Cole v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

61 S.W.2d 344, 332 Mo. 999, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 344 (Cole v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 61 S.W.2d 344, 332 Mo. 999, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 512 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*1005 GANTT, C. J.

Action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act and Safety Appliance Act for damages for personal injuries. At the time plaintiff and defendant were engaged in interstate commerce. Defendant offered no evidence. Verdict for plaintiff for $30,000. The motion for'a new trial was sustained. The court stated of record that it should have given the instruction, in the nature of a demurrer, and directed a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff appealed from the order granting a new trial.

Plaintiff was head brakeman on a freight train of defendant which left Pensacola, Florida, the southern terminus of the railroad, at five p. m. As such, he rode in the engine. The train moved northward and' at one a. m. stopped at Kimbrough, Alabama.

On arrival plaintiff alighted from the engine, uncoupled the 'train at the south end of a tank car containing gasoline and signaled the engineer to move northward. The engineer did so. Plaintiff boarded the tank car, riding on the ladder at the southeast corner of the car. The engine and cars moved past a switch stand on the west side of the track. On signal from plaintiff the engine and cars were stopped. Plaintiff then alighted, crossed the track, threw the switch and gave the fireman a back-up signal. Thereupon the engine and cars were moved southward to switch the ears to a switch track. As the southwest corner of the tank car was moving by plaintiff, he attempted to climb the ladder at that corner. In doing so he took hold of the rungs of the ladder with his hands and placed his foot on the bottom rung *1006 or stirrup of the ladder. He 'testified that when he did so his foot slipped from the stirrup, which caused him to fall and his left foot and ankle to be crushed by a wheel of the ear.

The court refused to submit the case to the jury on the theory of a violation of the Safety Applicance Act, but submitted -it on the theory of defendant’s negligence under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. Under the last named act it was charged that oil or grease was negligently on the rung of the ladder before the ear left Pensacola and had been there for a sufficient length of time for defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care, to have discovered and removed it. The answer was a general denial.

I. Plaintiff contends that there was evidence tending to show that oil or grease was on the rung of the ladder from which he slipped. The evidence on the question follows:

“Stipulation.
“It is stipulated and agreed by and between the plaintiff and defendant in the above entitled cause:
“That J. C. Mynatt, if present, would testifiy as follows: My name is J. C. Mynatt. I am a ear inspector for the Frisco Railroad (defendant) at Kimbrough, Alabama. On the early morning of June 2, 1929, I was standing on the station platform at Kimbrough, Alabama, and heard 'William G. Cole (plaintiff), brakeman on a train then at Kimbrough, calling for help and went to where he was lying on the ground near the Frisco tracks. I did not witness the accident. I went to the car which he pointed out as the one from which he fell and found it to be a tank car number POX 5187 and made a thorough examination and inspection of the car. I found the bottom rung of the ladder at the ‘A’ end of the car, which ladder serves as a sill-step or stirrup, covered with oil or grease. Mr. Odom, the conductor of the train, and Mr. Arnould, the rear brakeman, also examined the bottom rung of the ladder to which I refer. There were no mechanical defects in the ladder or the bottom rung thereof. The only thing I found was the oil or grease on the bottom rung of this ladder, which also serves as a sill-step or stirrup. I found the car to be equipped with all safety appliances required by law and all of these safety appliances were found by me to be in perfect mechanical condition and so far as construction and mechanical condition is concerned, in compliance with the Safety Appliance Act and regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
“That if M. M. Odom were present, he would testify: That he was conductor of the train in question and that in other respects, his testimony would be the same as that of J. C. Mynatt. That he would further testify that until he made an inspection of the ladder after *1007 Cole was injured, lie had no knowledge of the presence of the oil on the rung of the ladder.
“That I. L. Arnould, if present, would testify: That he was rear brakeman on the train in question; that in other respects his testimony would be the same as that of J. C. Mynatt; that he would further testify that prior to his examination of the ladder, after Cole tuas injured, he had no knowledge of the presence of oil on the bottom rung of the ladder.”

On the question, plaintiff testified that he did not know whether the ladder from which he slipped was at the “A” or “B” end of the car; that he made no inspection of the ladder and knew nothing about its condition as to oil or grease; that he only knew that his foot slipped from the rung; that he told car inspector Mynatt, conductor Odom and brakeman Arnould that he attempted to board the tank car at the south end of the string of ears, and that his foot slipped from the bottom rung of the ladder.

Defendant insists that this evidence did not tend to show that there was oil or grease on the ladder from which plaintiff slipped, for the reason there was a ladder at each corner of the “A” end of the car, and for the reason there was no evidence tending to show whether the “A” end was the south or north end of the car. In other words, it insists that the evidence did not identify the ladder from which plaintiff slipped as the ladder on which the oil or grease was found.

It is clear that at the trial the parties construed the testimony of these witnesses as locating the oil or grease on the rung of the ladder from which plaintiff slipped. In the opening statement to the jury defendant’s attorney said: “Tie (plaintiff) doesn’t claim that the car was in any way defective or that the defendant was negligent in any way in not furnishing a car with a good ladder. The only complaint that he does make here is that there teas oil on the bottom, rung of the ladder that he attempted to get onto. Now, there will be no evidence, so far as I know, as to when that oil got on there, whether it was carried on there by his own shoes as he got on there, or whether it had been on there before, nobody seems to know. All that the evidence in this case is going to be able to show is that there teas oil on that iron, and some witness who will testify here, possibly by agreement as to what they would say if they were present, that after Mr. Cole was hurt they went over and looked at the ladder that he said he fell from, and he said he saw the rung of the bottom of the ladder. . . . There isn’t going to be any dispute about there being oil on the bottom rung of that ladder. There isn’t going to be any dispute about the ladder being in perfect mechanical condition.

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61 S.W.2d 344, 332 Mo. 999, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1933.