Ergenbright v. Saint Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.

163 P. 173, 99 Kan. 765
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1917
DocketNo. 20,653
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 P. 173 (Ergenbright v. Saint Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ergenbright v. Saint Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co., 163 P. 173, 99 Kan. 765 (kan 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This action was brought by Charles S. Ergenbright against the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company to recover for personal injuries sustained while he was in the service of the company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $5000 and from the judgment thereon the defendant appeals.

The first contention is that jurisdiction of the defendant [766]*766was not obtained by a valid service or other means. It appears that the defendant had a line of railroad which extended into Kansas a distance of two miles to the city of Coffey-ville. In 1909 the company entered into an arrangement with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company for the transfer to the latter of that part of the road which extended into Kansas. Afterwards it ceased to file reports with the secretary of state and its right to transact business in the state was finally'revoked on July 21, 1914. The injury occurred on July 30, 1914. There was testimony in behalf of the defendant to the effect that in the accounting of business, as between the defendant and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, the line of division was at the state line; that each was a separate and distinct organization; and that W. H. Tester, On whom the service of process was made, was the agent of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and not of the defendant. Other testimony, however, was to the effect that in dealing with the public Tester was held out by the defendant as its agent. In the folders, time-cards and advertising matter issued by the defendant, Tester was represented as its agent at Coffeyville. He testified that he acted for the defendant as well as the Missouri Pacific Railway Company in selling tickets and issuing bills of lading and that his duties as agent were substantially the same after the transfer of the property to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company as they had been before that time. The trains of the defendant were run through from Van Burén, Ark., to Coffeyville, without a break or change of control at the state line, and it appears that the trains were operated in Kansas by the defendant and that it actually did business there. The questions whether or not the defendant was doing business in Kansas and whether or not Tester was its agent were issues of fact which were determined by the court and it is reasonably clear that there was testimony to support the finding of the court that due service had been made.

The principal contention is that the evidence did not support the charge of negligence made against the defendant and that there was no basis in the evidence for the verdict of the jury. It appears that the plaintiff on the night of his injury was employed as a bfakeman on a freight train of the defend[767]*767ant which had taken the.siding at Oolagah, Okla., to allow passenger and mail train No. 119, southbound, to pass. The tracks run north and south and the station is located west of the tracks and has a platform, at the north end of which a mail crane stood, the latter being about seventy-five feet north of the station building. The plaintiff, after having crossed over the tracks at a point nearly opposite the north end of the platform, was walking northward along the west side of the main track toward a switch about 800 feet distant which he intended to throw after the passenger train had passed, when he was struck near the neck and shoulders by the mail sacks thrown out of the mail car of the passenger train, which was moving at the rate of about fifty miles an hour. The mail sacks were discharged and the plaintiff was found about sixty feet north of the crane, with his feet about ten or twelve feet west of the rails. The plaintiff alleged that the postal employees had been in the habit of throwing mail sacks out at the station in a negligent manner and that with the knowledge of this practice the defendant had permitted it to continue for a long time. The night operator at the station, who had been employed about eight months, testified that it was his duty to go out after the mail train had passed and bring in the mail sacks, and among other things stated: “I think I have found sacks west of the ditch or depression I have spoken of in the weeds. Not very many times. Three, four or five times, not over six, I don’t think.” The ditch mentioned was a flat, sloping depression about ten or twelve feet wide extending along the west side of the track for drainage, and beyond this depression on the higher ground were some grass and weéds. The operator had told the agent that he had difficulty in finding the sacks. The postal employees testified that it was their duty to throw the sacks downward and outward just before reaching the crane upon being warned by three.blasts of the whistle, and that it was good practice if the sacks could be thrown within a distance of sixty feet of the crane, depending somewhat on the speed of the train. There was testimony that the bottom of the car would be about four feet from the ground and about on a line with a man’s shoulder; that to throw the sacks thirty feet from the track would not be good practice; and that as the rule re[768]*768quired that'the sacks be thrown downward and outward it would not be good practice to throw them twelve feet from the car on a level with the floor of the car. The jury found, that complaint had been made by the operator who collected the sacks to the agent of the defendant as to the manner in which sacks had been thrown. There was also a finding that the negligence of the defendant on which the recovery was based was its failure to “report reckless discharge of mail to proper authorities.”

It.is insisted by the defendant that the finding was without any substantial support in the evidence and that there was no basis for holding the defendant liable for acts of one not in its employ and over whom it had no control. The one who threw the mail sacks which struck the plaintiff was not the servant or employee of the defendant and it is conceded that the doctrine of respondeat superior does not apply. He was an agent of the government and as to the manner of handling the mail was answerable to the United States and not to the defendant. A railroad company is not liable because of a single negligent act of the postal agent, but may become liable if it knows or should know of a custom or practice of the delivery of mail sacks in such a way as to endanger those rightfully at or near the place of ^delivery, without doing what it can to prevent a continuance of the negligent practice. The fact that the postal agent negligently threw the sack against the plaintiff on this occasion is not of itself sufficient to render the defendant liable.

In the early case of Muster v. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R’y Co., 61 Wis. 325, it was held that the negligent act of the postal clerk could not be imputed to the railroad company unless the company itself was negligent and it was added:

“We conclude that the mere act of the postal employee in throwing off the mail-bag at the depot, conceding it to have been a negligent act, was not negligence on the part of the railway company.” (p. 331.)

In Galloway v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 56 Minn. 346, the basis of the liability of the railroad company for an injury occasioned by a postal agent was stated as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 P. 173, 99 Kan. 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ergenbright-v-saint-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-co-kan-1917.