Atchison Topeka & Santa Fé Railroad v. Plunkett

25 Kan. 188
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 25 Kan. 188 (Atchison Topeka & Santa Fé Railroad v. Plunkett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atchison Topeka & Santa Fé Railroad v. Plunkett, 25 Kan. 188 (kan 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

This was an action brought by Thomas Plunkett, administrator of the estate of Peter Plunkett, deceased, against the Atchison, Topeka &' Santa Fé railroad company, for damages alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the defendant in wrongfully causing the death of said Peter Plunkett. The case of the plaintiff (who is now [190]*190defendant in error), as he alleges it, and as he claims to deduce it from the findings of the jury, is substantially as follows:

On the 28th day of June, 1878, Peter Plunkett was killed by being caught between the timbers loaded on two cars then in the car-yard of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé railroad company, at Atchison, Kansas. At the time of his death, Peter Plunkett was in the employ of the railroad company, as brakeman or yard switchman. At the time he was killed he was in the discharge of his duty as brakeman or yard switchman, and had been in the employment of the railroad company for about five months previous to his death, which was on June 28, 1878. He was killed while attempting to couple two cars in the railroad company’s yard, then loaded with projecting timbers. The yard-master of the railroad company instructed and ordered Plunkett to couple two flat cars that were then improperly and negligently loaded with projecting timbers. Five to eight hours previous to the death of Peter Plunkett, the yard-master had notice of the manner in which said cars were loaded. After the yard-master of the railroad company had knowledge of the manner in which the timbers of said cars were projected, he ordered and instructed Peter Plunkett to couple the same together. In obedience to such order of the yard- master, Peter Plunkett attempted to-make the coupling of said cars, so loaded with projecting timbers. The death of Peter Plunkett was caused by the wrongful act and omission of the railroad company. The railroad company, by the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care on its part, could have prevented the injury complained of. The death of Peter Plunkett was caused by the gross negligence of the railroad company. At the time of the injury complained of, Peter Plunkett was in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care. At the time of the injury complained of, Peter Plunkett was not guilty of any negligence that proximately contributed thereto. As such brakeman or yard switchman, Peter Plunkett was under the control and direction of said yard-master of the railroad company. As such brakeman and yard switchman, it was in the line of Peter Plunkett’s duty to couple and uncouple cars. The yardmaster of the railroad company ordered and instructed Peter Plunkett to couple said cars just previous to receiving the injury complained of. At the time of the injury complained of, Peter Plunkett was in the exercise of that degree of care that prudent men would ordinarily exercise under like circumstances.

[191]*191The findings of the jury, if we take their general conclusions, were substantially as claimed by the plaintiff, the defendant in error. Their general verdict, and all or nearly all of their general conclusions, whether of law or fact, were in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant. And about the only findings of the jury which were favorable to the defendant were those findings which stated the facts in considerable detail. And even those findings which stated the facts in detail were fully as favorable to the plaintiff as the evidence would warrant; and indeed some of them were entirely too favorable. The principal findings of the jury tending to. show liability or non-liability on the part of the defendant, are as follows:

Question 1. Was not Peter Plunkett, at the time of his death, on June 28, 1878, within ten days of being seventeen years old? Answer: Yes.

Q,. 2. Was he not a very stout, active and healthy young man at the time of his death? A. Yes.

Q,. 10. Was not the occupation of Peter Plunkett at the • time of his death a brakeman and yard switchman in the employ of defendant? A. Yes.

Q. 12. Did not Peter Plunkett just before he met his death uncouple two flat cars, loaded with timbers or other material, from the engine and train, and proceed alone, and unaccompanied by any one, with said two ears, the said cars being moved forward by their own gravity, the track being slightly down grade, and having been started by a push from the engine, toward another car loaded with timbers, some distance east of said Plunkett? A. He did — the east car being a flat car, and loaded with timber.

Q,. 13. Was not said Peter Plunkett at the forward end of the said two cars, as they were then going? And if not, where was he? A. Yes; on the forward end of east car.

Q,. 14. Was he not standing by the brake on top of said car, and close by the end of said car, and near to the end of the projecting timbers on said car? A. He was.

Q,. 16. Did not Peter Plunkett, in attempting to make said coupling of said car, bend his knees, depress his body, and bow his head, and assume a squatting position, for the purpose of clearing the projecting ends of the timbers on the cars he was trying to couple when the cars should come [192]*192together, and while he was making the coupling? A. Yes, he did.

Q,. 17. When the said cars came together, did not the ends of the timbers on the two cars catch his head between them immediately back of the ears, and thereby kill him? A. Yes.

Q,. 18. At the time Peter Plunkett rode down those cars and attempted to make said coupling, was there any obstacle or obstruction to prevent his seeing the car, and its condition, and the manner it was loaded, upon which he rode? If there was, state what the obstacle or obstruction was. A. Yes, it was raining hard at the time.

Q,. 19. Was there any obstacle or obstruction to prevent the said Peter Plunkett from seeing the car toward which he was moving, its condition, and manner of loading? And if there was, state what the obstacle or obstruction was. A. There was no obstacle. Moving toward another car, it is impossible to tell how far timbers project.

Q,. 20. What distance from the place where the said Peter Plunkett took charge of said two moving cars was it to the place where the standing car was, and where he met his death? A. From six to eight car-lengths.

Q. 21. Would the said Peter Plunkett have been injured by the projecting ends of the timbers on said cars, or by anything else, if he had taken the precaution or care to have bent his head low enough to be below the line of said projecting timbers? A. He used ordinary care and precaution.

Q,. 22. Did not Peter Plunkett fail in his attempt to clear his head from the ends of the projecting timbers on said cars, while'trying to make said coupling? A. He did.

Q,. 24. How far over the ends of said cars did the said timbers project? A. The west end of east car, part of the timbers projected two feet; the east end of west car, part of timbers projected from one to twelve inches.

Q,. 26. Were not the cars between which Peter Plunkett was killed received by the defendant from a connecting line •east on the morning of June 28, 1878, then already loaded, and in the same manner that they were at the time hé was killed? A. Yes.

Q,. 28. How long had said cars, loaded as they were, been in the possession of the defendant prior to the time of Peter Plunkett’s death? State the time in hours, as near as you ean. A.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Kan. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railroad-v-plunkett-kan-1881.