Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. King

1932 OK 750, 25 P.2d 304, 165 Okla. 169, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 22, 1932
Docket20331
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1932 OK 750 (Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. King, 1932 OK 750, 25 P.2d 304, 165 Okla. 169, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 418 (Okla. 1932).

Opinions

McNEILL, J.

This is an action to recover damages for wrongful death under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. George L. King, an employee of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, while in the performance of his duties, fell from the top of an oil tank tender of an engine, which resulted in his instantaneous death. The action was instituted in the district court of Grady county on December 19, 1927, by Claudia King, surviving wife and widow of said decedent, as the admin-istratrix of the estate of said decedent, against said railway company.

It appears that said decedent was a man of about 45 or 50 years of age, and had worked for said company for approximately eight years, during which time he was engaged primarily as a fireman, but at the time of his death he was working as a hostler in the town of Chickasha. His duties required him to take charge of the engines when they came in from a run and to put them in the roundhouse to have them properly oiled, refueled, and reconditioned for another run. In the early morning, about 3 a. m., of February 1, 1927, while engaged in refueling an engine for said company in the performance of his duties as a hostler in the railroad yards of said company, he took engine No. 878, which was pulling an interstate passenger train operating between Dallas, Tex., and Minneapolis, Minn., and proceeded to refuel it for the purpose of its outgoing run. This engine had previously been a coal burning engine and had been converted into an oil burning engine. In the tender, which had been previously equipped for carrying coal, there had been constructed a tank for fuel oil for the operation and movement of said engine. Plaintiff, in part, alleges in her petition, as follows:

“* * * Plaintiff further shows that in preparing and changing said tender from a container of coal to a container of oil, the defendant company, * * * so constructed said oil tank as to elevate the top of the oil tank or receptacle 28 to 30 inches above the top of said tender, the front of said oil tank being approximately 18 inches be- *171 Bind front of tender, and carelessly and negligently so constructed said oil tank as to leave an opening of 15 inches between the inside wall of said tender and the outside wall of said oil tank; and * * * negligently and carelessly left protruding upward and across the space on top of tender a rough, irregular sheet of steel, which said sheet of steel was, of approximately one-fourth of an inch of thickness, and which said piece of steel so protruding was of the approximate height of 15 inches.
“Fifth: Plaintiff further shows that * * * there was left a space of from 28 to 30 inches, which it was necessary to execute at a single step, and that by reason of the failure * * * to cover said space between the outside wall of said oil tank and the inside wall of said tender, it became necessary to pass over such opening and over said rough, uneven and protruding sheet of steel, and required one passing from the top of said tank to the cab of the locomotive engine, to step down a distance of from 28 to 30 inches, and over and across said protruding sheet of steel and said uncovered opening between the inside wall of tender and the outside wall of said tank instead of the usual and customary distance of 14 to 15 inches over cover space and remove steel sheet.
“Sixth: Plaintiff further shows that on the night of the 1st day of February, 1927, while engaged in the performance of his duties and acting under the authority and direction of defendant’s superior officers and employees, that it became necessary to refuel with oil the aforesaid locomotive engine and tender of said defendant company; that said deceased, in the usual and customary manner, placed said engine at a point for receiving oil and fuel, and went upon the top of said oil tank, as it was necessary that he do, for the purpose of filling and refueling the same, for its future use and service in interstate commerce; and that in the course of his duties, and acting with due and ordinary caution, it wTas then necessary for him to dismount from said oil tank to the engine cab, for the purpose of removing such engine to the defendant’s roundhouse; and plaintiff alleges that in dismounting from the top of said oil tank, in an effort to return to said engine cab, that said deceased, acting with due caution and in the usual and customary manner, undertook to step from the top of said oil tank to the top of the wall of said tender, as was necessary that he should do, but that by reason of the faulty construction of said oil tank and by reason of the neglect and failure of the defendant company * * * to cover said opening, it became necessary and said deceased was required, acting with due caution, to step or attempt to step from the top of said oil tank to the top of said tender, as negligently constructed, a distance of 28 to 30 inches, and over and across said protruding sheet of steel so negligently and carelessly left and retained by the defendant’s servants and employees; and plaintiff says that in so returning to said cab from the top of said oil tank, and acting with due caution, that by reason of the careless construction of said oil tank and said tender, and wholly within the course of his duties and under the directions of the defendant company and its employees, said deceased was caused to stumble, and was thrown and fell from said tender to the ground, a distance of approximately 12 feet, and was injured and killed.
“ Seventh: Plaintiff further shows that said injury and death of said deceased was wholly caused by reason of the wrongful acts and negligence of his defendant company, its agents and employees, in constructing said converted tender as hereinabove alleged, and in failing and refusing to provide a reasonably safe place in which said deceased was to work, and in failing to use reasonable and ordinary care in changing and converting said tender from a carrier of coal to a carrier of fuel oil, and that said death of the said George L. King was without default or want of care on the part of said decedent, but that said decedent was, at all times, acting with due and ordinary care. * * *”

The defendant admitted that the coal tender had been converted to an oil burner, and that the oil tank was about five feet high with a large flat surface built in the shape of the tender setting in the oil tender, but asserts that this tender was equipped with all the safety devices prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission; that it had steel steps at the front and also at the rear end for its ascent and descent; that it had a rail on the top for the use of persons working around on the top of the tank; that the deceased did not fall from the top of the tank at either place provided for descending therefrom; that decedent fell from the right front corner of the tank while the engine and tender were standing still and facing the north; that this was not the place provided for his descent and he was at a place strictly of his own choice.

Defendant alleged in its answer, in part, as follows:

“Answering further and for a separate defense, this defendant alleges and states that the plaintiff’s decedent, George L.

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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 750, 25 P.2d 304, 165 Okla. 169, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-p-ry-co-v-king-okla-1932.