Chicago & E. I. R. R. v. Myers

83 Ill. App. 469, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 816
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 29, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 Ill. App. 469 (Chicago & E. I. R. R. v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & E. I. R. R. v. Myers, 83 Ill. App. 469, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 816 (Ill. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $1,600 against appellant in favor of appellee, for alleged negligence causing the death of appellee’s intestate, John B. Myers. The declaration contained five counts, four of which were eliminated from the consideration of the jury by instructions, leaving only the second count, which, as amended, is substantially as follows:

Deceased in his lifetime was in the employ of the defendant as a brakeman upon a certain freight train, being moved in a northerly direction, between the stations Cayuga and Perrysville, and it was the defendant’s duty to exercise ordinary and reasonable care in the selection of its servants, both engine men and trainmen, on said freight train, and also its passenger trains, which defendant was operating over said road, with whom it might become necessary for deceased to work in the movement of said freight train. Yet, defendant, disregarding its duty to deceased, carelessly and negligently employed, as engineer of one of said passenger trains being moved in a northerly direction behind said freight train between said stations, a careless, incompetent and unskilled servant, when defendant knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known, said servant was careless, unskilled and incompetent, and the defendant negligently retained said servant, to-wit, said engineer, in its employafter it knew that said servant was careless, incompetent and unskilled; that thereby deceased, while exercising ordinary care for his own safety, and while performing his duties as said brakeman on said freight train, which had become stalled upon defendant’s road, and which was being moved or attempted to be moved by the freight engine thereto attached and the passenger engine of said passenger train, upon which said careless, incompetent and unskilled servant was employed as engineer (deceased), was, by reason of the lack of skill and incompetency and carelessness on the part of said engineer in performing his duties, and in the negligent and careless application of the air brake on said passenger engine, which caused' the breaking of the coupling of said engine, thrown with great force and violence from a certain gondola car, one of the cars being pushed by said passenger engine, to and upon the ground, and upon, to wit, a certain side track of defendant’s railroad, his leg and body being run over by the wheels of said car, and he sustained mortal injuries, from the result of which he shortly thereafter died.

The part of the count italicized was added as an amendment after the evidence was all in, and after counsel for plaintiff had addressed the jury and counsel for the defendant had proceeded with his argument for some time.

Appellant plea,tied the general issue and the statute of limitations to the count as amended. The suit was commenced November 14, 1895, and the trial occurred in February, 1898. The court sustained a demurrer to the plea of the statute. Appellee’s intestate was a brakeman on a freight train of appellant consisting of an engine, thirty-three cars loaded with coal and a caboose. September 25, 1S94, between twelve and one o’clock a. m., near a station called Dickason, in Vermilion county, in the State of Indiana, while ascending a considerable grade on the main track in a northerly direction, for the purpose of taking a side track to allow a passenger train which was following the freight train to pass, the freight train came to a dead stop, which was necessary in order to have a brakeman run ahead and turn the switch into the siding. When the switch was turned an attempt was made to start the train, which was unsuccessful, by reason of the fact that the rails were so wet and slippery that the wheels of the engine merely spun around on them in one place without moving forward. Eutherford, the conductor of the freight train, then sent Myers back to flag the approaching passenger train, which he did, and when that train came up Eutherford requested Burley, the engineer of that train, to couple on .to the rear of the freight train and help to move it up the grade and into the siding.

The passenger train consisted of an engine, a baggage car, two coaches and a sleeper. Myers coupled the engine of the passenger train to the rear of the freight train, using for that purpose the pilot bar of the engine. The engine was not detached from the cars which it was moving. Both engines were then started and after the freight train had been moved by them from 500 to 700 feet, Eutherford, the conductor of the freight train, thinking that the engine of his train could complete the work, pulled the pin out of the pilot bar and the passenger train stopped. The consequence of disconnecting the passenger engine from the freight train was that the slack between the freight cars, which the passenger engine had been pushing, ran out, -the cars ran downward and backward, and the freight train was broken in two sections. The rear section, consisting of five cars and the caboose, remained on the main track, and the forward section was pulled into the siding by the freight engine. Rutherford then requested Burley to hitch on to the rear section of the freight train and push it into the siding. Burley coupled on as requested; Myers went to the front platform of the forward car of the section, which was a gondola car, with a platform about six inches wide, and stood on the east side of the platform. Rutherford went to and stood on the east steps of the platform of the caboose. Burley then started his engine, and after the cars had moved about 500 feet, at a speed of about five miles per hour, Rutherford received a signal from Myers which he understood to be a “ go slow” signal, and says he passed it back to Burley. Either some other signal was given, or Burley mistook the one given, and applied about ten pounds air pressure to the brakes, when the passenger engine and cars stopped short. The effect of the sudden stoppage of the passenger engine, coupled with the momentum of the freight cars, was to break the eye of the pilot bar connecting the engine and caboose, and cause a jerking of the freight cars. At the time this jerking occurred Rutherford says that he saw Myers’ lantern go over, and immediately went forward and found Myers lying on the west side of the track, about the length of two rails from the switch, with his leg off. He died shortly afterward as a result of his injuries.

To entitle appellee to recover, it was incumbent on her | to prove that Burley, the engineer of the passenger train, was an incompetent engineer; that appellant employed him, | or retained him in its employ, either with actual knowledge that he was incompetent, or under such circumstances that | appellant is legally chargeable with such knowledge, and also that the injury to appellee’s intestate was caused by his negligence. Our view of the case, after careful considera- i tion of the evidence, is such that we do not deem it neces- 1 negligence at the time of the accident. There is no evidence of Burley’s incompetency prior to the time of his employment by appellant. John McClure, a locomotive engineer of twenty-seven years standing, testified that he and Burley were born and brought up in the same town; that Burley became a railroad engineer in 1871, and operated an engine on the Pennsylvania Railroad until the fall of 1882, and on the Wabash Railroad from the latter time until July 4, 1894, at which last time he, the witness, saw and rode with him.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Ill. App. 469, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-e-i-r-r-v-myers-illappct-1899.