Ballard v. Sacramento Northern Railway Co.

14 P.2d 1045, 126 Cal. App. 486, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 432
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4611.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 1045 (Ballard v. Sacramento Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. Sacramento Northern Railway Co., 14 P.2d 1045, 126 Cal. App. 486, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 432 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The plaintiff had judgment based upon the second cause of action set out in her complaint, from which judgment the defendant appeals. The second cause of action in the complaint sets forth, after reciting preliminary matters showing the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action, that Charles K. Ballard was, on and prior to the eleventh day of November, 1930, a brakeman regularly employed by the defendant. That on the eleventh day of November, 1930, at Marysville, Yuba County, said Charles K. Ballard came to his death by being thrown from the top of a freight-car then and there being operated by the defendant. That the direct and proximate result of the death of Charles K. Ballard was the hauling, and permitting to be hauled and used on its railway line, a certain freight-car known as a “gondola car”, that was not equipped with efficient hand-brakes; that the hand-brake on said car had a defective and crooked brake-shaft; that by reason of the defect in the brake-shaft the brake on said car could not be set with safety; that when the wheel at the top of the brake-shaft was turned, the crook in the shaft would cause the wheel to flare up on one side and down on the other, thereby causing the deceased to lose his balance and to fall from the top of the car to, and beneath the wheels thereof, which instantly caused his death; that the defendant was operating said car with a defective and inefficient brake that could not be set with safety, contrary to the terms and provisions of the Federal Safety Appliance Act. The section of the Federal Safety Appliance Act and the rules and regulations of the interstate commerce promulgated in pursuance thereof, required that the rim or perimeter of the brake wheel on the top of the brake-shaft should, on gondola cars, have a clearance of at least four inches above the top of the *488 car. The evidence in this case showed a violation of this rule, and that there was not such clearance.

The photographic exhibits in this case show that in order to set the brake on a gondola ear, the brakeman must take a position upon a narrow footboard on the end of the car, placing his foot against the “dog” or “pawl”, give the brake-wheel a turn with his hands, and with one of his feet push the “dog” or “pawl” into the ratchet which holds the brake as set. The footboard upon which the brakeman is required to stand is about midway between the top of the car and the bottom of the sill of the framework upon which the car is built. The photograph shows that this footboard is very narrow, and only of sufficient length to afford standing room for the brakeman operating the brake. Whenever it is desired to set the brake more securely than can be done by simply using the wheel at the top of' the brake-shaft, a club is inserted in the wheel, placing one end against the shaft as a fulcrum, and pressing the club against a spoke of the wheel. The length of the club reaching out beyond the circumference of the wheel gives the brakeman added power in setting the brake.

It appears from the testimony that this manner of setting brakes is required whenever the car is stopped upon a grade or incline, such that the brake cannot be efficiently operated from the power afforded by the simple use of the wheel.

The record shows that at the time of the accident the appellant was, and had, prior thereto maintained a railway ■ of interstate commerce, or a railway over which interstate commerce was carried. As heretofore stated the deceased was employed in the capacity of a brakeman. On the day in question the crew of which the deceased was a member was engaged in backing a string of cars propelled by an electric motor, for the purpose of setting out two cars at a place known as the “Sandpit” in Marysville. At the place where the cars were to be spotted the grade or incline of the track was such that in order to set the brakes sufficiently tight for them to remain stationary upon the grade, it was necessary for the deceased to use a brake club. The gondola car to which we have referred was one of the cars so spotted and the car upon which the deceased was engaged in setting the brakes at the time he met with his death. *489 This car was known as number 4467, and was being spotted for the purpose of being loaded with sand.

The testimony is conflicting as to the flare of the brake-wheel, that is, as to the difference between a horizontal plane and the plane described by the wheel in its revolutions. Some of the witnesses testified that there was a variation of two inches. One witness, who apparently made a minute examination of the wheel and the brake-shaft testified that there was a difference of six inches between the higher and the lower side of the wheel as it was turned upon the bent shaft.

It is admitted in the record that the brake-wheel did not have the clearance prescribed by the rules promulgated by the Interstate Commerce Commission governing braking appliances on gondola cars. This negligence on the part of the defendant, while not controverted upon this appeal, is held by the appellant not to have been the efficient cause of the accident.

On the part of the respondent it is contended that the braking appliance which we have described was not only violative of the Federal Safety Appliance Act, but that it could not be efficiently operated safely. The question of whether the braking appliance could or could not be operated efficiently can only be resolved by taking into consideration the conditions surrounding the location of the car at the time when it became necessary to operate the appliance, that is, whether the condition of the braking appliance was such that it could be safely operated by the use of what is called a “brakeman’s club”, in order to set the brakes sufficiently tight to hold the car in place while being loaded. The respondent contends that the flare of the wheel giving, as one Witness said, a drop of six inches in its revolutions, could not be safely operated when a brokeman was using a club, as the flare in the wheel or the variation from a horizontal plane in its revolutions was such as to create the hazard of the club slipping on the brake-shaft and endangering the person of the brakeman. The photograph to which we have referred shows that the operator of the brake had a very narrow footboard upon which to stand, and that any defect which would cause the brake-club to have a tendency to slip, might very readily imperil the person of the operator. True, if the operator of the brake had a very tight hold *490 of the wheel with his right hand, while he was pushing the brake-club with his left (this being the manner of operation), it might be possible, even though the brake-club slipped and the operator’s balance on the footboard was disturbed, he might save himself by holding to the brake-wheel with his right hand. Contrariwise, if the full force and strength of his body were used in pressure upon the brake-club in order to securely set the brakes, under the conditions presented it is reasonable to infer that any slight defect in the mechanism or a defect such as we have described might reasonably and probably would result in injury to the operator.

It may here be said that the photograph of the car in question, although very small, being about 2%x4% inches, clearly shows the slant of the brake-wheel at the top of the shaft.

It is not simply a question of whether the brake in this case was efficient.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 1045, 126 Cal. App. 486, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-sacramento-northern-railway-co-calctapp-1932.