Dennis v. Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Co.

372 P.2d 3, 13 Utah 2d 249, 1962 Utah LEXIS 190
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1962
Docket9543
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 372 P.2d 3 (Dennis v. Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis v. Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Co., 372 P.2d 3, 13 Utah 2d 249, 1962 Utah LEXIS 190 (Utah 1962).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

Defendant railroad appeals from a jury award in favor of plaintiff, an employee, who lost two fingers on his left hand as a result of frostbite while repairing track.

The case is grounded in the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 1 which allows re *251 covery for negligence of the employer even if the employee is contributorily negligent, requiring that the total award he diminished by the proportion his negligence bears to the whole. The jury awarded $20,000 damages and deducted one-half thereof for the plaintiff’s negligence, leaving a net award of $10,000.

The essence of the railroad’s appeal is that the evidence fails to show that it was guilty of any negligence, or that by any such conduct it contributed to cause plaintiff’s injury.

In accordance with recognized appellate procedure, we must review the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict. 2

Plaintiff had worked as a section hand for the defendant for 16 years. He was part of a crew working out of Green River, Utah, where he and other members of the crew lived. On the night of January 2, 1960, the foreman, J. G. Chronopoulos, called plaintiff and two other men to report for work with him at 5 p. m. He tried but was unable to locate a fifth man. The plaintiff was not dressed as warmly as the others. He was the only one without overshoes ; and whereas the others wore woolen mittens, he wore two pairs of gloves: the inner pair of canvas and the outer pair of a rubberized material. Plaintiff testified that he had worked at other times, including nights, while similarly dressed; and that he wore what he thought was sufficient clothing.

The assignment was to go in a truck to a point on the defendant’s mainline about 18 miles west of Green River to repair what is called an “open joint” which had developed between the ends of rails because of their contraction due to the extremely cold weather. The procedure is to loosen eight or nine of the 40-foot rail lengths on either side of the open joint, one at a time, and move each slightly toward the open joint and thus close it. During the procedure they use what is called a “dutchman”: a short piece of rail, two or three inches in length, depending upon the necessity, to insert temporarily while trains are allowed to pass over it at reduced speed

This particular job took nearly all night. The weather was bitter cold; there was snow on the ground and there was some wind. The recorded temperature at Green River was plus 10 degrees F. at 5 p. m. January 2, and minus 5 degrees at 5 a. m. the next morning. While the work was in progress, the men chopped up old ties and maintained a fire by which they warmed themselves intermittently. Their truck, which had a heater in it, was close by, its motor running at least part of the night, its lights being required to aid in the work. *252 Particularly when a train would pass, the men would stay by the fire.

Plaintiff testified that he was cold; that the first indication of trouble with his hands came about midnight when he was loosening rail bolts with a large iron wrench about four feet long, he noticed his fingers seemed to be clamped to the wrench and he had to pry them loose. He said that at some time during the night he complained of being cold. He also stated that he went to the truck to get warm, but thought he was only there about 30 minutes, which in view of the verdict must be taken as true. However, in searching for fault on the part of the railroad, it is significant to observe that there is no evidence that anyone prevented or dissuaded the plaintiff from warming his hands as often or as long as he wanted to ; and that the foreman and both of the other men testified that the plaintiff in fact went to the truck around midnight and remained there the rest of the night until the repair was completed about 4 a. m. At about noon the next day when plaintiff awakened from his sleep he noticed that his fingers were painful and discolored, so he thought they must have been frozen. After reporting the matter to his foreman and being examined by the doctor, he was hospitalized and treated for frostbite. It became necessary to amputate the little finger and ring finger of his left hand; the former at the first joint from the knuckle and the latter at the knuckle. An added tribulation is that, the middle finger on that hand had already been amputated some 22 years before because of an infection. Thus he now has. only the thumb and index finger on that hand. The evidence is that he can still perform the duties of his employment as a section hand despite his loss of his fingers.

It will be conceded by all, including the defendant, that by the terms of the-F.E.L.A. and the decisions of the U. S. Supreme Court 3 and this court 4 regarding its. application, these principles are well established: that it imposes a high standard of care upon the railroad to safeguard its employees against injury; that the duty of care increases in proportion to the danger involved in the employment; that there must be a policy of extreme liberality in allowing the issues in such cases to be determined by a jury; and that if there is any evidence whatsoever to justify a reasonable belief that the railroad failed to exercise such precautions as reasonable care and prudence would dictate under the circumstances, the verdict must be sustained. But that is as far as the law goes. It is neither *253 an insurance nor a compensation act. The right to recovery is based upon negligence. 5

To justify the submission of the case to the jury and the finding of negligence, the plaintiff sets forth what he calls “the more could have been done rule”, stating that “this rule was well established in the case of Bailey v. Central Vermont Railway, Inc.” 6 That case does not harmonize with the interpretation the plaintiff attempts to read into it: that if anything more whatsoever could have been done for the plaintiff’s safety, a jury question as to the defendant’s liability for failing to do so is presented. Even a cursory reflection upon the matter reveals the fallacy therein. Practically any type of industrial accident could in some way have been prevented by the application of precautions perceivable by hindsight. If nothing else, the plaintiff could have “stood in bed.”

The Bailey case does emphasize the principles we have stated above. But it does not depart from the universal constant in the law of torts: that liability is predicated upon negligence: the failure to use reasonable care under the circumstances. That being so, the statement that liability results when “more could have been done” for the safety of the employee, must be understood as meaning “within the demands of reasonable care.” This is the only way that such an idea can be reconciled with the commonly acknowledged rule as to what constitutes negligence.

Plaintiff also urges application to our case of certain language from Rogers v. Missouri Pacific Railroad:

Related

Dennis v. Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad
375 U.S. 208 (Supreme Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
372 P.2d 3, 13 Utah 2d 249, 1962 Utah LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-v-denver-and-rio-grande-western-railroad-co-utah-1962.