Burnett v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

124 P.2d 307, 113 Mont. 253, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 15
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1942
DocketNo. 8,275.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 P.2d 307 (Burnett v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnett v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 124 P.2d 307, 113 Mont. 253, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 15 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was commenced by Levi Nadeau as plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries which he said he had •sustained while working in the employ of the defendant Northern Pacific Railway Company, as a common laborer and in its freight yard of its station a.t Livingston, Montana. The ease was tried and went to judgment for the defendant on motion for nonsuit. From this judgment the plaintiff appealed. After the appeal was perfected and before argument of the appeal, the plaintiff, appellant died. Proceedings were had whereby R. A. Burnett was appointed administrator of his estate. The administrator was substituted as the party in interest and the appeal now is prosecuted in the name of said Burnett as administrator of the estate of Levi Nadeau, deceased, as appellant. For convenience in discussing the case in this opinion the deceased, Levi Nadeau, will be referred to generally as the plaintiff.

The action was brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U. S. C. A., sections 51 et seq., the complaint alleg *255 ing that the defendant company, an interstate carrier, had been guilty of negligence toward the plaintiff while he was in its-employ and engaged in work pertaining to its business as a common carrier in interstate commerce, and because of which he suffered personal injury. The general complaint is that the-company had failed to furnish the plaintiff a safe place to work, and had failed to furnish proper equipment and appliances necessary for his safety in performing the work he was. required to do. The prayer is for $20,000 damages.

The company, by its answer, denied any negligence on its. part, and alleged that the injury which plaintiff complained of resulted wholly from his own negligence, and also set up-contributory negligence and assumption of risk as defense.

The accident which is the basis of the plaintiff’s complaint occurred in the latter part of the livestock shipping season, on. December 7, 1936. The plaintiff had been employed by the-company for five or six years, working on section crews, out on the line and in the yards, repairing track, scalping weeds and other general track and yard work. At this particular time he-was working in a small crew in the yards at Livingston, cleaning up and keeping the tracks and cars in order for the handling-of the company’s traffic. Late in the afternoon of this day the-foreman under whom he was working sent the plaintiff and another man to clean and condition some stock cars used for transportation of livestock and which were standing on a spur-track in the yards. The work entailed cleaning out dirt accumulations on the floor of the ears, and sanding the cars, that is-throwing in fresh sand on the floors of the cars. The sand used lay in piles along the track where the cars stood. This sanding-track was over near the stock yards, a spur track that would hold about thirty-five stock ears. The sand was dumped along-this track on the south side in piles about six or seven feet wide from the ties out.

In cleaning and sanding these particular cars the dirt was-thrown out of the car door on the north side and deposited in piles along the north side of the track and the fresh sand was; *256 shoveled in from the sand pile lying along the south side of the track, and through the door on the south side of the car. In entering the ears to clean them the men climbed up the brakeman’s ladder at the end of the car and moved along the side of the car, finding foot-holds and hand-holds in cracks and ledges .and entered the side door. After the dirt was cleaned out and thrown out the door on the north side, the men got out of the ■car from the door on the south side and got over onto the sand pile to throw in the sand. The plaintiff was injured in jumping from the ear and onto the sand pile. The company at no time had provided step ladders or other convenience for getting in and out of the cars and no such convenience was provided in this instance. There was no foreman immediately present directing the men in doing this work. Plaintiff was experienced in this work. He said he had cleaned a great many cars that way, that ■during the fall shipping season they would clean sometimes as .high as twenty-five to thirty-five cars a day.

The plaintiff and the other man with him, on this occasion, had cleaned and sanded two ears and cleaned a third, and the accident in which the plaintiff was injured occurred as he was .getting out of the car through the side door and onto the sand pile on the south side of the track to shovel in sand. There had been a fall of snow the day before and the sand piles along the track were partly covered and the holes and depressions filled with snow. The plaintiff, in getting out of the car, sat on the edge of the floor in the car door, and placing his two hands on the edge of the car floor, one hand on either side of him, threw himself forward, using his hands and arms to spring iimself forward, and thus jumped over onto the sand pile. He landed on his feet in a hole in the top of the sand pile, and his body fell backward resulting in the injury of which he complains. The man was fifty-nine years old and weighed two hundred pounds.

The sand pile extended out six or seven feet from the track. The ground sloped away from the track and the sand pile had been shoveled down so the top of the pile at this place was *257 about one foot lower than tbe edge of tbe ties. The ends of the railway ties were about even with the side of the ear, and the car floor was about four feet above the railroad track. The track was clear of snow as was the ground near the track for about three and a half feet out.

The plaintiff says that the fall, when he landed in the hole in the top of the sand pile, resulted in injury to his back and other parts of the body of a permanent nature, from which he has ever since suffered and as a result of which he has been totally disabled and incapacitated from doing any work. He lays the blame of the accident on the company in that it had failed to provide proper equipment and convenience for safe exit from the car in which he was working, and in failing to give attention to the condition of the top of the sand pile and in failing to guard against danger of accident to the men in leaping from the car and onto the sand pile to shovel in the sand. The hole in which he landed with his feet was not noticeable because of the snow. The hole, he said, was about thirteen inches wide and about one foot deep. Of this condition of danger, he says, the company knew or should have known and of which it should have warned the plaintiff and taken other precautions against his possible injury therefrom.

The facts as above stated were brought out by the plaintiff’s own testimony. The case was tried to a jury. At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant moved for a nonsuit, on the grounds that the plaintiff had failed to prove any negligence on the part of the defendant; that there was no evidence to show that any negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s alleged injuries; that the injuries, if any, suffered by the plaintiff were caused by his own negligence and failure to exercise ordinary care for his own safety; that the condition of danger, if any, was open and obvious and familiar to the plaintiff and was part of the risk the plaintiff assumed.

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Related

Taylor v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad
384 P.2d 759 (Montana Supreme Court, 1963)
Allen v. Smeding
357 P.2d 13 (Montana Supreme Court, 1960)
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292 P.2d 66 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
124 P.2d 307, 113 Mont. 253, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnett-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-mont-1942.