In this action for damages for breach of a railroad-union contract in unjustly and wrongfully discharging the plaintiff as an engineer, the plaintiff, Omie R. Wilson, has recovered a judgment of $14,080.
The action and judgment are against the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company, a corporation, and at the outset of its appeal we are confronted with the claim that the court erred in not sustaining its motions and directing a verdict for the railroad for the reason that the plaintiff was never employed by the defendant corporation
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and, therefore, it did not discharge him. It is the "appellant’s contention that the employer-employee relationship never existed as between the corporation and the plaintiff. The basis of the contention is that during Wilson’s tenure the railroad was operated by trustees and if there was any liability to the plaintiff it was upon the trustees and not upon the reorganized railroad corporation. In its answer the railroad corporation denied liability to Wilson and all the proof was that during the period in question Wilson was not employed by the railroad corporation, the corporation had no employees whatever, but that Wilson was employed by the trustees. But, despite, the plea and these undisputed facts, volume thirteen of the proceedings concerning the. reorganization of the railroad in the United States District Court, in the “Consummation Order and Final Decree,” in paragraph 8.03, “Transfer of Liabilities of Debtor Trustee, ” it is recited: ‘ ‘ From and after the Consummation Date there shall be no liability on the Debtor Trustee for any obligations incurred by him in his official capacity as Debtor Trustee pursuant to the authority of "this Court,
lnot the Reorganized Company shall alone become and be liable for any and all such obligations in the place and stead of the Debtor Trustee and shall indemnify [and hold the Debtor Trustee harmless against all such obligations
and any failure on the part of the Reorganized Company to satisfy-them. ’ ’ The railroad sought to, show by cross-examination of the Clerk of the United States District Court that enumerated lists of liabilities and obligations followed this paragraph, the inference being that the other liabilities were excluded, but in the circumstances, as the trial court in effect instructed the jury, the question is not debatable and if there is any liability to the plaintiff it is now upon the reorganized corporation. Stuart v. Dickinson,
Upon the merits' of the appeal the railroad insists, first, that the controversy arose out of a railway labor agreement, a matter within the jurisdiction of the National Railroad Adjustment Board, to which the plaintiff’s claim had been submitted, and that board having taken cognizance of the claim obtained exclusive jurisdiction, to the end that courts had no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the. suit. The plaintiff’s claim or grievance wás handled by the local lodge of his dnion in a hearing before company officials and subsequently was filed by the General Chairman of the Grand Lodge with the National Railroad Adjustment Board where his claim was denied in- an ex parte presentation and, therefore, it is urged that the plaintiff’s claim and cause, of action was res adjudicata and, accordingly, the trial court erred in not directing a verdict for the railroad. The difficulty with the railroad’s argument is that the issues upon the record before us are not so simple. If these were the issues necessarily involved in the appeal, as the-argument assumes, the railroad’s conten
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tion would certainly be decisive. The subject" of this action was a matter within the jurisdiction of the National Railroad Adjustment Board (45 U. S. C. A., Sec. 153) but the mere fact that it was a claim or a grievance growing out of a labor agreement, or the mere fact that Wilson was a member of the union, did not in and of itself give the board exclusive jurisdiction. The plaintiff had the right of election, to proceed before the board or "to file this suit at common law (Moore v. Illinois Cent. R. Co.,
On June. 10, 1944 Wilson was the engineer on a freight train involved in a head-on collision with another train near Stoutland, Missouri. As a result 6f the collision and in accordance with the *1174 union contract the railroad gave Wilson notice to appear before the assistant general manager “with representative of your choice, for investigation in connection with accident fifth 34 and fifth 33 near Stoutland June 10th. ” As a result of that hearing and a hearing before the general manager Wilson was dismissed from the railroad service. In those-hearings he was represented by the general chairman of his union. Upon receipt of the company’s letter of dismissal Wilson, pursuant to union procedure, took his grievance of dismissal. up with his local lodge and the local voted to seek his reinstatement. The local chairman presented the claim and the company refused to reinstate him. Wilson says that the local chairman then turned the claim over to the general chairman, in August 1944, and he was likewise unsuccessful in his efforts to secure reinstatement by the railroad officials. Thereafter, on October 3,1944, the general chairman gave notice to the National Railroad Adjustment Board and the railroad that Wilson’s claim or grievance for reinstatement with pay for all time lost would be submitted to the First Division of the board, ex parte, in Chicago. In April 1948 the board denied Wilson’s claim. There is no dispute concerning this sequence of events or occurrences except that Wilson categorically denies that he had notice or knowledge of the proceedings before the board or of its decision until after the event. He stated that he never received a copy of any letter, notice or document concerning the claim before the board.
