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

165 P. 831, 101 Kan. 122, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 9, 1917
DocketNo. 20,899
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 165 P. 831 (Fraser v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific 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
Fraser v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 165 P. 831, 101 Kan. 122, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 32 (kan 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, who was an employee of the defendant. The plaintiff recovered, and the defendant appeals.

The defendant maintains two freight houses in Kansas City, Mo., which extend north and south and are connected by a dock or platform. At the close of "business each day a doorman sees to it that all doors are closed and bolted. About six o’clock in the evening 'a watchman comes in and remains until six o’clock the next morning. The watchman is the only man in charge of the company’s property at night, and his duties are to protect and look after such property in all respects— the lights, fire, water, theft, and if doors be not secured, to secure them. Two registry boxes are installed in each building.' In case of fire, the watchman breaks the box, pulls down a lever, and so gives an alarm. Besides this, the watchman is required to visit each box at stated intervals throughout the night, and by means of the bell indicate to the Western Union telegraph office in the Stock Exchange building, a block and a half from the freight houses, that he is awake and on duty. Frank Holland was the watchman for both buildings. The work was too heavy for one man, and the plaintiff took Holland’s place as watchman of the north building; The plaintiff had been fireman of the heating plant which heated the freight house office. It required but a small amount of work to attend the heating plant, and he continued to do so after he assumed the duties of watchman. One night, as the plaintiff was going his rounds, he saw an open door on the west side and [124]*124toward the north end of the building. He had passed by the door hourly from 7:05 p. m. to 12:05 a. m. and the door had been closed, but as he came to it at 1:05 a. m. it was open. He carried a lantern at his side in his left hand and a revolver in a holster under his left arm. Upon seeing the open door he reached for his revolver with his right hand, and was immediately shot in the left arm by a man who escaped through the open door.

The plaintiff’s petition does not contain the word “watchman.” He framed his petition and he framed his testimony to make it appear that aside from his duties as fireman his duties consisted in ringing those two bells, installed for the purpose of compelling him to make an hourly record of the fact that he was awake and about his business. He said the registry boxes were for protection against fire, and had to be rung every hour. He had no orders covering anything except his duties as fireman and turning in those registry boxes. He said Holland was a watchman, and had pulled the bells as a part of his duties as watchman. Holland was relieved of all duty in the north building, but the plaintiff said one of Holland’s duties was taken away and given to him, and that was to pull the bells, and he pulled them as fire protection. The plaintiff’s superior officer left the order for him to ring those bells. He had no orders about doors, except the one through which he entered the building. That one he was required to shut, so people could not steal or burn or do any damage, and he locked it behind him to keep anybody from coming in after him. But there his duties in respect to doors ended. True, he said, “while working there I went round some with Holland, and found doors open, and we closed them,” but when he took Holland’s place, and there was no other employee except himself in the building, sometimes he glanced around when going to ring his bells, and sometimes he did not. When not ringing the bells he stayed in the office.

The supposed foundation for the defendant’s legal liability in damages is this: The plaintiff was obliged to pass by the door through which the intruder entered every hour of the night in going from the office to the places where he worked the bell-ringing charm against fire. The door was left unlocked, and no guard was set to prevent desperadoes from [125]*125making a breach through this weak place in the fortifications behind which the plaintiff rung his bells. These culpable omissions exposed the plaintiff, who was entirely without fault, to great bodily harm, and even to death, and did in fact, through a series of events linked together in natural sequence, proximately cause the plaintiff to be shot.

Testimony which the plaintiff himself produced, and the testimony of witnesses produced by the defendant whom the plaintiff did not undertake to contradict, cut the underpinning from the. fabrication that bell ringing was an independent employment, and not a means of making hourly reports, and established the fact that the plaintiff was watchman of the north building in place of Holland, and succeeded to Holland’s duties there. There are doors and doors of the north freight house, which is 600 feet long and 45 feet wide. A rolling door at the south end opens on the dock between the two buildings, and has bolts in the sides. Another door fastens in that way. The west doors, about thirty in number, are sliding doors, and when closed are fastened by bolts pushed down with the foot into slots. Sometimes it would be discovered that in closing the building in the evening a bolt had not been pressed down, and the proof, coming from the lips of the plaintiff’s own witness as well as the witnesses for the defendant, was that the watchman’s first duty on coming into the building in the evening was to see that doors were closed and fastened. The plaintiff did not dispute this proof, but on rebuttal merely reiterated his claim that he had no instructions regarding doors, and said he was carried on the pay roll as a fireman. The plaintiff had pleaded that he was engaged in interstate commerce, the defendant being an interstate carrier, and the case was submitted to the jury to say whether or not the defendant was negligent in not furnishing the plaintiff a safe place in which to pursue his nocturnal, indoor, interstate commerce pastime of bell ringing..

There was just one fair dispute concerning the facts, and that was whether or not, when the plaintiff became watchman as well as fireman, he was drilled with respect to looking after the doors of the building. There was no rational ground for dispute to be settled by the jury that the plaintiff was watchman, “ringing bells” being a freight-house expression denot[126]*126ing the duties of watchman, and the court should have instructed the jury to that effect. There was no dispute to be settled by the jury that the first thing for the watchman to do when he came on duty was to see that the doors were secured. A watchman of ordinary capacity might be expected to understand this fact without instruction. The plaintiff admitted he had gone about the building with the watchman, had observed open doors and had closed them. But if the plaintiff needed instruction, the defendant’s negligence consisted, hot in leaving the door unbolted or failing to appoint a watchman to guard its watchman while on guard, but in not telling the plaintiff to see that the door was bolted. This negligence was not relied on as a basis for recovery.

There was evidence that it was generally known there were persons about the freight house at different times of night looking for an opportunity to steal property in the defendant’s care. An unlocked door would facilitate an attempt to steal should one be made. The defendant, however, had taken precaution against theft.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 P. 831, 101 Kan. 122, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraser-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-kan-1917.