines toward each other. On the other hand, the plat used by the plaintiff in the oral argument indicates that the distance between the two engines where he stood must have been four or five feet. The finding of the jury is not specific upon this point and the evidence is very uncertain. It seems quite clear to us that whether the dangers of his situation were so obvious that a man of ordinary intelligence must have known and appreciated •them depends upon all the circumstances and very much upon the distance between the two engines at the place where he stood. If presumptions are to be indulged they would, of course, favor Turner, and the fact that he continued following along holding the pole makes it seem incredible that the space could have been anything like as narrow as is contended by the defendant. Turner must have known that the dead engine had
Complaint is made of the instructions. The'twelfth instruction and the first paragraph of the fourteenth could not have misled the jury. The case was not tried nor the verdict based upon the theory that the mere placing of the pole between the engines was a dangerous operation, although it was dangerous. The thirteenth instruction is not open to the objection that it implied that some notice was due from Nix to Turner to retire to a place of safety before Turner could be re
For these reasons the judgment is reaffirmed.