Charters v. Industrial Works

146 N.W. 128, 179 Mich. 1, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 477
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1914
DocketDocket No. 116
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 146 N.W. 128 (Charters v. Industrial Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charters v. Industrial Works, 146 N.W. 128, 179 Mich. 1, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 477 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Stone, J.

This is a personal injury case involving two separate and distinct injuries. The alleged injuries occurred more than a year apart, and had no connection with each other, so that the case presents practically two cases in one. The negligence charged relating to the first injury was the furnishing of an improper lantern to the plaintiff by the defendant; while the negligence charged relating to the second injury was the employment and retention of an incompetent, careless, and reckless fellow-servant, to wit, an engineer.

The first injury is alleged to have occurred on, to wit, November 11, 1909, and the second on, to wit, May 31, 1911, at Bay City, in the yards of the defendant’s factory, where were manufactured railroad cranes, railroad equipment, and other heavy machinery, and where were maintained switching tracks, traveling cranes propelled by steam power, and used as locomotives to move freight cars about the yards, and as derricks for lifting and moving heavy objects as necessity required; that switching operations were carried on in such yards in the nighttime by a crew [3]*3of men employed for such night shift or work,'who were provided with lanterns to enable them to perform such work.

The undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff commenced working for the defendant on or about September 7, 1909. He went to work first as a member of the yard gang, containing 35 or 40 men, who worked outdoors in the yard connecting the various buildings. A part of the equipment of the yard gang consisted of two locomotive cranes, called, respectively, “Big Sandy” and the “Joe.” In the fall of 1909 these two cranes were working on the night shift. Each of these cranes had a crew of three men, consisting of the conductor, engineer, and brakeman. The engineer stayed in the cab of the machine; the conductor stayed on the ground, and had charge of the operations of the crane, giving orders to the engineer and brakeman; while the brakeman also stayed on the ground, and acted as a helper to the conductor. In addition to the lifting work, the cranes took the place of yard engines in moving cars about the yards.

Referring to the first alleged injury, it may be stated that after a short preliminary service on the day crew plaintiff commenced working on the night crew in the fall of 1909, and was given the position of conductor on the “Big Sandy.” His brother, Fred Charters, was brakeman, and the engineer was one William Redmond. It was part of plaintiff’s duty, as conductor, to take charge of the operations in the yard on the night shift. In order to furnish light for the night work, the defendant had installed an elaborate lighting system, consisting of a power house, steam engine, and generator, and a system of arc lights situated at different points in the yard. In addition to these lights, the conductor and brakeman on the crane' also had lanterns which they carried with them in doing their work. There was a sharp conflict in the evidence in regard to the condition of [4]*4the are lights, and the amount of light which they gave while burning. This question, however, is of minor importance, inasmuch as the negligence complained of, which was finally relied upon at the trial, was not based upon any insufficiency in these stationary lights, but upon the alleged defective character of the hand lantern which plaintiff was using on the night of the alleged injury. Upon that subject the declaration, after alleging the duty of the defendant, averred that the defendant, not regarding its duties, then and there carelessly, negligently, and wrongfully did fail and omit to perform its said several duties in that behalf, in the following particulars:

(5) “In that it failed to provide, furnish, and supply plaintiff and its other employees, working about such yards in the nighttime, with suitable and sufficient lights so that they might carry on their work with reasonable safety, and be able to distinguish objects upon, along, and near such tracks, although said defendant had often promised plaintiff so to do, and assured plaintiff and its other employees that, if they would continue to work with such lights as were then provided, other and suitable and safe lights would be provided in the immediate future.”
(6) “In that it failed to furnish and supply plaintiff working about such yards in the nighttime with a lantern so constructed that-the light therein would not be extinguished by an ordinary draft of wind, but, on the contrary, provided plaintiff with a certain lantern so constructed that .the light therein would be extinguished by ordinary drafts of wind.”

The 1909 injury is claimed to have resulted from plaintiff being pinched between a box car and a pile of iron pile driver weights standing near one of defendant’s private tracks in the yard. These tracks were of standard gauge, and connected with the public tracks in the street, so that freight cars could be taken in and out of the yard for loading and unloading; but all such switching operations were carried on by the locomotive cranes operated by the defend[5]*5ant’s yard gang, and not by the railroad company. Some of these tracks were used more than others, and the ground adjoining all of them was used as a general piling ground for heavy material of various kinds which had to be handled by the cranes.

This alleged injury is somewhat extraordinary in that, although plaintiff claims that it resulted in serious injury to him, it is not claimed that it was brought to the attention of the defendant’s officers or the yard foreman at the time, and they knew nothing whatever about it until after the second injury, and the threatened litigation resulting therefrom. Plaintiff did not stop work on the night of the 1909 injury, or on the succeeding days, and, inasmuch as there was no other eyewitness of the accident, the plaintiff’s testimony must be looked to to ascertain the facts. He claimed and testified on the trial that he had ordered the engineer to move a freight car away from the foundry, so that another car could be placed for unloading. The car to be moved away was a wide box car loaded with coke. The point to which it was to be moved was just below or south of a “diamond” at the junction of two tracks called the “Boiler Shop Track,” running east and west, and the “Yard Track,” running in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction, so that the movement of the car on the yard track was substantially from northeast to southwest. He testified that the arc lights were not burning; that it was dark and rainy, and that, after going from the yard foreman’s office to the point where the car was expected to stop, to wit, the diamond, and not finding it there, he started walking close beside the track, and on the easterly side thereof, toward the northeast, from which direction the car was coming; that, after crossing the diamond, his lantern blew out, and that, after stopping a moment, he continued to-walk in the dark towards the approaching car, and so close to the track that he was [6]*6caught between the car and the weights piled beside the yard track. This car was being moved by the crane called “Big Sandy,” which was geared to run at a rate of speed not to exceed four miles an hour, and the evidence tends to show that the car was moving at a rate of from three to four miles an hour; the car being ahead, and being pushed by the crane in approaching the diamond. The plaintiff testified that he knew that the weights were there, and that he had worked in that vicinity loading and unloading iron on frequent prior occasions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 128, 179 Mich. 1, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charters-v-industrial-works-mich-1914.