He admits that he talked to the general chairman when the claim was turned over to the chairman in August 1944 but he says that the principal subject of conversation concerned awaiting the arrival of the- Interstate Commerce Commission’s report and investigation of the wreck. He said that the chairman talked about taking the case to the National Railroad Adjustment Board, but he said, “I had sued the Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen for insurance claim before, so they were sore at me, so I told him that I wouldn’t think of going to the Labor Board, because if the Frisco officials could get the representative of the Interstate Commerce Commission and entertain him so and he would give ’false report about me, why, they could sure fix me up; and five-men jurisdictional board representing the employees and five representing the railroad, and taking the one off, there would be your majority, and I said I wanted him to withdraw the engineers from service, and he wasn’t going to do that for one man, and I said, ‘Well, that affects all engineers on the Frisco system,’ and I said, ‘Forget about my case,’ I would handle it myself through the courts.” He admits that at the instigation of the general chairman, on August 29, 1945, (the claim was filed in October 1944) he signed the usual authorization form in which he authorized the general chairman of the brotherhood to handle his grievance to a conclusion before “any person, board or other tribunal” and to receive notice of hearings and to appear for him. He claims, however, *1175 that he signed the blank form and that it was his understanding that the form was to be used in connection with a grand officer’s attempt to get him reinstated. In any event about two months later, after signing the authorization, he appeared at the general chairman’s office “to see what progress had been made, and there had been no progress made, and I told him, to give me back my authorization and to drop my case entirely. I got up and - - he give me back my authorization, and right there in his waste basket I cut my name off of it and stuck it in my pocket, and I was up on my feet starting ottt the door, I turned around and I said, ‘Now, you imderstand this is the last time I want anything done in my case.’ ” The railroad introduced in evidence, from the general chairman’s file, a signed “carbon original” of the authorization but Wilson produced the original at the trial of this case with his signature cut off.
The general chairman, testifying for the railroad, admitted that Wilson talked to him about withdrawing his claim “before the signing of the authority” and “before the case was submitted to the adjustment board in ’44.” But it was his position, once a grievance was turned over to him by the local lodge, that “it is left to his discretion as to advisability of handling it to final conclusion” and that the employee no longer had any control over the matter. He said that the only way a claim could be withdrawn from him was through the local lodge and that this one was not so withdrawn. He said that the written authorization was not necessary either when given or at the time of the trial. As to the presentation of the claim to the National Railroad Adjustment Board he said, “After the local lodge, the organization, had accepted his case he didn’t have anything more to say about it.” As to Wilson’s requesting him to drop the matter, after submission to the board, he said, “Yes, I remember having some conversation with Mr. Wilson to the effect that he would rather drop 'the case and go to court with it, but I declined to do fhat, and-proceeded to handle the case along the lines that I thought was to the best interest of the organization and Mr. Wilson also; therefore I continued to handle the case.” In conclusion he said, “I told him I wasn’t going to drop it.”
The union constitution and by-laws were not offered in evidence and there was no other testimony concerning this subject except that the general chairman appeared and submitted Wilson’s claim to the board and the board denied the claim after a finding that the validity of his dismissal was dependent upon irreconcilably conflicting testimony. As we understand the majority opinions in the Burley case, it may not be said as a matter of law that Wilson so irretrievably authorized the general chairman to represent him or to submit Ms claim to the board that the board’s determination of the claim concludes him in this action. In all the circumstances the inferences to be drawn were of fact and they have been resolved by the jury’s finding. Elgin, *1176 Joliet & Eastern Ry. Co. v. Burley, supra; McCoy v. St. Joseph Belt Ry. Co., (Mo. App.) 77 S. W. (2) 175, 182.
In connection with the issue of wrongful discharge the railroad insists that the plaintiff failed to show that the hearings before the company officials were arbitrary or that section fifty-two of the contract, engineers schedule — ‘‘Engineers shall not be discharged, suspended or given demerit marks without just and sufficient cause,” was violated. It is also urged that Wilson failed to show that he could comply with the contract by being mentally, physically and technically qualified to perforin the duties of an engineer. If the trial court did not err in refusing to direct a verdict for the railroad for these reasons it is insisted that the appellant is entitled to a new trial because of the improper admission of hearsay evidence upon the first of these questions, and for the further reason that the trial court erred in instructing the jury.
