Fish v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

172 S.W. 340, 263 Mo. 106, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 340 (Fish v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fish v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 172 S.W. 340, 263 Mo. 106, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 382 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

The plaintiff is the widow and administratrix of Norman Gr. Fish, and sues to recover damag'es under the Federal Employer’s Liability Act as amended in 1910, for his death on January 15, 1909, at Princeton, Mercer county, Missouri. The petition was filed the 21st of September, 1910, and alleges in substance: That on the date of his death said Norman Gr. Fish was employed as a head brakeman of a freight train by the defendant railroad company, which was an interstate carrier and engaged at the time in interstate commerce; that ‘‘ prior to the 15th of January, 1909, the defendant had negligently erected on its roadway between its passing track and main line at the south end of its yards at Princeton, Missouri, an iron standpipe or water crane for the supplial of water to its engines, and negligently maintained said iron standpipe or water crane so near its said tracks and so near the sides [110]*110of passing cars and of such insufficient distance from said tracks and from the sides of passing cars as to endanger the personal safety and lives of defendant’s employees in the performance of their duties, upon its trains and cars, passing through, said town of Princeton, and along said standpipe or water crane. 'Said standpipe or water crane was then and there erected and maintained within a distance of between eighteen and' twenty-four inches from the sides and side ladders of passing cars ordinarily passing on defendant’s passing track, and said standpipe or water crane was of such insufficient "distance from said railroad tracks and said passing cars and so near the same that it was not reasonably safe to defendant’s brakeman, while on the side and side ladders of its freight car, and while in the performance of their duties on trains passing said standpipe or water crane; and said nearness of said standpipe or water crane rendered defendant’s tracks, cars, and standpipe or water crane, at that point, an unsafe place to work. And at all times mentioned in this petition, the defendant knew of said nearness and said insufficient distance to said standpipe or water crane, and might have known of the same by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence.

“On January 15, 1909, at Princeton, Missouri, while the said Norman Gr. Pish was in the exercise of ordinary care and was in the performance of his duties as defendant’s head brakeman of said freight train, and while said Norman Gr. Pish was on the side of one of defendant’s cars engaged in his duties as head brakeman, and while it was dark and while said Norman Gr. Pish did not know of his proximity to said standpipe or water crane, said train, upon which the said Norman Gr. Pish was serving defendant as head brakeman, ran over and along defendant’s said passing track and carried the said Norman Gr. Pish against said standpipe or water crane, whereby the head and body of Norman Gr. Pish was brought into contact, and [111]*111collision with, and struck by said standpipe or water crane, and the said Norman Gr. Fish was thereby knocked under said train and his body was thereby mutilated and mangled and the said Norman Gr. Fish was thereby negligently killed and caused to die, which death of the said Norman Gr. Fish was caused by the aforesaid negligence and negligent acts of the defendant. That at the time of his death, said Norman Gr. Fish was a servant of the defendant in the conduct of its interstate commerce business; that his earning capacity was one hundred dollars per month.

Wherefore, plaintiff prays damages for his death in the sum of thirty thousand dollars.”

Before answering said petition the defendant filed a petition to remove the same to the Federal court on the ground of diverse citizenship, and on the further ground that it involved the construction of an amendment- (April 5, 1910) of the Federal Employer’s Liability Act and executed bond for removal.

The petition for removal being denied, the defendant answered in substance:

That the deceased husband of the plaintiff had been long in defendant’s employ as a freight brakeman and had full knowledge of the location of the said water crane and negligently assumed such a position on the side of the car and placed his body from such distance that his injuries and death were caused by his own negligence directly contributing thereto and his assumption of the risks of such a collision; that the deceased carried and was familiar with a time-table and also with certain rules prescribed by defendant for its employees, and among other, the following:

“All employees are hereby notified that there are coal chutes, platforms, and other structures, located on the main line and on sidings, also structures and platforms belonging to private corporations and persons, located on industrial sidings and spurs, that will not olear a man riding on the side of a car, and all em[112]*112ployees must protect themselves from injury in passing such structures.”

The answer further alleged that the deceased in violation of defendant’s rule on the occasion in question climbed upon one of its moving trains and attached himself to a certain car and placed his body at an unnecessary distance therefrom, and by reason of such negligence directly contributed to the injury sustained by him without any negligence on the part of the defendant, and that by so acting, he also assumed the risk of such injury.

The answer further stated that prior to his employment the deceased on the 20th of November, 1907, in order to receive employment from defendant as freight brakeman entered into a written, contract in the following terms:

“I have had explained to me the dangerous nature of the service in which I am about to engage. .1 understand that standing in front of or getting on to an engine or car coming towards me, is dangerous, and is in violation of the rules, and if done by me will be at my own risk. I understand that great care must be exercised in approaching and passing all bridges and overhead structures, as they will not clear a man standing on the top of a high covered car; that it is dangerous to climb upon and down the sides of cars, or otherwise expose myself while passing water tank spouts, and house pipes, coal houses or chutes, seed houses, cotton platforms, signal posts, through girder bridges, switch stands, mail cranes, roundhouse doors, buildings and other structures dangerously near to the track, as they will not clear a man with safety, and that I am required to look out for the same and avoid danger. I understand that the duties of the aforesaid situation exposes me to great danger, the risk of which I assume, and agree to use constant and proper care to prevent injury to myself and others.”

[113]*113The answer alleged that this contract was an assumption of risk on the part of the deceased which prevented any recovery in the present action. The answer further alleged that the risks incident to the use of said water crane was not only observable by plaintiff’s husband, but he was fully informed and had full knowledge of the location thereof, and that his continued use of the same prior to his death without complaint or objection was the assumption by him of the risk of injury therefrom.

Plaintiff adduced evidence tending to support the allegations contained in her petition. Defendant introduced evidence tending to show the facts pleaded in its answer. Defendant preserved a term bill of exceptions to the action of the court in denying its petition to remove the cause.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 340, 263 Mo. 106, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-mo-1914.