Welch v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad

182 Mass. 84 | Mass. | 1902

Loring, J.

This case comes here on exceptions taken by the defendant at the new trial which took place after the decision of the court reported in 176 Mass. 393.

The defendant’s first contention is that the evidence as to the due care of the intestate was materially different at the second trial, and that although there was evidence of due care on his part at the first trial there was none here.

The intestate was the switchman of the crew of a switching engine used in the freight yard of the defendant at .Park Square in Boston. The accident occurred during the night of November 5, 1894. The crew had been engaged in taking cars which had been unloaded at No. 3 freight house, and delivering them elsewhere to be loaded. Just before the accident the switching engine with some cars, testified by some to be seven, by others ten, had pulled out of “ Three House ” track and pushed up on No. 1 track, intending to deliver some of these cars on track No. 12. It appeared from the testimony of the conductor that he called to the motorman of the interlocking tower to let the train down on “ Number 1 ” track, and gave a signal with his lantern to the same effect; and that this order was acknowledged by the tower man by a motion of his hand. The conductor then walked to the switchman’s house, some four hundred or five hundred feet from the interlocking tower, to see if No. 12 track was clear. He found that it was not; he then motioned his train to back down south of the Boston and Albany crossing until he gave a motion to kick in the cars to be left *89on track No. 12, intending to wait until the train on No. 12 track got out of his way. It also appeared that when the engine with its cars got south of the Boston and Albany Railroad cross-over the interlocking signal was set against the defendant’s tracks, and the engine with its cars had to wait until a Boston and Albany train had gone by.

The jury could have found from the testimony of the tower man that Welch was present when the conductor gave the order to the tower man to let the engine and cars down on track one. The train stayed south of the Boston and Albany crossing about five or six minutes. It then received an order from the conductor, transmitted to the engineer by one of the brakemen, to kick the cars or some of the cars back, and Welch, who had been in the brakeman’s house, stepped out and called to the tower man. The tower man testified that Welch called “On Three House, Jimmie,” but one of the brakemen, who had been changing his stockings in the brakeman’s house during the five or six minutes the train was waiting south of the Boston and Albany crossing, testified that Welch called out “Number 1,” and this was corroborated by the brakeman Ames, who transmitted the order to kick the cars off.

There was testimony at the former trial that Welch gave a motion with his lantern as well as that he called to the tower man, and that the tower man acknowledged the order by a motion of his hand; and it is the absence of this testimony at the second trial on which the defendant particularly relies in his contention that there was no evidenóe of due care on Welch’s part.

What happened was this: The tower man set the switch for Three-House track, the engine kicked the cars back and. ran over Welch, who was picked up about sixty feet north of the brakeman’s house, on track No. 3. It appeared that Welch had taken shelter in the brakeman’s house while the train was waiting south of the Boston and Albany cross-over, and that after he gave the order to the tower man he stepped back into the house for some purpose like putting the cover on the stove, and then stepped out. No one saw what he did after he stepped out.

The night was a stormy one; snow was falling; one of the witnesses testified that it was “ very stormy; a heavy storm.”

It appeared that tracks 5 and 6 were full of cars, and for that *90reason Welch had to go out to No. 1 track to get signals from the conductor at the switchman’s shanty at the north end of the yard. There was evidence from which the jury might have found that Welch was 'struck at the frog immediately opposite the brakeman’s house, although his body was finally found sixty feet further north. If he was struck there he was in the direct path to No. 1 track, where he had to go to take signals from the conductor.

The defendant contends that Welch was bound to look out for himself since he was in a railroad yard where cars were passing up and down all the time and in every direction. But if the tower man got Welch’s signal in confirmation of the conductor’s signal previously given, Welch had a right to assume that no train would come down on Three House track. We are of opinion that the jury could have found that Welch had a right to assume that the tower man heard his signal. The tower man testified that he got a signal from Welch; if he had made the motion usually made in acknowledgment, it would not have indicated that he understood the signal but merely that he had got some signal. In this case the jury could have found that the tower man heard the signal and then threw the wrong switch by mistake. One witness testified that Welch could have been heard ordinarily seven hundred feet away; the tower was less than one hundred and fifty feet away, and there was nothing to prevent Welch’s being heard but the storm. We are of opinion therefore that the jury could have found that Welch was in the exercise of due care within the doctrine of Maguire v. Fitchburg Railroad, 146 Mass. 379, relied on by the defendant.