The contention that Wilson failed to show that he was discharged in violation of the contract is that in his petition the allegation was that he was “discharged without just and sufficient cause after a purported investigation and hearing which was entirely arbitrary.” Therefore it is said that any other issue or proof was beyond the scope of the pleadings and that Wilson should.not have been permitted to prove or have the jury decide, on evidence independent of the company’s investigation, whether he in fact violated the rules in running a red light, thereby causing the head-on collision. Upon the issue as the railroad says it was pleaded, it is pointed out that there was no evidence that the hearing before the company officials was arbitrary or unfair in any manner. On the contrary, all the proof was that the hearing was held in accordance with the terms of the contract and was fairly conducted, and upon the evidence before the officials Wilson’s dismissal was justified. The quoted language is employed in the plaintiff’s petition, but preceding this allegation it is alleged that “plaintiff’s employment was terminated by defendant, wrongfully, without cause and in violation of plaintiff’s rights” under the contract. The principal instruction submitting the issue set forth Section 52 of the agreement and hypothesized for the jury Wilson’s contention that the first signal showed green, that he operated the train in accordance with the signals but nevertheless the collision occurred, and, in this connection the jury was instructed “if you further find that such collision was not due to any fault or neglect of plaintiff” and that the railroad investigated the cause of the collision “and from the evidence available did unreasonably and arbitrarily determine that plaintiff was at fault and thereafter discharged plaintiff from his employment account plaintiff’s alleged responsibility for said collision, and if you find that such discharge was without good and sufficient cause” there was to be a verdict for the plaintiff, Wilson. Obviously the issue as objected to by the railroad was not
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beyond the scope of the pleadings and the court was not in error in instructing the jury upon the subject. Wilson’s evidence .tended to show that he obeyed the signals, and the railroad’s evidence tended to show that he violated the signals and the rules and whether he did or not and whether he was discharged without good and sufficient cause were for the jury to determine. Johnson v. Thompson, (Mo. App.) 236 S. W. (2) 1; Hall v. St. Louis-S. F. Ry. Co.,
In the investigation before the railroad officials to determine the cause of the wreck and to place responsibility for it a reporter took the statements of over fifty persons concerning the head-on collision and the condition of the signals. In proof of whether he had violated the rules and the signals the plaintiff, over the objections of the railroad, read to the jury numerous excerpts from these statements. Because the statements were hearsay the railroad now urges that this evidence was prejudicially erroneous and for that reason it is entitled to a new trial. The respondent contends that these statements “were statements made by employees and agents of the defendant as to facts learned within the scope of their authority * * * made by said agents to their principal * * * while acting within their scope of authority and are admissible as admissions against interest.” These unsworn statements, were not reports or letters required to be made or kept and they were not so-called “res gestae” statements. Phillips v. St. L.-S. F. R. Co.,
The argument that the railroad was entitled to a directed verdict because 'Wilson failed to show that he could comply with the contract “by being mentally, physically and technically qualified to perform duties of an engineer” is presented in this manner: The railroad points to his testimony and that of his doctors, developed by cross-examination of him, in his personal injury action in which the nature and extent of his injuries was described, to his petition in
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that action, alleging the nature and extent of his injuries, and to the fact that the plaintiff had not submitted to the usual two-year physical examination required of engineers, and contends, therefore, that he has not shown “his bona fide readiness to perform” the contract. It is said that suits for wrongful discharge are based upon proof of actual loss, “it must be based upon the time that he could have performed the work.” In the first place Wilson was dismissed from the service because of his responsibility for the wreck in ignoring the signals and thereafter there was no question as to his physical or mental ability to perform the duties of an engineer. Iiis request for reinstatement, in effect an offer or tender of performance, was not denied because of any physical or mental disability, it was simply denied, presumably because of his responsibility for the' head-on collision and the resulting $330,000 damages to trains and cargo. Of course it was incumbent upon him as a part of his case to show that he was mentally capable and physically able to perform the duties of an engineer under the contract (Cramer v. Mack,
In January 1945 Wilson instituted an action, under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, against the railroad in which he sought $150,000 damages for his personal injuries resulting from the head-on collision of the two trains at Stoutland. In that action a jury returned a verdict in his favor for $53,750. After notice of an appeal by the railroad that judgment was satisfied or settled for the sum of $35,000, from which Wilson testified he received the sum of $22,000. The, railroad . contends that it was entitled to a directed verdict for the reason that “Plaintiff has here recovered a second time for alleged loss of wages for which he has already been compensated.” The railroad points to the allegations in his petition in that suit concerning the nature and extent of his injuries and to the testimony, developed on cross-examination of him in this action, concerning the nature and extent of his injuries and the claim and proof
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that he had been “seriously and permanently injured” and insists from these facts alone that, in effect, there has been a double recovery and, therefore, he may not recover in this action. Of the general rule there is no doubt, there can be but one recovery, satisfaction, or compensation, 'for the same demand, loss or injury. Adams v. Southern Pac. Co.,
For the reason stated the railroad is entitled to a new trial and, accordingly, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
The foregoing opinion by Barrett, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
