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

1917 OK 354, 170 P. 1143, 67 Okla. 219, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 10, 1917
Docket7460
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1917 OK 354 (Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Pruitt) 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. Pruitt, 1917 OK 354, 170 P. 1143, 67 Okla. 219, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 390 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

The parties to this action-will be designated as in the trial court. W. H. Pruitt, as plaintiff, instituted this action in the district court of Pottawatomie county, Okla., against the Chicago-, Rock Island & iPacüfijc (Railway fcompany, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while in the employ of the defendant company. The-plaintiff’s petition charged, in substance, that while in the employ of the defendant company, in the capacity of truckman helper, he was injured by reason of a shaker bar slipping from a grate on one of the defendant company’s engines, causing him to-fall, and that the slipping of the shaker bar and his fall, resulting in the injury, were proximately caused by the negligence of his fellow servant, one Ed Horde, in failing to properly place the shaker bar upon the grate staff. After generally denying the plaintiff’s allegations of negligence, defendant’s answer charged contributory negligence, to which the plaintiff filed a general denial. The trial was had to- a ju-ry, which resulted in a verdict for the-plaintiff for $1,600. From 'this judgment the defendant has appealed to this court.

*220 The facts necessary to a determination of the questions involved in the appeal, as disclosed by the evidence, are substantially as follows:

The witness Ed ‘Horde, called by the plaintiff, testified that at the time of the injury to plaintiff, that he (Horde) was engaged by the defendant company in what is known as shaking the grates or knocking the fires; that when an engine is brought into the yards of the company it was his duty, with an assistant, to knock the fires and clean the fire boxes, which is done by shaking, the grates and dumping the fire into the pit; that the witness and the plaintiff were shaking the grates on the occasion •of plaintiff’s injury; that the grates weighed between 75 and 100 pounds each, and are attached to three staffs in front, which, staffs extend up and about six inches above the deck of the engine; that the shaker bar is an iron bar about three or four feet long, with a hole in the end extending about four to six inches up into the bar, 'and in order to shake the grates the shaker bar is placed down over -the staff, which fits into the hole in the shaker bar; that when the Shaker bar is in good condition and the staff is in good condition and the shaker bar is properly placed upon the staff, it cannot slip off by just the ordinary pulling; that when the plaintiff got on the engine he asked the witness if everything- was ready, to which the witness answered, “Yes,” and that when “we both took hold of the shaker bar, as there was no use in one man trying to shake the bars, and we gave a surge on it, and the bar slipped off the staff, and we both fell.” The witness further testified that he attempted to put the shaker bar on the staff; that “it was setting on there, it was supposed to be on there.”

The plaintiff testified that just before the accident he was scraping cinders out of the ash pan, and Mr. Horde was up in the cab, as plaintiff understood, getting the shaker bar ready; that witness then got up into the cab, and that just as 'he got into the cab Horde said, “I am ready.” Plaintiff then testified, “I walked up, and he had hold of it, and I took hold of it 'and gave a surge on it and it came off, and I think it was the inside one,” and that when the shaker bar came'off plaintiff fell to the deck of the engine on the coal, and was injured.

The principal error assigned is that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict of the jury, and in support of this •assignment it is strenuously insisted by counsel for defendant that there was no competent evidence of primary negligence on the part of the defendant company, but we will discuss the assignments oí error in their logical order.

One of the questions asked the witness Horde was;

“When the shaker bar is in good condition and the staff is in good condition and the staff is properly placed — I mean the shaker bar is properly placed upon the staff, is there any danger of It slipping off by just the ordinary pulling?”

The witness answered:

“No; if it were properly put on it would ■not slip -off.”

An objection was made to this question, on the ground that it called for a conclusion of the witness, and it is here insisted that the court, by permitting the question to be answered, permitted the witness to usurp the province of the jury “instead of submitting it to them upon the facts and permitting them to determine from those facts whether or' not there was any danger of the shaker bar slipping off if properly placed upon the staff.” We do not think the court erred in overruling the objection to this question and answer, for it appears from the testimony in the record that this witness was an experienced man in shaking grates or knocking fires, having had three years’ experience in this particular kind of work, and we believe that he was sufficiently qualified as an expert to give his opinion as to whether or not the shaker bar would come off in shaking the grates if properly placed on the staff.

As stated by Tones on Evidence, § 367, p. 459, where the subject under investigation is unfamiliar to the jury, or even to the judge, there would be no adequate mode of arriving at any satisfactory conclusion if expert testimony were rejected; and in recognition of this fact the courts have adopted 'the rule of admitting opinions of witnesses whenever the subject-matter of inquiry is such that inexperienced persons are unlikely to prove capable of forming a correct judgment upon it without such assistance.

It seems to us that the. facts npon which the opinion 'of the witness Horde was based were of such a character as to make it improbable that such facts could be transmitted to the minds of the jury in such a way as to enable them to come to an intelligent conclusion without the aid of the witness’ experience in the operation of the instru-mentalities used in shaking the grates. While it was proper for the witness to give his opinion, the jury was not concluded *221 thereby, as the value of such evidence was for the jury to determine. Atchison. T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Baker, 37 Okla. 48, 130 Pac. 577; Fire Ass’n of Philadelphia v. Farmers’ Gin Co., 39 Okla. 162, 134 Pac. 443.

But counsel also say that there was no competent evidence in the record showing that the 'bar would come off of the staff when operated properly. It will be -observed that on this point witness Horde testified:

“We both took hold of the shaker bar, as there'was no use in one man trying to shake the bars, and we gave a surge on it, and the bars slipped off the staff, and we both fell”

—>and the plaintiff testified:

“I walked up and he had hold of it, and I took hold of it and gave a surge on it and it came off, and I think it-was the inside one.”

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Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 354, 170 P. 1143, 67 Okla. 219, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-p-ry-co-v-pruitt-okla-1917.