Baltzer v. Chicago, Madison & Northern Railroad

53 N.W. 885, 83 Wis. 459, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 271
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 N.W. 885 (Baltzer v. Chicago, Madison & Northern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltzer v. Chicago, Madison & Northern Railroad, 53 N.W. 885, 83 Wis. 459, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 271 (Wis. 1892).

Opinion

Pinney, J.

1. It is manifest that the evidence of the negligence of the engineer in running the engine on the spur track at an unsafe rate of speed, on the occasion when the plaintiff was riding on the pilot with a view to couple .the drawbar of the pilot to the flat cars, required the submission of the case to the jury. Whether the accident was caused, as the plaintiff testified, by the sudden reversal of the engine, whereby he was thrown forward and caught and his arm crushed, as he describes, or. whether he accidentally and without fault of the engineer lost his balance while holding the drawbar and reaching forward to draw the pin or to attempt to make the coupling, was a question for the jury, as well as the question whether the engineer ran the engine at a dangerous rate of speed up to the point where the plaintiff claims he suddenly reversed the engine, and within a few feet of the flat cars. The motion for a nonsuit was, we think, properly denied. Whether the evidence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff, occurring at the time and directly contributing to his injury, was so clear and decisive as to warrant the court in withdrawing the case from the jury and directing a verdict for the defendant, it is not necessary now to decide. We think that it may be fairly claimed that the evidence of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff was such, ai least, that different minds might well come to different conclusions in respect to it, and as to whether the plaintiff should or should not recover.

We think, however, that the judgment of the circuit -court should be reversed for error in the instructions to the jury. The evidence is undisputed that the engineer is under the command and control of the brakeman while en[470]*470gaged in coupling and switching cars in or out on side or spur tracks, and is hound to obey his signals. It is clear that the plaintiff did not give him any signal such as the code of signals and course of business required, although he was, as his testimony shows, fully conscious of the rate of speed at which the engine was running, and although he shouted, merely, the engineer testified that he did not hear him; and he was, as he says, looking out and attending to his duties. The proper signal was by a motion in the night-time of the lamp or lantern, and in daylight with the hand. It is true that the plaintiff says that at times they shouted, instead of making signals such as the code required ; but employees, in doing so, took great risk of the signal not being heard or understood. The code, requiring signals to be such as are addressed to the eye instead of the sense of hearing, is no doubt founded on long experience, and upon the ground that one addressed to the eye is much more certain and likely to be understood than one attempted to be conveyed by sound of the voice, which may not be heard or understood, in consequence of the noise of the engine and cars in motion, and the escape of steam. Again, the evidence shows, not that it is dangerous to ride on the pilot when going at the rate of speed mentioned, but that it is dangerous to attempt to make the coupling under the circumstances stated; the pin not having been properly placed, but being in the drawhead of the flat car, so that the coupling could not be made without it being first withdrawn. The rules required the plaintiff to “be very particular to notice the speed at which cars are moving” when coupling, and, “if moving at a dangerous rate, no attempt must be made to couple by going between the cars; ” and it was further declared that “ it is dangerous to uncouple, or attempt to place links or pins or drawbars, while cars are in motion, and is strictly forbidden.” The plaintiff’s testimony shows that on this occasion it was his [471]*471duty to have known that the pin was properly placed, so as to safely make the coupling, or to have himself placed it there. He had the right, by proper signal, to regulate the speed of the engine, and even to stop it, so that he could-place the pin and make the coupling in a safe and prudent manner. He took the risk of doing what his employer had forbidden him to do, and disregarded the observance of methods calculated to secure his safety, as shown by experienced railway employees long familiar with such work.

It is argued that the witness Stein, in his testimony, justified the course pursued by the plaintiff. He said it “ was safe to ride on the pilot before he made the coupling, if it did n’t strike anything; that it was perfectly safe to ride on the pilot going down the side track, but when he found the pin was not set he should have stopped the engineer. To make the coupling safely, it was his duty to know' that the pin was in the proper position before he attempted to make it, and before his engine arrived there.” He also said: “ It was the duty of the engineer to slow up without a signal, so that the coupling could be made in safety.” “ I should say it was a dangerous thing to make a coupling of the front of an engine to a car, riding on the pilot; the pin in and the engine moving. The danger consists in the fact that he cannot make the coupling unless he attempts to raise the pin just as he enters the drawbar. I should think it would take his attention away from one place to another, from where he was going to enter the drawbar to where he was going to catch the pin, and he is liable to let his drawbar, from the weight of it, swing below the hole and strike the lower lip and glance down.” The witness Carter testified that he had made couplings under the circumstances described, but said: It would be dangerous to attempt to make the coupling when the pin is in the hole with the drawbar in my hand. The danger consists in your being liable to hit the drawbar, or be thrown under the engine or [472]*472car, if you didn’t happen to make it. If you cannot get the pin out in time, you are liable to let the drawbar drop and the pilot run under the car and crush a man, — throw him off the pilot, and be run over by the engine.” If it was the duty of the engineer to slow up without a signal, his failure to do so might not justify the brakeman in neglecting to give a signal until it was too late to be effective.

It is difficult to distinguish this case from Lockwood v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 55 Wis. 50, 66, in which this court said: “If he voluntarily placed himself in a dangerous position, not required of him by the rules of the company or by the order of some superior officer or employee, and was injured while in such position, even though the negligence of the company was one cause of the injury, he cannot recover, because his placing himself in such dangerous position was also negligence on his part, and contributed to the injury.” Wolsey v. L. S. & M. S. R. Co. 33 Ohio St. 227. And many other cases might be cited to this effect.

It is apparent from these considerations that the question of the existence of contributory negligence, under the evidence, to say the least, was a fairly close one. Whether the effect of his conduct may not be controlled '.or materially modified, in view of the conflict of evidence as to the speed of the engine, and evidence that it was the duty of the engineer to have slowed up without a signal, and whether he did so or not, and in view of all the other facts and circumstances, or whether the plaintiff was' guilty of contributory negligence, so that the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant, we do not find it necessary to decide, and we intimate no opinion on the point.

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Related

Hines v. Sweeney
201 P. 165 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1921)
Wabash Railroad v. Keister
67 N.E. 521 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1903)
Crane v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
67 N.W. 1132 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1896)
Baltzer v. Chicago, Madison & Northern Railroad
60 N.W. 716 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.W. 885, 83 Wis. 459, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltzer-v-chicago-madison-northern-railroad-wis-1892.