167 F. 696 | N.D. Cal. | 1908
(charging jury). You are instructed that section 2 of the safety appliance act (Act March 2, 1893, c. 196, 27 Stat. 531 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3174]) imposes upon the defendant an unqualified duty to equip its cars with couplers coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the ends of the cars; and, if the defendant hauled over its lines of railroad any cars which could not be so operated, either by reason of being improperly equipped or by reason of the original equipment being out of order or disconnected, or otherwise inoperative, your verdict should be for the government as to each and every car so hauled.
You arc instructed that section 2 of the safety appliance act applies to 1he coupler on each end of every car subject to the law, and it is wholly immaterial in what condition was the coupler on the adjacent car, or on any other car or cars, to which each car sued upon was or was to be coupled. The equipment on each end of every cat-must be in such condition that whenever called upon for use it can be operated without the necessity of men going between the ends of the cars.
You are instructed that in actions arising under the safety appliance act the government is only required to prove by a fair preponderance of the evidence the existence of the defects as set out in the complaint.
If from the evidence you find that the cars or either of them described in the petition or in some count thereof were equipped with' the requisite couplers and grab irons, and that they were in the con • dition required bjr the law when they were received by the defendant to be hauled over its line of railroad as stated, but during the time they were being so hauled the couplers or grab irons from any cause became injured or out of repair upon any of the cars so that they were not in an operative condition, then the defendant ‘would be re
You are instructed that it is the duty of a railroad company, subject to the provisions of the safety appliance act, to establish reasonable repair points along its line of railway for the making of repairs of the kind necessary to comply with the law — that is to say, repair points at places where they are reasonably required — that it is also the duty of such railroad company to have on hand at such repair points the material and facilities necessary to make all such repairs, and that such railway company must use reasonable foresight in providing material and facilities for such purpose; and, if the jury believes that the defendant hauled any car defective as to safety appliances over its line of railroad from any such repair point, where by the exercise of reasonable diligence and foresight such repairs could have been made, your verdict should be for the government as to each and every car so hauled.
You are instructed that; if the defendant hauled any car over its line of railroad from or through any point in a defective condition, it is wholly immaterial that the defendant had no' shops, material, or facilities for repairing the defects at that place, if it can be shown that said car had started from' a repair point upon the line of defendant’s railroad in the same defective condition, and where such repairs could have been made had the defendant exercised reasonable diligence and foresight in providing such repair point with the proper material and facilities for the making of all repairs necessary to comply with the safety appliance act, your verdict should be for the government as to each and every car so hauled.
Your verdict should be for the government as to each and every car so hauled upon that state of facts.
The jtiry returned a verdict for the United States on the second, fourth, fifth, and eighth causes of action, and, not being able to agree as to the balance of the counts, was discharged.