Dolan v. Burden Iron Co.

62 A.D. 545, 71 N.Y.S. 145

This text of 62 A.D. 545 (Dolan v. Burden Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolan v. Burden Iron Co., 62 A.D. 545, 71 N.Y.S. 145 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Chase, J.:

The defendant is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of bar iron, horse shoes and other products at Troy, N. Y. For the purpose of conducting its business, coal, ore and other materials are .obtained in different parts of the country and transported to Troy on cars of various railroad corporations. For the purpose of receiving and handling such cars and materials the defendant has a series of railroad tracks connected with the tracks of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company. The New York Central and Hudson' River Railroad Company back such loaded cars into the yard of the defendant. The defendant has an engine which it uses on its tracks in charge of a locomotive engineer employed by it. . It also employs a yardmaster and two brakemen. The cars so delivered to it are weighed and taken to different parts of its plant and unloaded. The empty cars are again weighed and they, are either refilled with freight, and as so refilled, or as empty cars are taken from the yard of the defendant and backed onto side tracks of the New York Central and Hudson River railroad, where they are taken by said company.

[547]*547In October, 1895, the plaintiff was employed- by the defendant as one of said brakeinen and continued in such service until the time of the accident mentioned in the complaint. His duties consisted chiefly in coupling and uncoupling cars. He had had experience in such work prior to his employment by the defendant. He was familiar with the operation of coupling appliances and of the danger incident to the same. All kinds of cars came to the .defendant’s premises. They varied in size and build. They varied in size, build and character of the coupling appliances, including the drawheads and the openings in the drawheads. There was no uniformity in the height of the drawheads on the cars of the various companies. The difference in their height was as much as two or three inches, and such difference was plainly noticeable. The plaintiff was familiar with the use of - a coupling stick. Evidence that previous to the accident plaintiff was told by an employee of the advisability and safety of using a coupling stick, and evidence that coupling sticks-were in plain sight on the engine, at the scale house, and about the yard was received and not contradicted. The cars of the Western New York and Pennsylvania Railroad Company and of the Fall Brook Railroad Company were frequently in the defendant’s yard and the drawheads of the Western New York and Pennsylvania cars were generally lower than those on the cars of the Fall Brook road. On the afternoon of the 1st day of February, 1896, after the plaintiff had been engaged most of the day with his fellow-brakeman in coupling and uncoupling cars that were being weighed and unloaded in the usual way, he started southerly along the east side of a number of cars attached to and backed by the defendant’s engine. The cars so attached to the engine consisted, first, of seven cars of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, and connected with them on the south were three cars of the Western New York and Pennsylvania Company. The plaintiff walked rapidly or ran with the train by the side of the cars for the purpose of reaching the point where they would meet two cars that were standing further south on the same track, and which cars were the property of the Fall Brook Company, and for the purpose of there making the coupling between the most southerly car of the moving train and the most northerly of the two cars so standing on the track. In the drawhead of the southerly car of the moving train, which was a car [548]*548of . the Western New York and Pennsylvania Company, was a link ready for insertion in the drawhead of the standing car. When the cars appi’oached within about three feet of one another the plaintiff stepped in between them for the purpose of making the coupling. He says the link'and everything appeared to be all right. He took hold of the link to enter the same into the drawhead of the standing car and his hand was caught and to some extent crushed, and he received the injuries of which lie complains in this action. Plaintiff says that the drawhead of the moving car appeared to him to be three or four inches lower than the draw-head of the standing car. He further says that as he ran along by the side of the cars he looked for inspector’s chalk marks, .calling attention to any defects in the cars, but did not discover any.

The defendant did not employ any one specially to' inspect the cars that came into its yard. The plaintiff says that Lawlor, his fellow-brakeman, and himself were the only ones, he knew of to inspect and examine the cars. Lawlor is not now in the defendant’s employ. He appears as a witness for the plaintiff and says that he saw the cars after the accident and that one of the bolts holding the strap on which the drawhead rested on the Western New York and Pennsylvania car was broken, allowing the. strap holding the drawhead and the drawhead to sag, so that it was four or five inches lower than the drawhead of the Fall Brook car. Evidencé was received which the defendant claims demonstrates beyond contradiction that the evidence of Lawlor in regard to the drawhead sagging is not true. When the couplings are in proper repair and the cars come together, the drawheads actually strike, aiid the jar causes the pin in the drawhead of the car to be connected to drop down through the link thus fastening the cars together. At the time of the accident the drawheads of the cars actually came together. They did not pass one another in any way, but the link passed into the socket of the Fall Brook car drawhead, and was caught by the pin and the cars were actually taken from the yard of the defendant and delivered to the New York Central and Hudson River railroad with the coupling that was made at the time the accident occurred. The drawheads were some six or eight inches deep and-eight or ten inches wide, and the openings therein about five inches square, so that they could not have • passed one another even if one of them [549]*549had sagged the maximum amount claimed by the plaintiff. The link was about one foot in length. We may assume for the purposes of this opinion that it was the defendant’s duty to inspect the cars when they came upon its premises and that the drawhead.of the Western New York and Pennsylvania car, by reason of the alleged defect in one of the bolts holding the strap on which it rested, sagged prior to the accident as claimed by the plaintiff. It was necessary for the plaintiff to establish that the alleged defect in the drawhead of which he complains, or some other defect attributable to the defendant, was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury.

The drawhead weighs from 120 to 200 pounds exclusive of the attachments. It cannot be lifted without using considerable strength. Sometimes a piece of wood is put under the drawhead,, and two men, one on either side of the car, then lift it up to its; place. Lawlor testifies that when the drawhead is down it makes the coupling hard, but in explaining why it makes the coupling hard, he says: “ Because it was hard to lift the link up; you had to lift it up in that shape; if that didn’t go in there it was only just taking chances that it would go in there, and if you didn’t it would go down under and it would go so quickly it was liable to snap your hand. If it went in there it was all right, but if it didn’t it would glance off and your hand was liable to be catched.”

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Bluebook (online)
62 A.D. 545, 71 N.Y.S. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolan-v-burden-iron-co-nyappdiv-1901.