Frizzell v. Wabash R. Co.

199 F.2d 153
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1952
Docket14534_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 F.2d 153 (Frizzell v. Wabash R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frizzell v. Wabash R. Co., 199 F.2d 153 (8th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

COLLET, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff-appellant appeals from a judgment entered upon a directed verdict for defendant in an action for damages for personal injuries brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S. C.A. § 51 et seq. The cause of action is predicated upon the alleged negligence of the defendant railroad company:

1. In furnishing and maintaining set-offs with insufficient space for parking work cars used by crews of section hands working on the roadbed;

2. In furnishing plaintiff an unsafe place in which to work, where the footing was insecure, causing plaintiff to slip in the act of assisting in the placing of a work car or push car back on the rails;

3. In furnishing plaintiff insufficient help with which to perform the task assigned to him, in that defendant assigned to plaintiff as section foreman only three men, which number was insufficient to handle work cars in removing them from and replacing them on the rails, without undue physical exertion and injury to the-workmen.

Plaintiff was employed by defendant as a section foreman on April 12, 1949,. and had been a section foreman for approximately a year and a half. On April 12, he and three section hands were engaged in replacing old ties with new ones-on the roadbed of defendant about three-miles northwest of Shenandoah, Iowa. He had been engaged in that work practically continuously in that neighborhood for about three weeks. He was entirely familiar with the work and experienced in it, having been employed in that type of work by defendant for 25 years. The work re.quired the use of a motor car and a push car. Setoffs were customarily, and in this instance actually, constructed at intervals of about one-half mile. They consisted of planks so placed at right angles to the rails and on the right-of-way along the-side of the tracks that cars of the type in question could be run off on them when it was necessary to remove the cars to permit the passing of trains. These setoffs were long enough to accommodate only one-motor car or push car. On the day plaintiff was injured, both a motor car and push car were being used. As was customary, he and his crew went out to the place they were to work that day with both cars. They parked the motor car on a set-off and used the push car in their work, leaving it on the rails. This was not the main line of the railroad, and since no trains were to pass during the morning, it was unnecessary to remove the push car from the rails until lunchtime. It was the rule of defendant that all such cars had to be removed from the rails during the lunch period. When that time came,plaintiff and his crew were working near the setoff where the motor car was parked. The opposite side of the track from that setoff was selected by plaintiff as the appropriate and most convenient place to park the push car during the lunch period. 1 At his direction it was parked on the right- *155 of-way at that point and seven feet from the closest rail, as the company rules required. The roadbed was ballasted with cinders between and for a short distance on each side of the rails. The remainder of the space used for parking the push car was dirt. Such was the ordinary construction of defendant’s roadbed. At the point in question and for some distance in either direction, with one exception, the roadbed was on an embankment with shoulders having a steep grade estimated at 28 per cent. A short distance from that point there was a somewhat more level space where the push car could have been placed. The push car weighed from 500 to 700 pounds. It was removed without incident. But when the four men undertook to place it back on the rails at one o’clock, plaintiff was straining and lifting and just as it was about to go on the rails, his left foot slipped in a depression in the cinder ballasting, he had a severe “stabbing” pain in his left arm and chest, he went down on his right knee and momentarily “blacked •out”. His head cleared shortly, and he says he does not know that the other workmen even noticed his physical condition, although he told one of them of it soon thereafter and about an hour afterwards mentioned it to another one of the three. He stayed on the job during the afternoon but was not able to do much. That evening ■after work he went to his room and after a time went to sleep. He awoke about nine o’clock that evening with very severe pain in the chest and his arm. Upon consultation with the company doctor by telephone, the doctor directed him to go to the hospital at once as his trouble was his heart. He did so and the preliminary diagnosis was confirmed. He stayed in that and other hospitals for a number of weeks and was upon his discharge pronounced physically incapacitated for work of that kind, and retired. He was still not well at the time of the trial, and the evidence tended to establish the fact that he was permanently disabled from performing manual labor, which alone he was qualified to do. In January, 1947, he had trouble with his heart and was off from work for some time. It appeared, however, that his trouble at that time was a comparatively mild attack of angina pectoris and he returned to work. At that time his doctor wrote a letter to the company hospital advising that plaintiff should not be assigned to work requiring heavy exertion. Upon his return to work he was first assigned to the type of work he had previously done, but in August was made a foreman. His duties as foreman required him to participate in all kinds of work done by those under him. His present disqualification results from a coronary occlusion which his expert medical testimony indicates was precipitated by his strenuous exertion on April 12, 1949. The trial court determined that the evidence furnished no basis for a finding of negligence on the part of defendant. Plaintiff’s contention that it does is based upon the premise — sound if factually correct — that if on the evidence reasonable minds might differ on the question of whether defendant had been negligent in either of the three respects above stated, the determination of defendant’s negligence must be left to the jury. Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Botts, 8 Cir., 173 F.2d 164. Plaintiff insists that such a situation was presented as to each assignment of negligence.

The custom of providing setoffs at intervals of every half mile is not conclusive as to their adequacy in number and distance apart. For, as stated in Urie v. Thompson, 337 U.S. 163, 178, 69 S.Ct. 1018 1028, 93 L.Ed. 1282:

“ * * * negligence, within the meaning of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, attached if respondent ‘knew, or by exercise of due care should have known,’ that prevalent standards of conduct were inadequate to protect petitioner and similarly situated employees.”

And, in Andrews v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., 333 U.S. 821, 68 S.Ct. 854, 855, 92 L.Ed. 1108, the failure to do “what ‘a reasonable and prudent man would ordinarily have done under the circumstances of the situation’ ” will constitute negligence.

Plaintiff does not base his charge of inadequacy of setoffs upon the premise that they were too far apart, but, as heretofore *156

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199 F.2d 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frizzell-v-wabash-r-co-ca8-1952.