The defendant’s other contention on this behalf is that it was the duty of Welch to see that the switch was set right by the tower man. We do not think that we can rule as matter of law that it was the duty of this employee to go to the dwarf signal and rub off the snow to see if the switch was rightly set each time it was set by the tower man.

We are of opinion that there was evidence that the train was going at eighteen to twenty miles an hour; and Long testified that the usual rate of speed was six miles an hour. The jury were warranted in finding that six miles an hour was the usual rate of speed, in spite of his cross-examination, in which he said *91that “ sometimes ” the switching engines went slower and sometimes faster, depending on circumstances.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that “ The jury found for the plaintiff, and assessed damages in the sum of $4,000, the same being the total damages awarded both for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate and the injury which caused his death, which said damages the jury apportioned as follows: $500 to the plaintiff as the legal representative of the deceased, and $3,500 to the father, John Welch, who at the time of the death of the deceased was next of kin, and dependent upon the wages of said deceased for support.”

It appeared that the intestate, who was twenty years of age, had beefiuin the habit of giving substantially all his wages to his mother, and that she used them for the support of the family, consisting of the father, mother and seven children, including the intestate; it further appeared that the father was earning $1.25 a day, and that he also gave his wife, the intestate’s mother, his wages, except what was necessary to pay the water rates anil taxes on the house the family lived in, and $10.10 a month toward paying for the house, which was bought on the instalment plan and which cost from $1,200 to $1,400 and was partially paid for. The expenses of the family, including food and the clothing of some of the children, were paid for by the mother out of the combined earnings of father and son, and of two daughters when they had work. The defendant’s contention is that the persons dependent on the father were dependent on the intestate, but that the father was not, because the earnings of the intestate were not in fact given to him and had not been used by him. We are of opinion that the jury could have found that the mother acted for the father in receiving and expending his wages and those of his minor children.

The next exception was to the admission of evidence. The plaintiff was allowed, against the objection of the defendant, to introduce, as evidence of the death of one Ames, a witness at the former trial, whose testimony was introduced as the testimony of one deceased, that he knew “from general repute” that he was dead. Had there been no further testimony the case would come within Blaisdell v. Bickum, 139 Mass. 250, in which it was held that general report not brought to the knowl*92edge of the family is not competent evidence of death. In the case at bar, it was subsequently shown by another witness that the report of the witness’s death was brought home to the family of the deceased. We think that that removes the objection although the evidence was not admitted de bene.

The defendant objected to the father’s testifying how much he had paid on the house the family lived in and which Welch’s mother had testified had been bought on the instalment plan ; the father testified that he took out 110.10 a month to pay the instalments due. ISTo ruling was requested as to whether this expenditure precluded the father’s claim that he was dependent on the son. , We are of opinion that it was competent to prove how all the money put in the common purse was expended.

The conductor of the train, called as a witness on cross-* examination by the defendant, had denied that a report introduced by the defendant as his report of the accident was written by him, and at first admitted and afterwards denied that the signature on the back was his.

When called by the plaintiff in rebuttal this witness was allowed to testify that this report was not his and the signature was not his; that it was his duty to make out a report in his own ‘ handwriting; and he was then allowed to testify, against the defendant’s objection, that in the report which he did make out he stated how fast the train was going and that it was going at the rate of eighteen to twenty miles an hour. In the report produced by the defendant the speed was stated to be five miles an hour. We are of opinion that it was competent for the presiding judge in his discretion to allow the plaintiff to put in this evidence in rebuttal as to the report put in by the defendant as the report of the witness. As the defendant had produced the report in evidence as the report made by the witness and the witness had denied that it was his, it would have been idle to require the plaintiff to notify the defendant to produce the report made by the witness as the foundation for secondary evidence of its contents. On the defendant’s introducing evidence of a statement made by the witness, it was competent for the plaintiff to show that that statement was not made by him, and in that connection what the statement made by him was.

Exceptions overruled.

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