Brabbits v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.

38 Wis. 289
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 38 Wis. 289 (Brabbits v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.) 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
Brabbits v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 38 Wis. 289 (Wis. 1875).

Opinion

LtON, J.

It is claimed by the learned counsel for tbe defendant, that there is no testimony in the case tending to show that the engine attached to the train on which the plaintiff was employed, was defective or not reasonably safe; and that if there is any such testimony, there is none tending to prove that the defect therein caused the injury of which the plaintiff complains. After a careful perusal of .the testimony, we find ourselves unable to concur in either position.

Sinclair, the engineer in charge of the alleged defective engine, testified that it was defective in that the throttle valve leaked; and that the effects thereof were, that the engine wasted water; that it was not safe to leave it long on the side track; that it was harder to handle; and that it could not be used as well in switching. Also (quoting his language), “ the effect of a leaky valve is, that it [the engine] stops and stands quicker when you reverse it.” This witness evidently testifies under a strong bias in favor of the defendant, yet he admits that when the plaintiff was injured, he (the witness) remarked “ that defendant would fix the throttle for the valve, now that a man had his hand hurt.” “I made the remark that I thought they would fix that throttle, now that a man got hurt.” This remark tends to show that the idea that the defect in the engine was the causd of the injury, was no mere afterthought of the plaintiff, but was immediately suggested to the mind of one present when the plaintiff was injured, and who perhaps was the best qualified to judge correctly as to the real cause of the injury.

Owen McDermott, a practical locomotive engineer, corroborated the testimony of Sinclair, and said that, when switching, an engine with a leaky throttle valve might get the start of you, and give a jerk, and come and go too quickshe might be liable to do so. The engine would start quicker on reversing it, if the throttle valve leaked.”

To the same effect is the testimony of James Gates, a witness called by the plaintiff. An objection was made on behalf [294]*294of tbe defendant, and overruled by the court, that this witness was not competent to testify as an expert. This objection may as well be considered and disposed of here as elsewhere. Gates testified that he then had .control of a steam engine in the works* of a manufacturing company at Jefferson, and that while he did not claim to be a practical engineer, and was not a first class locomotive 'engineer, he had fired and handled a locomotive and understood an engine. We think he was competent to testify to so plain and simple a matter as the effect of a leaky throttle valve. This witness says: “The unsafety of a leaky throttle valve arises partly because the engineer is unable to tell what steam he has in the cylinder.” All of these witnesses testify that when the throttle valve leaks, steam. escapes into the cylinder and makes the engine harder to manage.

The plaintiff testified that some cars loaded with iron had been run from a side track at Clinton Junction on the main track; that he went on the track, between them and the cars attached to the engine, to couple them ; that when the engine had nearly stopped, he gave a signal, and the ’cars attached to the engine (quoting the language of the plaintiff) “ came all of a sudden, and they caught me before I could get out of the way ; they came all of a sudden, and caught my hand before I could get it out.”

Yery clearly, the foregoing testimony tends to prove that the engine was defective and unsafe to be used in switching; that an unusually sudden movement of that part of the train attached to the engine caused the injury complained of; and that the suddenness of such movement, and hence the injury, might have been caused by the leaky condition of the throttle valve.

It is true that Sinclair testified that the leak was slight, and gave his opinion that it • had no influence in producing the injury ; and Owen McDermott testified that he was speaking of the effects of a bad leak, and that a slight one would do little [295]*295or no barm. It also appeared tbat the cars which the pláintiff was coupling when injured, were loaded with iron which projected beyond the ends of the cars, making the process of coupling more difficult and probably more dangerous. But these facts, while they may weaken the force of the testimony tending to prove that the engine was defective and that such defect was the cause of the injury, do not obliterate such testimony. That testimony still remains in the case; and the question whether it proves the facts which it tends to prove, was properly submitted to the jury.

The next, and indeed the controlling question in the case, arises upon the following instruction which the learned circuit judge gave the jury, and to which due exception was taken on behalf of the defendant: “ If the company had any individual in their service, whose duty it was made by the'company itself to take charge of the repairs of engines, to whom engineers were to report when engines became out of repair, and whose duty it was made by the company to act on such reports —• to see that the engines were put in repair, — I must instruct you that if such notice was given to any person thus acting in behalf of the defendant in this case, such notice is good notice to the company.”

That this instruction may be fully understood, it is necessary to state that the undisputed evidence in the case proves, that when the plaintiff was injured, one Jefferson McDermott was, and for a considerable length of time before had been, in the service of the defendant as foreman of its round house, or shop for the repair of engines, at Chicago; that he had charge of all the hands there employed; that when an engine was out of repair, it was the duty of the engineer thereof to report the fact to McDermott, whose duty it was to see that the same was repaired ; that he was the proper person to whom the defect in the engine in question should have been reported (if such engine was defective or out of repair), and Sinclair was the proper person to make such report; that the defendant had [296]*296other shops of a similar character, at other points, each in charge of a foreman ; that one Tilden, who is called the master mechanic, had general supervision of all repairs of the motive power, tools and machinery of the defendant, and general charge of all the men employed in the locomotive department of the company, including the power to employ men in, or discharge them from, the service of the defendant in that department; and that the foreman had no such power to employ or discharge men without the consent of the master mechanic.

And here it will be convenient to dispose of another objection taken during the trial, and relied upon to reverse the judgment. The foreman, McDermott, was asked, on behalf of the defendant, whose business it was to employ hands at the round house; but an objection thereto was sustained, and the testimony excluded. If the testimony was material, it was most favorable to the defendant (as will hereinafter appear), that it be proved that the witness had no power to employ the hands who worked under him. That he had not, is an undisputed fact in the case, proved by the testimony of Tilden. Hence the defendant was not prejudiced by the ruling, and the rejection of the offered testimony (if erroneous) was not an error that will work a reversal of the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Wis. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brabbits-v-chicago-northwestern-railway-co-wis-1875.