Engel v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

195 N.W. 523, 111 Neb. 21, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 66
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1923
DocketNo. 22467
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 195 N.W. 523 (Engel v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engel v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 195 N.W. 523, 111 Neb. 21, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 66 (Neb. 1923).

Opinion

Colby, District Judge.

This is an action brought in the district court for Lancaster county, prosecuted under the federal employers’ liability act by the legal representative of Adam Engel, deceased, who in his lifetime was a section foreman in appellant’s employ in the city of Lincoln, to recover damages because of the alleged negligent fatal injury of the said Adam Engel by appellant.

The amended petition, after alleging matters of jurisdiction, besides pleading the violation of an ordinance of the city of Lincoln restricting the speed of locomotives or trains to four miles an hour within the city, pleads as other negligent acts by the appellant causing said injury, in substance, as follows: (1) In not keeping a look-out on the advancing end of the locomotive which was running backward; (2) in not seeing sa.id deceased and warning him of his danger; (3) in not having the locomotive under control at the time it struck deceased; (4) in not stopping the locomotive before striking deceased; (5) in operating the locomotive backward without a look-out on the rear or advancing end; (6) in operating the locomotive at a speed in excess of 10.miles an hour; (7) in not sounding a whistle [23]*23or ringing a bell as it moved backward at the time and immediately prior to the time of the accident; (8) in not warning the deceased before the locomotive struck him and in time to permit him to have escaped injury; (9) in not stopping the locomotive after appellant and its agehts and employees in the locomotive, in charge thereof, saw said deceased and realized his danger.

Appellant’s answer admitted its corporate capacity and the relation between itself and Adam Engel at and before the time of his death; admitted that appellant is a railroad corporation engaged in interstate transportation by rail of freight and passengers; that said Engel, on the day of the accident which resulted in his death, was a foreman of a gang of men engaged in maintaining and repairing appellant’s roadbed and side-tracks in the city of Lincoln used in its business as an interstate carrier by rail, and that such work was necessary to maintain its tracks in proper condition; and also admitted the collision and the injury, and that the locomotive was being driven backward at the time of the accident; admitted Engel’s age, and that there survived him a widow, daughter, and a son, but denied all other allegations of the petition.

The appellant further alleged that the ordinance pleaded in plaintiff’s petition was void; that at the time of the accident the day was clear and that there were no obstructions to Engel’s view of the approaching locomotive, which he knew was moving backward and was .liable to pass over the track at any time. The answer also alleged that the whistle had been sounded and the bell was ringing, and that Engel, in going on the tracks under the circumstances, assumed the risk of his injuries, and that his death grew out of such assumption and his own carelessness and negligence.

In reply it was alleged, among other things, that there were many cars, locomotives and trains moving about the yard in the vicinity of th' accident and men were constantly at work in that neighborhood.

The case was tried and submitted to a jury, who returned' a. verdict in appellee’s favor in the sum of $10,000; motion [24]*24for new trial was overruled and the case appealed to this court; appellant setting forth 49 separate assignments of error upon which a reversal is asked, also stating 15 propositions of law relied upon for the reversal of the case.

It is plain that under the issues the burden of proof rested upon plaintiff to show by a preponderance of the evidence one or more of the material specific acts of negligence of the defendant alleged in the petition, and that such act or acts caused the fatal injury to Adam Engel, and, unless it appears that such act or acts were proved, the verdict of the jury cannot be sustained.

There seems to be a duplication of some of the specific acts of negligence alleged, but this fact is not material. It appears from the record that there was very little conflict in the evidence on the trial, such conflict being mainly in relation to whether the bell on the advancing locomotive was ringing from the time it passed the Ravenna crossing to the time of the accident, or not. The employees on the engine testified in the affirmative, but witnesses for the plaintiff testified that they did not hear the ringing of the bell. It also appears that the whistle was not blown after the locomotive entered the yards passing through the gate at the Ravenna crossing.

The evidence shows that the deceased, who was a section foreman and foreman of a gang of some 16 to 18 men, was engaged on the day of the injury in shoveling snow and clearing the depot and tracks, and that on such day the weather was blustery and stormy, the ground covered with snow, and the tracks wet. The accident occurred in the extensive Burlington yards at Lincoln, in that part westward from the passenger station. It appears that deceased was fatally injured by the engine and tender of train No. 18, and that at or about that time the engine of train No. 89, coming from the roundhouse, was moving forward toward the deceased, with bell ringing, and that the engine and tender of train No. 18 had come from its regular run from Hastings to Lincoln and was going backward to the roundhouse to lay up until its next run.

[25]*25The defendant and its employees on the locomotive knew that deceased and the gang of men under him were constantly crossing and recrossing the tracks at the place where the accident occurred, that locomotives were traveling backward and forward on the many tracks in the yards and bells were ringing on the different engines that were at times passing to and fro, and that there were 50 to 60 engines backing over the track every eight hours. It is unquestioned that the yard in which the deceased was working with his gang of men was a place of danger at nearly all times, and that this must have been known to deceased' as well as to the defendant railroad company and its employees on the engine of train No. 18, and it would seem that the care, caution and prudence which a reasonable person, under the circumstances, should exercise were required both of employer and employee at all times to insure the safety jf those employed in labors about the yards.

It further appears from the record that the Ravenna crossing, or the Ravenna-Billings crossing, as it is sometimes called, was about three blocks, or a distance of 406 or 500 feet from the place of the accident; that train No. 18 was late 10 or 15 minutes; and that there was a way for No. 18’s locomotive to have gone to the roundhouse not over the west-bound track where the accident occurred, and that such way was generally or sometimes used when the trains were late.

The first error assigned by appellant for reversal of the judgment of the lower court is that such court overruled appellant’s motion to strike from the amended petition reference to the ordinance of the city of Lincoln forbidding the operation of trains, engines, cars or trucks within the corporate limits of the city of Lincoln at a greater rate of speed than 4 miles an hour, and that this alleged error also includes the rulings of the court on the same subject in the introduction of evidence. While it is true that, the district court overruled the motion to strike from the amended petition the ordinance of the city of Lincoln referred to, and also true that evidence of such ordinance [26]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 N.W. 523, 111 Neb. 21, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engel-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-neb-1923.