Douglas Overfield v. BNSF Railway Company

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 2024
DocketED112272
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas Overfield v. BNSF Railway Company (Douglas Overfield v. BNSF Railway Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas Overfield v. BNSF Railway Company, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION THREE

DOUGLAS OVERFIELD, ) No. ED112272 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the City of St. Louis v. ) Cause No. 1922-CC00078 ) BNSF RAILWAY COMPANY, ) Honorable Annette Llewellyn ) Appellant. ) Filed: December 10, 2024

Introduction

BNSF Railway Company (BNSF) appeals the trial court’s judgment in favor of

Respondent Douglas Overfield (Overfield), after a jury returned a verdict of $2.75 million

on Overfield’s claim of negligence against BNSF under the Federal Employers’ Liability

Act (FELA) for injuries he sustained while working as a locomotive engineer. BNSF

argues that the verdict director improperly contained two disjunctive bases for negligence,

which were not supported by substantial evidence and constituted an improper roving

commission. BNSF further argues the trial court erred in refusing BNSF’s proffered

withdrawal instruction. Given the nature of FELA, as well as Supreme Court of Missouri

precedent upholding identical language in FELA verdict directors patterned, as here, after Missouri Approved Instruction (MAI) 24.01, we find no instructional error. We affirm the

judgment of the trial court.

Background

Overfield worked as a locomotive engineer for BNSF. On February 18, 2018, as

Overfield was exiting a locomotive, his company-issued reflective vest caught on the rear

door handle mechanism, causing him to fall and sustain severe spinal injuries. He is no

longer able to work as an engineer with the work restrictions given by his orthopedic

surgeon. Overfield filed against BNSF claims of negligence under FELA, and of

negligence per se under the Locomotive Inspection Act (LIA), but only the FELA claim

was submitted to the jury.

Overfield presented evidence that he exited two locomotives that day. The first was

equipped with a short walkway or platform outside the door that led to two steps

descending to ground level. The second locomotive, on which Overfield was injured, had

steps immediately outside the door. Both had a narrow doorway that Overfield had to turn

sideways to pass through. The second locomotive also had a protruding door handle and

bolt-locking mechanism that extended from the door, unlike other locomotives in BNSF’s

fleet that have a recessed lock or small knob. The only handrail outside the door of the

second locomotive required an employee to reach past the door handle of the open door.

BNSF safety policy required employees to maintain “three-point contact” when

exiting a locomotive, which is contact with the locomotive using either two hands and one

foot, or two feet and one hand. Overfield testified that some locomotives had “grab irons”

by the door frame, but the second locomotive, on which he was injured, did not. There

was also evidence that some locomotives had two handrails available as employees exit the

2 cab. Overfield testified he did not receive training regarding exiting a locomotive like the

second locomotive; specifically, how to use a handrail that was partially blocked by the

door of the locomotive.

BNSF policy also required its employees to wear reflective clothing anytime they

were outside the cab of a locomotive, which included while they exit the locomotive. Many

types of reflective clothing were permitted under this policy, but at the time of Overfield’s

injury, BNSF issued only reflective vests to its employees free of charge. Overfield

presented evidence that the zippered vests like the one he was wearing when he was injured,

had large arm holes that were prone to snag, and that prior to his injury BNSF had received

numerous reports of employee injuries or near-injuries resulting from vests snagging on

various locomotive components, including door handles. BNSF had therefore made

available tear-away vests, designed to tear apart if snagged, in order to address the issues

with the zippered vests. However, BNSF received complaints about the tear-away vests

not working properly. At the time of Overfield’s injury, BNSF policy allowed employees

to choose to wear either zippered or tear-away vests.

Overfield submitted only his FELA claim to the jury. He argued that the reflective

vest with a known snag risk was unsafe in the conditions of exiting through the narrow

doorway with a protruding handle and steps immediately outside the door, with the only

handrail being partially blocked by the open door. The trial court gave the following

verdict director to the jury:

Instruction 7

In your verdict, you must assess a percentage of fault against BNSF Railway Company whether or not plaintiff was partly at fault if you believe:

3 First, conditions for work were not reasonably safe and defendant knew or by using ordinary care could have known of such conditions and that they were not reasonably safe, and

Second, with respect to such conditions for work, defendant either failed to provide: reasonably safe conditions for work, or reasonably safe reflective clothing, and

Third, defendant, in any one or more of the respects submitted in Paragraph Second, was negligent, and

Fourth, such negligence resulted, in whole or in part, in injury to Plaintiff Douglas Overfield.

(emphasis added). BNSF objected to the italicized language above offered in the

disjunctive, noting that Overfield’s claim centered on the vest, and Overfield had

abandoned his claim that the design of the second locomotive was inherently unsafe.

BNSF further requested a withdrawal instruction to direct the jury that they “may

not consider the design of the locomotive or any of its parts or appurtenances as evidence

of negligence in this case.” Overfield argued this withdrawal instruction was too broad

because the conditions of the locomotive, while not inherently unsafe, contributed to the

unsafe conditions given the fact that Overfield was required to wear the vest with large arm

holes as he exited the locomotive. The trial court denied the withdrawal instruction.

The jury returned a verdict assessing one hundred percent fault against BNSF for

Overfield’s injuries and awarding damages in the amount of $2.75 million. This appeal

follows.

Discussion

BNSF raises five points on appeal. In Points I and II, BNSF argues the trial court

erred in submitting Instruction 7, the verdict director, because the record lacked substantial

evidence to support the disjunctive bases for finding liability (Point I), and because the

4 language constituted a roving commission (Point II). In Point III, BNSF argues the trial

court abused its discretion in denying BNSF’s proffered withdrawal instruction. In Points

IV and V, BNSF raises errors regarding the submissibility of any claim concerning a defect

in the design of the second locomotive. Overfield maintains that he submitted no such

claim, and the parties agree that in this light, both points are moot. Accordingly, we deny

Points IV and V as moot and discuss only Points I through III.

Point I

In Point I, BNSF argues the trial court erred in giving Instruction 7 because there

was insufficient substantial evidence in the record to support the submission of the two

disjunctive bases for finding BNSF negligent: failure to provide reasonably safe conditions

for work, or failure to provide reasonably safe protective clothing. Specifically, BNSF

argues that because Overfield limited his claim to the use of the vest, the only proper

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Douglas Overfield v. BNSF Railway Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-overfield-v-bnsf-railway-company-moctapp-2024.