Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Coleman

182 F.2d 712, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2855
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 28, 1950
Docket12788_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 F.2d 712 (Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Coleman, 182 F.2d 712, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2855 (5th Cir. 1950).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge,

Brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act,1 the suit was for damages for personal injuries received in a fall from a railroad trestle or bridge as a result of claimed negligence of the defendant in sending plaintiff to work thereon,

Ag plaintiff pleaded it,2 the negIigcnce consisted in this: that; though he had had thirty-seven years railroad experience as a member of a section crew, twenty-five years of that time as section foreman, he was not experienced in working on railroad bridges or trestles; that, notwithstanding defendant knew this was so, it ordered him to go upon one with his gang to supervise its repairing and building; that the work was unsafe and hazardous, was outside the ordinary duties of his employment, and he was not fully aware of its danger.

Defendant, denying that it was guilty of negligence as alleged, the cause was tried to a jury, and at the conclusion of all the evidence,3 none of which contradicted or differed in any substantial respect from that [714]*714given by plaintiff, defendant moved for a directed verdict.

This motion denied, and a verdict for plaintiff coming in, defendant moved, under Rule SO, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. This motion also denied, it appealed from the judgment on the ver[715]*715diet, assigning as error the denial of these motions.

Here, setting out fully in its brief, the undispuLed facts and insisting that they do not, they cannot, be said to support the charge of negligence made against it, appellant urges upon us that the judgment must be reversed and here rendered for it.

Appellee, quoting none of the evidence, hut setting out instead a purported summary of its effect, presents the case here as though appellee was put at a task made dangerous by the negligence of the defendant without being adequately advised of its dangers or provided with proper safeguards against them.

As an example of the discrepancies between the summary and the evidence itself, appellee states in his brief, “Plaintiff was sent on the job by defendant’s road master over his protest, plaintiff realizing that the task was dangerous and not voluntarily assuming such duties.”

The evidence of plaintiff, however, as set out in the note above, shows that he did not object to undertaking the work because of its dangers but because he thought he might not have the skill to do it properly, and when told that he could do it and to go ahead, he made no further objection. His evidence shows, too, that there was no danger whatever in doing the work except the danger of falling, if he did not keep his balance, a danger not due to any negligent condition but merely to the fact that the trestle was 16 feet high, and if he slipped through or fell off the ties he would fall to the bottom. It shows, too, that a part of his duties for the thirty-seven years he had been a section man, twenty-five of them as foreman, was to keep constant watch and ward over this and other trestles, that he was walking and riding over them regularly, in the course of his duties, to find and report defects in them, he and his crew keeping the track over them in repair and sometimes making temporary repairs on the trestles, and that no one knew better than he, from long experience in crossing tresties, that if he did not keep his balance, and did not watch his step, he might fall through or off the trestle.

Again appellee’s brief, on the same page, comments upon the fact that the guard rail, which was placed on the ties to hold them steady, had been taken off, and there was nothing provided for plaintiff’s safety or to prevent him from falling.

The evidence of plaintiff himself shows conclusively that the so-called guard rail was ,not intended to, it did not, it could not, act as a safety measure to keep men working on the bridge from falling. It was put in to keep the ties from separating and being pushed out of line by passing trains. The first thing that had to be done in repairing the trestle, as plaintiff himself testified, was to take the guard rails off.

None of the cases cited by appellee are in point. They deal with situations where there is conflicting evidence, or where the evidence shows a dangerous situation resulting from want of care. Nothing was out of place here. Nothing was other than as it ought to he. On the contrary, everything was as it ought to be in working on and bringing the repair job to completion. The charge or claim that defendant did anything that it ought not to have done or left anything undone that it ought to have done, finds no support in the evidence.

As plaintiff himself frankly testified, there was nothing that could have been told him that he did not already know, and no harm would have come to him if he had not lost his balance. The fact, which appellee does not plead, hut of which he seeks to make something here, that plaintiff was sixty-three years old, is entirely without significance. As a matter of common knowledge, there is nothing in the mere fact that an active able bodied man, accustomed for years to walking over, working in connection with, and inspecting trestles, is sixty-three years old to make him more likely to fall off or through the trestle than a man of [716]*716lesser years. Indeed, with the caution and prudence that comes with years and experience, he is less likely to do so. Too many difficulties and impediments are already being placed unjustly in the way of competent and skilled older men to keep them from getting and holding jobs, for this court to add to them the view that the mere fact that an employee had attained the age of sixty-three made it an act of negligence to set him to doing what he was doing here.

The evidence in this case is so without dispute, the situation it portrays is so clear, simple and free from any suggestion of negligence or fault on the part of the defendant proximately causing or contributing to plaintiff’s injury as to make the citation of authorities unnecessary. In emphasis, however, of the correctness of this view, we have set out in the note below citations of, and quotations from a few of the leading cases.4

The judgment is reversed and here rendered for appellant.

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Related

State v. Adams
178 S.E.2d 72 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1970)
Finnegan v. Monongahela Connecting Railroad
108 A.2d 321 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1954)
Seaboard Air Line R. Co. v. Gentry
46 So. 2d 485 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1950)
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Coleman
182 F.2d 712 (Fifth Circuit, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
182 F.2d 712, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-coast-line-r-co-v-coleman-ca5-1950.