Campbell v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad

102 A. 597, 92 Conn. 322, 1917 Conn. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 102 A. 597 (Campbell v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 102 A. 597, 92 Conn. 322, 1917 Conn. LEXIS 132 (Colo. 1917).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The case was tried to the jury, but it appears from the record that most of the facts were not in dispute. The Standard Oil Company, on August 17th, 1911, owned and used a yard for the storing of petroleum and its products. In the yard were five spur tracks, and one main track which passed through the gates of the yard to a connection with the defendant railroad outside the gates. These tracks were numbered from one to six. The railroad brought daily into the yard cars loaded with material for the Oil Company or empty cars owned by the Union Tank Company, which were loaded by the Oil Company with its products and transported out of the yard and to their destination by the railroad. An employee of the Oil Company gave to the conductor of the train upon reaching the gates instructions, oral or written, as to the location in the yard of the incoming cars, and as to which were the outgoing cars. The train would not enter the yard until an employee of the Oil Company opened the gates and threw the semaphore at a crossing of a trolley road outside the gates.

The Oil Company had no control over the operation of the train in or out of the yard, and no control over the train crew; these remained under the exclusive control of the railroad. The Oil Company exercised no other duties in connection with the train except to open the gates, to throw the semaphore, and to hand the conductor of the train his instructions as to the location of the incoming cars and as to the cars to be taken out of the yard.

*325 Under its agreement with the Tank Company, the Oil Company" repaired the cars of the Tank Company when found necessary, and it had on the day in question three men so employed, Mclnnis, Morrow, and the deceased Leinster, and a part of their work was the painting of the cars in the yard requiring painting, and under as well as over all other parts of the cars. The cars were repaired on all of these tracks.

On the day in question, an engine and four cars with a crew consisting of an engineer, a firemen, two switchmen, and a conductor, ran to the yard and received at the gate instructions as to incoming and outgoing cars. The engine then pushed into the yard four cars to be left there, and the crew was proceeding in due course with their work when Leinster, one of the three men engaged in repair work, was either caught between two cars on track five, or knocked down by the'impact of two cars, while he was either at work under one of the ears, or standing near one of the cars and outside the track.

The plaintiff claimed the injury occurred on track four, the defendants near track five. The jury found, by its answer to an interrogatory, that it occurred on track five, and on the evidence this fact must be taken as conclusively established. The plaintiff claimed to have proved that the car was pushed against the car under which Leinster was at work without notice to him of the approach of the train. The defendants claimed to have proved that Leinster had been instructed to place a blue flag in front of the car on which he was working, as a warning to the train not to approach, and that he had failed to do this. The plaintiff also claimed to have produced evidence that Leinster was engaged in the due course of his work painting underneath the car when he received his injury. The defendants claimed to have proved that Leinster had *326 no duty on track five, and was not then engaged upon the Oil Company’s work, nor under instruction from it, under which all work done by him was begun and pursued. The Oil Company also contends that the verdict was against the evidence.

The case against the Oil Company must rest upon proof, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that Leinster was at work in the course of his employment in painting a car on track five, and that, without notice to him of the approaching train, the Oil Company permitted the train to be pushed against the car Leinster was working on, or against the car next to the car he was working on, causing this car to strike the car he was working on, throwing him down, and the train immediately being pulled out the car passed over him causing him the injuries from which he died.

The plaintiff’s witness, Martin, testified that Leinster was on track four, the proof showed that he was on or near track five. The defendants argue that this tends strongly to discredit Martin. But we think the jury might have reached another view, and found that Martin was mistaken in the track, but not mistaken in what he saw Leinster doing.

The two questions of fact decisive of this motion to set aside the verdict are: 1. Did the train cause Leinster to be knocked down and run over without his having been notified of its approach? 2. At the time of his injury was Leinster engaged in his master’s work and by his express or implied command?

We briefly discuss in order these questions. A number of witnesses in behalf of the defendants testified to the existence of a rule and practice of the yard by which a blue flag was required to be placed upon the track in front of the car on this track which was being repaired, and that this flag was notice to the railroad crew to keep its train off this track. And several testi *327 fied that it was the duty of the employees on the repairs to place these flags, and that at the time of the accident there was no flag on track number five. If these were the only facts in evidence, and Leinster had notice of this rule, it would follow that Leinster was negligent in not having protected himself by complying with the rules of his master. But Crofut, the assistant yardmaster at the time of the accident, testified that this flag system was inaugurated after the accident. If we assume that the jury ought to have found that the flag system was in existence at the time of the accident, this does not conclude the question of Leinster’s negligence, as the defendants seem to assume. It must further appear that Leinster had been instructed to protect himself by placing one of the flags on the track on which he was at work. Mills, the local manager of the Oil Company, and Mclnnis, testified that it was Leinster’s duty to have placed a flag on the track on which he was at work; and Mclnnis testified that he had instructed Leinster as to this duty. Morrow, on the contrary, whose deposition was taken by the plaintiff and introduced in evidence by the defendants, testified that it was the duty of Mclnnis, the foreman, to have placed these flags. Here was a conflict of testimony, and it was for the jury to decide whether Mills and Mclnnis, or Morrow, was correct. And it was also for the jury to find whether Mclnnis in fact gave Leinster such instruction. If the jury found that Morrow was correct, they must necessarily have found that there was no occasion for Mclnnis to give such instructions, and they were at liberty to find that he did not give them. If the jury found that Leinster did not receive these instructions, their finding that he did not know of the approach of the train and that he was not negligent, would have been permissible and logical.

*328 There remains the question whether or not Leinster at this time was engaged in his master’s work and at a place where he had the right to be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A. 597, 92 Conn. 322, 1917 Conn. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-conn-1917.