Delinks v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad

81 A. 1036, 85 Conn. 102, 1911 Conn. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 A. 1036 (Delinks v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delinks v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 81 A. 1036, 85 Conn. 102, 1911 Conn. LEXIS 103 (Colo. 1911).

Opinion

Roraback, J.

The record shows that the plaintiff, who lived in Union City, on July 3d, 1910, had been in the employ of the defendants for about one year as a motorman in the vicinity of Waterbury. His regular run at this time was on the Derby Connection. The plaintiff, before his employment by the defendants, had operated trolley-cars in the capacity of motorman in Providence.

At aboul/two o’clock in the afternoon upon the date above mentioned, the plaintiff was directed to run a car making an extra trip from the center of Waterbury (Exchange Place) to Lake Quassapaug, and to follow the regular car. The car which he was given was No. 104, a double truck, eight-wheel, closed car, equipped with Christensen air-brakes, and a hand-brake, and equipped electrically with a G. E. No. 800 controller, with nine notches on the same, so that the power-handle could be shifted from the “off” position to the full power, which involved placing the handle around to the ninth notch. The car also had an overhead switch, or circuit-breaker, so called, which was located at either end of the car and just above the motorman’s head as he *104 stood in position for running the car. This closed car was not used in the summer except in emergencies, and had been standing outdoors in the weather for some time, and its hand-brakes under the platform had not been inspected and oiled, and were badly rusted and clogged up by rust, sand, and dirt on the day of the accident.

The car was taken by Delinks at West Main Street and proceeded to Exchange Place, at which point he started out behind the regular car for Lake Quassapaug with a few passengers. Upon arriving at Lake Quassapaug he started to follow the regular car back toward Waterbury with no passengers upon his car. From a point about eleven hundred feet west of the Middlebury station to the station there is a drop of about sixty feet. As the plaintiff approached a point six or seven hundred feet west of the station on this down grade, he applied the air-brake for the purpose of decreasing the speed of the car and keeping it under control as he approached the station. He opened the air-brake valve gradually in the usual manner, but the air-brake, for some unknown reason which could not later be discovered, owing to the partial destruction of the apparatus as a result of the collision, as hereinafter set forth, failed to perform its function and to decrease the speed of the car. He turned the air-brake off and on again with the same result. He thereupon directed his attention to the hand-brake, but it was rusty and clogged up, as hereinbefore described, and although exerting his utmost strength he was unable to move the handle so as to apply the brake. At a point where he applied the air-brake the car was running about fifteen miles an hour down grade, and rapidly increasing its speed. When he was about one hundred and fifty or one hundred and seventy-five feet from the station he found he was unable to use the hand-brake and there *105 fore threw the reverse switch and turned on the power and the circuit-breaker blew out. He shut off the power, threw the overhead or circuit-breaker on, and again applied the power, but he was unable to stop the car, and thereupon it dashed into the regular car then standing at the station.

When within about one thousand feet of the station the plaintiff looked at the indicator on the air-gauge, which showed the normal pressure of sixty to seventy pounds in the reservoir. Both the automatic air-pump, which pumped the air into the reservoir, and the air-brakes worked the entire trip up to this point, and there was nothing then to indicate to the plaintiff that they were not in good condition. This gauge indicated that there was at that moment between sixty and seventy pounds of air in the reservoir, which was the normal and usual condition when the reservoir was full. Whenever the air pressure gives out sufficiently to prevent its use in stopping the car, this failure will always be shown at once in the air-gauge. The hand-brake had become stiff by reason of failure to oil, and permitting its parts to rust, and dirt and sand to accumulate, and was practically unworkable. If the hand-brake had been in good working condition the plaintiff would ■ have been able by its use to have brought the car to a stop within a distance of two hundred feet and avoided the collision. The defendants had negligently failed to inspect the hand-brakes and correct their unsafe condition. It was not the duty of the motorman to inspect or try the hand-brakes before using them to stop the car, and there was no negligence on his part in not discovering their defective condition, which could not be seen from 'the platform, but only from beneath. The proximate cause of the injury was the negligence on the part of the defendants in failing to inspect the handbrakes, and in permitting them to become stiff and *106 rusty, and unable to be used, and the defendants were negligent in not providing a hand-brake on this car in a condition suitable to be used on this trip in a case of emergency, such as confronted the plaintiff on this occasion.

As the plaintiff proceeded toward Middlebury station from Lake Quassapaug he knew that there was a regular car ahead, and that he was following on an extra car, and he knew that it was his duty to stop at Middlebury station. When he crossed the Southbury Road he blew his whistle for the Middlebury station. He was reasonably familiar with the route, knew the grade at the Middlebury station, and expected to stop at this place. After leaving Waterbury he had no occasion to use the hand-brake at any time until just before the accident as herein stated. Air-brakes of this construction are subject to occasional, though rare, trouble and difficulty, and it is possible for some part of the apparatus and appliance in connection with said air-brake system to suddenly fail, thereby rendering useless the brake as an appliance for decreasing speed. These air-brakes were of an approved type used by almost all the railroads in New England and by other railroads in this country and abroad, and were the most reliable brake known to modern railroad science.

The hand-brake is used as an emergency and auxiliary brake, and its purpose is for use in case of trouble with the air-brake. If the air-brake had been workable at the point of application, the car, traveling at the rate of speed at which it was then proceeding, could have been stopped within a distance of two hundred feet.

In applying the reverse the brakes were not set. The plaintiff shut off the power, threw the reverse switch, applied the power, and, the car not being checked, turned the power on to the ninth notch, and *107 then the overhead blew out, whereupon he threw on the overhead switch and then applied the power again. The first application of power was gradual, that is, the controller handle being swung from notch to notch, and the full nine notches were given because the car was not checked by less power. There was no negligence on the part of the plaintiff in applying the power nine notches at the time and in the way he did apply it. The car had acquired at that time such a momentum that the reverse failed to hold it as it was put on, and it would not have held the car and avoided the collision, substantially as it occurred, if the power had been first applied to the extent of two notches only and held there.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 1036, 85 Conn. 102, 1911 Conn. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delinks-v-new-york-new-haven-hartford-railroad-conn-1911.