Chaffin v. Union Pacific R.R.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 2006
Docket04-3313
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chaffin v. Union Pacific R.R. (Chaffin v. Union Pacific R.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaffin v. Union Pacific R.R., (10th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

F IL E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit U N IT E D ST A T E S C O U R T O F A PP E A L S August 16, 2006 T E N T H C IR C U IT Elisabeth A. Shumaker Clerk of Court

B ARRY CH A FFIN ,

Plaintiff-Appellee, No. 04-3313

v. (D. Kansas)

U N IO N PA CIFIC RA ILR OA D (02-CV-1188-JTM ) C OM PA N Y ,

Defendant-Appellant.

O R D E R A N D JU D G M E N T *

Before H E N R Y , A N D ER SO N , and O ’B R IE N , Circuit Judges.

Union Pacific Railroad Company (“Union Pacific”), the former employer of

Barry Chaffin, appeals a jury verdict in favor of M r. Chaffin compensating him

for various damages resulting from a foot injury he sustained while working as a

conductor. Specifically, Union Pacific contends that the district court erred by

admitting certain testimony about M r. Chaffin’s lost future wages claim, by

denying Union Pacific’s M otion for a New Trial and Judgment as a M atter of

* This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3. Law, and by permitting the jury to consider M r. Chaffin’s lost future wages claim.

Because we hold (1) that the district court did not abuse its discretion by

admitting the testimony; (2) that M r. Chaffin presented sufficient evidence for the

jury to find U nion Pacific’s negligence caused his injury and to support his lost

future wages claim; and (3) that the jury properly considered M r. Chaffin’s lost

future wages claim, we affirm the district court.

I. B A C K G R O U N D

This appeal concerns a lawsuit that M r. Chaffin filed under the Federal

Employers Liability Act (“FELA”) seeking damages for the injuries he sustained

during one of his shifts as a conductor for Union Pacific. In this suit, he alleged

that, as a result of Union Pacific’s negligence, he suffered frostbite, causing him

to stumble and injure his foot. The facts, view ed in the light most favorable to

M r. Chaffin, see Snyder v. City of M oab, 354 F.3d 1179, 1187 (10th Cir. 2003),

are as follows.

On January 30, 1999, M r. Chaffin reported to work in Dalhart, Texas and

received his assignment to take a train staffed by himself and an engineer, M r.

John Hall, to Amarillo, Texas and drop off 87 freight cars. Another railroad

company, the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railroad (“BNSF”) owned and

operated the train yard in Amarillo where M r. Chaffin had been directed to drop

off the 87 freight cars belonging to Union Pacific. A trackage rights agreement

2 permitted Union Pacific to use some of the tracks in the BNSF yard. The

agreement also provided that BNSF w ould be responsible for maintaining the

train-yard tracks, and also for cleaning and maintaining the switches. Further, the

agreement required that Union Pacific and BNSF “shall bear all costs of loss

and/or damage to its sole employees . . . without regard to which party was at

fault.” App. vol. IV, at 508.

One of the conductor’s duties is to clean the railroad switches in bad

weather while en route. Because of the blizzard conditions in that region of

Texas, M r. Chaffin wore weather-appropriate gear, including company-approved

work boots, a ski mask, thermal underwear, ski pants, and multiple layers. Union

Pacific provided M r. Chaffin with a switch broom so he could perform this duty –

a broom with a chisel on the handle used to break up and dislodge ice and snow.

M r. Chaffin needed to stop the train to clean the switches at several locations on

the way from Dalhart to Amarillo. W hile working on clearing ice and snow from

the switches, he alternated spending fifteen minutes outside and fifteen minutes

inside to stay warm. W hile cleaning one of these switches, M r. Chaffin may have

punctured one of his boots with the switch broom.

Once the train arrived in Amarillo, W illiam Forsythe, the manager of the

train yard and an employee of Union Pacific, w as to notify BNSF that the train

with the freight cars had arrived so that BNSF cleaning crews could begin to

3 clean the switches, enabling the train to move into the yard. He also was

responsible for ensuring that BNSF had cleaned and cleared all switches.

Because M r. Forsythe had been on a conference call, he failed to notify BN SF

that M r. Chaffin’s train had arrived. He had seen BNSF crews earlier in the day,

but he did not know whether these crews had cleaned the switches that M r.

Chaffin needed to use to deliver the deliver the freight cars.

Upon arrival in Amarillo, M r. Forsythe instructed M r. Chaffin to break

apart the freight cars forming the train in a manner that was contrary to the work

order M r. Chaffin had received before leaving Dalhart. M r. Chaffin asked to

break up the train differently, since the trip to Amarillo had taken nearly twice as

long as usual due to the w eather, but M r. Forsythe denied this request. To carry

out M r. Forsythe’s instructions to break up the train, M r. Chaffin needed to move

the train along four different tracks and employ a number of switches to move

between the tracks in the train yard. M r. Chaffin testified that M r. Forsythe

ordered him to clean the switches, and that he believed he would be disciplined or

terminated if he did not obey M r. Forsythe’s instructions.

W hile M r. Chaffin was cleaning the first sw itch, M r. Forsythe drove out to

the tracks and saw him clearing ice and snow off the switch. After this encounter,

M r. Forsythe called for BNSF crews to clean out the sw itches that M r. Chaffin

would need to use in order to comply with M r. Forsythe’s instructions. M r.

4 Forsythe did not tell M r. Chaffin that BNSF crews were on their way. After

cleaning this first sw itch, the train was able to move forward, but M r. Chaffin

soon encountered a derail device that had to be cleaned. M r. Chaffin decided to

notify the BNSF maintenance crews himself regarding the condition of the derail

device. He also called M r. Forsythe to explain that the condition of the derail

device made it unsafe for the train to proceed into the yards. M r. Forsythe

instructed M r. Chaffin to leave the train and proceed into the yard to begin

cleaning the sw itches. The train could not follow M r. Chaffin into the yard until

the derail device was cleaned.

M r. Chaffin continued to work on cleaning the next switch he encountered.

M r. Forsythe had told M r. Chaffin that he w ould send a van to transport M r.

Chaffin around the train yard, but it did not arrive. M r. Chaffin called M r.

Forsythe to tell him he was cold and to ask about the van’s status. M r. Forsythe

told M r. Chaffin the van would arrive soon, so M r. Chaffin continued down the

tracks to the next switch. M r. Chaffin testified that he could have returned to the

depot to warm up, but decided to continue in light of his understanding that the

van would soon arrive.

The van did not arrive, and M r. Chaffin’s foot had become numb and w as

hurting. He decided to walk to the train depot, which was around 2,500 feet

away, to warm up, but he slipped on the way. After slipping, M r. Chaffin decided

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