Baney v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

218 N.W. 424, 116 Neb. 615, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 162
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1928
DocketNo. 26037
StatusPublished

This text of 218 N.W. 424 (Baney v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baney v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 218 N.W. 424, 116 Neb. 615, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 162 (Neb. 1928).

Opinion

Dean, J.

This is an action at law wherein Edith L. Baney, plaintiff, widow of George W. Baney, sued to recover damages which she alleges she sustained by the accidental death of her husband which was caused by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, defendant, m that the company negligently failed to furnish a reasonably safe, efficient, and workable air-locking device on a certain steel dump railroad car which was owned, or at least furnished and operated, by the defendant company, in hauling dirt from the state capítol square and dumping it on the state fair grounds from one of the above mentioned dump cars. Besides his widow, the decedent left surviving him four minor children, namely, Edith 8, Joan 7, Marguerite 4, and George 2, and these children, as alleged, are all dependent upon plaintiff for support and schooling and the like. Baney was an employee of the state of Nebraska when the accident happened. Hence, the state became a party defendant and, in respect of the state's liability or interest herein, the court ordered and adjudged that “the matter of rights and liabilities between plaintiff and the defendant state of Nebraska be reserved until ruling on motion for new trial.”

The plaintiff filed a remittitur in the sum of $20,000, on condition that a rehearing be denied. The instrument, which includes the remittitur within its recitals, and also matter in respect of the state's alleged liability, follows:

“Comes now Edith L. Baney, administratrix of the estate of George W. Baney, deceased, plaintiff, in person and by her attorneys George E. Hager and Clifford L. Rein, and [617]*617hereby freely and voluntarily remits, from the verdict of the jury in the sum of $45,000 heretofore rendered herein, the sum of $20,000, and hereby freely and voluntarily consents that the said court may enter judgment against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, a corporation, defendant, and in favor of the state of Nebraska, defendant, for $5,400, the amount due the state of Nebraska under the Nebraska workmen’s compensation act, and against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company., a corporation, defendant, and in favor of Edith L. Baney, administratrix of the estate of George W. Baney, deceased, plaintiff, in the sum of $19,600, the amount due said plaintiff under the Nebraska workmen's compensation act.”

Upon submission of the remittitur the court entered the following order:

“This court having heretofore ordered that the plaintiff file a remittitur of $20,000 herein, and it now appearing that the plaintiff has filed remittitur in said amount, the court now orders that the state of Nebraska will continue weekly (workmen’s compensation) payments to plaintiff as heretofore ordered by this court, and upon any final judgment herein, same to be paid into this court for adjustment with compensation payments heretofore ordered.”

The state has not appealed. The defendant railroad company alone has appealed to have the proceeding and judgment reviewed.

The accident occurred August 20, 1925, in connection with the unloading of dirt on the Nebraska state fáir grounds adjacent to Lincoln. Baney was then a robust, able-bodied man of 31 years. As a state employee he and other workmen had somewhat to do with the filling and levelling of low and uneven surface depressions on the state fair grounds with dirt hauled from the site of the new capítol building. More than 4,500 car-loads of this dirt were loaded on steel dump cars by steam power shovels from the excavations made on the state house grounds preparatory to the erection of the new state capítol build-[618]*618mg and the substructure or basement. When a train of these cars was loaded it was hauled by gasoline tractor engines on temporary steel rail tracks from Fifteenth to Seventh street and from thence to and upon the state fair grounds. The gasoline tractors were furnished by the state, and driven by state employees, and all temporary rail tracks, which are referred to herein, and wherever laid, were furnished and installed by the state.

The loaded cars, on arrival at destination, were hauled or pushed for the most part by the defendant’s locomotive engines from place to place thereon and dumped at such points as the filling and levelling process on the fair grounds might require. Baney, with other state employees, worked at spreading and levelling the dirt. Shortly after one of the cars was dumped, and while Baney and another employee were cleaning out the moist dirt that stuck to the side of the car, for it was a rainy day, the moving parts of the car suddenly, and without warning, “returned from an inclined to a horizontal position,” and Baney’s body was caught, his chest was crushed, and he instantly died. Shortly afterward the car was opened with crowbars and the body was released. And in defendant’s answer and in its brief it is admitted that Baney’s death was caused “by his being caught and fatally injured between the moving parts of a dump car.”

The plaintiff contends, as above stated, that the defendant railroad company negligently failed to keep its car-locking device in a reasonably safe condition. This device, when in normal working order, was intended to hold the moving parts of the car, after it was dumped, in an upright position until such moving parts were released and, upon such release, the moving parts automatically returned to a horizontal position. The controlling mechanism of this dumping apparatus was in the cab of the locomotive as a part of its equipment and was so placed as to be readily accessible to the engineer, or engine foreman, for control and release as occasion should require. In their brief plaintiff’s counsel make the following state[619]*619ment: “On August 20, 1925, at about 11 o’clock in the morning, the Burlington’s crew, in charge of its engine foreman, John Gettman, pulled into the fair grounds a train of 10 or 12 of these dump cars loaded with dirt. Before spotting the cars in the locality where the dirt was wanted, the engineer, Smith, stopped the train and Gettman got off and inspected the track.”

It will not be denied that John Gettman, the engine foreman, and locomotive engineer Smith were both employees of the defendant railroad company at the time of the accident. The plaintiff alleges that Gettman applied the air. Prom the record it fairly appears that either Gettman or Smith must have applied the air, but the dumping device failed to work, as above noted. The defendant argues “that the railroad company furnished a man to dump the car, and not to unload the dirt.” This feature will presently be discussed.

In respect of the place of the accident one of the civil engineers, who was engaged by the state in the project, testified that the track “was about level at that place.” In this he was corroborated by one or more of the state's witnesses. But this was a disputed question for the jury. This engineer also testified that Baney’s duties were “to maintain and construct that track in accordance with the desires of the Burlington trainmen and the Burlington officials that might be there.” Upon further inquiry he repeated the above statement and added that “somewhere around 40” dump cars, each of 20-yard capacity, were used from time to time in hauling the dirt. He averred that the closing of the moving parts of the car that killed Baney could have been prevented by applying “the air to the cylinder,” had the equipment of the air dumping device been in a normal working condition.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 N.W. 424, 116 Neb. 615, 1928 Neb. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baney-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-neb-1928.