Elizabeth v. Conemaugh Black Lick Railroad

133 F. Supp. 533, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2915
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 28, 1955
DocketCiv. A. 12585
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 133 F. Supp. 533 (Elizabeth v. Conemaugh Black Lick Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elizabeth v. Conemaugh Black Lick Railroad, 133 F. Supp. 533, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2915 (W.D. Pa. 1955).

Opinion

GOURLEY, Chief Judge.

This is a claim for damages resulting from a death action under the Federal *536 Employers Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq.

Upon jury trial, a verdict was returnéd in favor of plaintiff administratrix in the amount of Eighty Thousand Dollars ($80,000.00). The surviving wife and seven minor children suffered pecuniary loss as a result of the most unfortunate death. 1

In answer to specific interrogatories, the jury found the total-amount of damages to be $100,000.00 but attributed twenty per cent of the negligence which was the proximate cause of the accident to the decedent. 2

The matters before the court, are twofold:

(1) Motion to .set aside the verdict or for' judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

(2) Motion for new trial.

Motion to Set, Aside,.Th,e Verdict. or For Judgment Notwith- ’ standing The Verdict

The cause of action arose out of an unusual accident. Decedent, employed as a skip hoist operator, was found at the bottom of a pit under,.a steel bucket which constituted .part of the'skip'hoist equipment, which .mechanism was utilized in the .servicing of. defendant’s locomotives. Sand is received from hopper cars and is conveyed from a pit beneath the hopper cars by the hoist bucket to the storage. bin. From this bin it is dispensed to locomotives.

The duties of the hoist attendant are primarily to transfer sand from the hopper cars to the storage bin by the operation of the skip hoist which, fundamentally, is a bucket which ascends from the pit beneath the hopper car to the storage bin at the top of the structure and then descends again to the pit. The skip hoist apparatus which causes the bucket to function in this manner is electrically 'operated and controlled by means of electrical switches and buttons.

- - The bucket ascends and descends in a .vertical line ■ and is suspended from a cable. There are two sets, of controls, one inside a shed and one outside on the wall of the shed adjacent to the pit. The bucket’is designed to travel along an oblique path on rails to a point some fifteen feet under a set of railroad tracks wbére'út trips a mechanism opening a hopper' door an'd is filled with sand.. The filling process takes- about five seconds.

When filled, the bucket then comes out of the pit oh a 127° slope and then vertically ascends some thirty to forty feet to the top of -a- concrete elevator where *537 the sand is dumped. The bucket takes about five seconds to dump and then descends vertically downward back into the pit where the process of loading and unloading is repeated automatically. The time needed for the bucket to be filled in the bottom of the pit and to ascend to the top of the elevator is about fifteen seconds. The same amount of time is needed for its return trip. The whole cycle is completed in about 40 to-45 seconds. • •

This bucket can be operated automatically by pushing the “On” button and the “Hoist” button inside the shed. It can be stopped anywhere in its path by pushing another button called the “Sáfe” button. At such time as the machine, is on automatic operation, it may be com trolled by use of the outside switch to-the following extent: Assuming the button on the outside switch remains in an out position, the machine continues to operate automatically until the current is completely shut off on the inside control or by depressing the button on the outside and turning it in a clockwise position. The bucket will continue to operate until it comes to rest in the bottom of the pit for reloading, and will stop and remain stopped until the buttoh ÓH the outside switch is released. In short, by depressing the outside button and locking it by turning it clockwise,' the bucket will make one cycle and come to rest at the bottom of .the pit and will remain stopped.

Decedent, in the performance of his duties, was required at infrequent intervals to descend into the pit to remove spilled sand from the floor of the pit and to grease guide rails which engage the wheels of the bucket and the gate or door beneath the hopper car which is opened and closed automatically by- the bucket.

Plaintiff advanced three distinct theories from which anyone, or all, or a combination of more than one, the negligence of the defendant might be premised.

Theory No. 1

That after decedent or another had depressed the outside push button arid the hoist bucket was stopped, and decedent had descended into the hoist pit in the performance of his duties, vibration from surrounding blast furnaces, a cindering plant, and railroad movements caused the push button to spring out re-energizing the hoist machinery, causing the bucket to come down upon the decedent.

In support of this theory, plaintiff offered expert testimony of engineers to establish the defective condition of the outside switch. Their testimony developed the fact that the outside switch was comprised of a button one inch in diameter and about 1% inches in length and contained a slot 'about % or one inch from the outside surface of the button. This slot when depressed and turned was supposed to come to' rest on a metal lip in the fraine of the' switch, thereby guaranteeing to keep it locked in a depressed position-;' This switch in the skip hoist was defective in that the button was not designated to the particular switch, and if the button was so designed, then the cover' upon which it was to lock itself was not the proper mate. The button was worn so that when depressed it was almost' impossible to turn the button clockwise. Further, the button was worn to a degree that the notch in the button could not fit itself on the metal case. Friction, and friction alone, would hold the button in a depressed position. No safeguard or locking device was present that would insure the button remaining in a depressed position.

Theory No. 2

Defendant failed to provide and maintain a reasonably safe place for decedent to work which was a proximate cause of his death.

Evidence was introduced’to show that the decedent was required to enter a dark pit by means of a' series of steel steps imbedded in concrete.' Some of the rungs were missing and others were broken. A temporary makeshift was provided in place of repairing the broken rungs. This makeshift was a 'rope by which the employee could lower himself *538 into the pit. There was no light in the pit. There was no electric appliance or switch in the pit by which a workman in the pit could control the movement of the bucket in the event some intervening agency or person would start the movement of the bucket to the bottom of the pit. Furthermore, the dimensions of the pit were such that no clearance for the protection of a workman legally in the pit did exist at such time as the bucket descended into the pit. Because of the lack of clearance, lack of light and absence of a switch and the defective conditions of the rungs, the pit into which the decedent was required to go in order to remove the accumulation of debris rendered the pit an unsafe place in-which to work.

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133 F. Supp. 533, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizabeth-v-conemaugh-black-lick-railroad-pawd-1955.