Baker v. Michigan Central Railroad

135 N.W. 937, 169 Mich. 609, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 778
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1912
DocketDocket No. 40
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 135 N.W. 937 (Baker v. Michigan Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Michigan Central Railroad, 135 N.W. 937, 169 Mich. 609, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 778 (Mich. 1912).

Opinions

McAlvay, J.

Plaintiff, as administratrix, brought suit against defendant to recover damages caused by an injury to her husband, which resulted in his death, and recovered a judgment.

Plaintiff’s decedent entered into the employment of defendant company as a switchman July 9, 1907, and was employed as such during all the time thereafter until the date of his injury on January 1, 1908, except for about one month, when he was working as a switchman for defendant at Grayling. At the time of his injury, he was at work with a switching crew in the yard of defendant at Bay City, West Side. The train upon which the switching was being done at the time was a regular daily passenger train, known as the Midland train, leaving West Bay City in the morning and running to Midland, about 19 miles, then returning, then going to Yassar, 22 miles, and returning from Yassar to West Bay City. This made one round trip. Two trips were made by this train every day.

Plaintiff claimed that there was a schedule or printed contract of hiring in force at the time and entered into between decedent as a switchman and defendant at the time [611]*611of his employment, which was furnished to all the switch-men. The portions material to be quoted therefrom are as follows:

“Michigan Central Railroad Company, Schedule of Wages for Switchmen. In effect west of the Detroit River, December 1, 1905. Michigan Central Railroad Co. Office of general superintendent. Commencing December 1, 1905, the following rules for switchmen west of the Detroit river will be in force: * * *
“Art. 11. All hose and chains will be cut on passenger trains after they arrive at all stations before being switched by carmen wherever carmen are stationed instead of switchmen. * * *
“Art. 18. Rates referred to herein will remain in effect two years from December 1, 1905.
“J. H. Snyder,
“Assistant General Superintendent.
“Approved: R. H. L’Hommedieu, General Manager.”

The contention of plaintiff in this case is briefly stated by her counsel as follows:

“The entire controversy therefore is comprised within this proposition: Defendant stipulated in its written contract with the switchmen that all hose would be cut by carmen on all its passenger trains after their arrival at all stations where carmen were stationed, instead of by the switchmen, and having knowingly violated this contract made for the protection of the switchmen, and having ordered, required, and directed the switchmen to cut such hose by hand, can a switchman, who was in the exercise of due care, injured while so working, recover from defendant for such injuries ?”

Before the consideration of the question propounded by plaintiff, it will be necessary to state further facts. This yard switching crew above mentioned, of which Baker, the deceased, was one, was on that day (which was a holiday) a pick-up crew, not the regular one, and was composed of five persons, viz.: Smith, conductor, O’Hare, engineer, Kratz, fireman, Baker and Shortridge, switchmen, also known as yard brakemen. This train, having made one round trip, had come in about noon, and the cars had been placed on the south Y in the yards at West Bay City for [612]*612switching, which is necessary for the purpose of putting the cars in proper order in making up the train to go out on the next trip, at about half past two. This crew was in the yard near this train, where some of them, including Baker, had eaten their dinners. A train in front of the switch engine blocked them in, and they waited for an hour or more until it moved out of the way. While the men were waiting, Yard Conductor Smith, who had charge of the train, having received his orders from General Yardmaster Jodway, came to where the men were, .and gave them the orders in the hearing of Baker about cutting the hose and chains and switching the cars. The crew then proceeded with the engine to do this switching. Shortridge, Baker, and Smith rode on the running board of the engine down towards the coaches. Smith and Baker jumped off. Shortridge remained on the engine, which was to be coupled onto the baggage car. Smith and Baker started back towards the rear of the train, and Baker asked Smith if he wanted the last coach cut off. Smith replied that he did, and Baker started on the run, and went under the platforms between the cars to do this work. The engine under the control of Switchman Short-ridge in coming back to couple onto the baggage car did not make the coupling. Another attempt was made, and, when they made the coupling, the cars were forced back, and Baker’s head was caught and crushed between the bumpers of the two cars where he was cutting or uncoupling the chains and air hose between them. He had unhooked one of the chains, but had not uncoupled the air hose or unhooked the other chain. ' The hose were designed to pull apart automatically when the cars separated, but the order of defendant was that they should be uncoupled by hand.

The work Switchman Baker was doing is the work mentioned and provided in article 11 of the rules for switchmen, above quoted, to be done by carmen. Bay City (East Side) was as far as this train was scheduled to run. When it arrived there, all passengers for that place [613]*613would be let off, and it would run across the river to West Bay City, and let off passengers, if any, at that place. Both Bay City and West Bay City are stations of defendant company. There were carmen at both stations. The record shows that — •

“ The carmen are located at a point where there is both receiving and dispatching. * * * When regular trains come in, there are carmen there at the West Side depot to examine them and do whatever work is necessary.”

The Midland train was a regular train. There is testimony tending to show that carmen were also stationed at the south Y where this train stood before it was switched to the coachyard. The record shows that on this train the work of cutting the chains and air hose was not done by carmen, but was required to be done by switchmen, and that this (with one exception) was the only passenger train so treated. Plaintiff’s decedent was a good competent switchman.

Defendant contended that Bay City was the terminal for this train; that it was not scheduled for West Bay City, and, after it arrived at the former place, it became “a dead train,” and was run over to West Bay City as such for switching; that no carmen charged with the duty of cutting the hose and chains on this train were stationed at the south Y where this train was run previous to switching ; that the switching crew had for more than five years always cut the chains and hose on this train; that the decedent, Baker, during the time he was employed in the Bay City yard, had worked with the crew which handled this train for 60 days before the accident, and knew how the work was done; that he voluntarily assumed the risk; that, if the accident was the result of negligence, it was the negligence of a fellow-servant, and not of the defendant. At the close of plaintiff’s proofs, defendant’s counsel asked for a directed verdict—

“For the reason that plaintiff had failed to prove any negligence on the part of defendant, * * * and that [614]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.W. 937, 169 Mich. 609, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-michigan-central-railroad-mich-1912.