Fryer v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

63 S.W.2d 47, 333 Mo. 740, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 580
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 63 S.W.2d 47 (Fryer v. St. Louis-San Francisco 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
Fryer v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 63 S.W.2d 47, 333 Mo. 740, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 580 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This is an action based upon violation of the Federal Boiler Inspection Act, U.S.C.A., Title 45, Chapter 1, Section 23. Plaintiff's petition was in two counts, the first, for damages for the death of her husband, the second, for damages for his conscious pain and suffering. Plaintiff's petition pleaded the facts concerning his injuries, as follows:

"3. Plaintiff's said husband, in the line of his duties and in the *Page 744 course of his employment, left the defendant's terminal at Springfield, Missouri, for Muskogee, Oklahoma, as engineer on locomotive engine No. 384, then and there being used and operated by defendant in pulling its westbound passenger train No. 1 between Springfield and Muskogee aforesaid; that said engine No. 384 was a large passenger engine, and was equipped with a reverse lever located near the engineer's seat box, for use by the engineer in handling and controlling said engine and the speed and power thereof; that said lever was a large steel bar, four or five feet in height, set in a perpendicular position, with a quadrant with notches thereon for holding said lever in proper position, so that when it became necessary for said lever to be moved either forward or backward on said quadrant it was necessary for the engineer to release the catch on said lever and the attachments thereto from the notches in said quadrant, by taking hold of said lever with his hand or hands, at the top end thereof; that said lever was located immediately back of the head of the boiler, and was so constructed that the same could be moved either backward from, or forward towards the head of the boiler, and had to be so moved in the operation of said locomotive.

"4. Plaintiff further states that said locomotive was equipped with a Baker valve, which was attached to said reverse lever at the lower end thereof and which was a part of the appurtenances and appliances of said locomotive and boiler; that said Bakervalve was attached directly to the valve stem, and connected withsaid reverse lever, so that when said locomotive engine was inoperation and working steam and pulling its load there was animmense pressure directly against and upon said lever, so thatwhile said locomotive was in operation and pulling its load, saidlever when released from the notches in the quadrant, by theengineer, as aforesaid, on account of the pressure and force exerted thereon by reason of the Baker valve arrangement as aforesaid, and by reason of its defective and unsafe condition,would suddenly more and jump forward with great force andviolence.

"5. Plaintiff states that said locomotive engine was not equipped with an air reverse, as such engines are customarily, and should be, equipped; that an air reverse is an attachment or appliance modern and in customary use on locomotives, which if attached to the Baker valve appliance and lever, controls and operates said lever by air, so that when the same is released from the notches in the quadrant aforesaid, the movement of said lever forward or backward is controlled and held in check by means of an air valve, so that the same will move steadily, easily and under control of the engineer; but when not soequipped with an air reverse, the said lever when released fromits notches upon the quadrant aforesaid, will as heretoforestated, move and jump forward with great force and violence whilesaid locomotive engine is in operation and pulling its load; (and *Page 745 particularly will move suddenly and jump forward with great force and violence when the Baker valve attachment is defective and out of repair, as herein set out). (Italics and parentheses ours.)

"6. Plaintiff states that on the early morning of said date, while her said husband was running and operating said engine No. 384, as the engineer thereof, pulling defendant's fast westbound passenger train No. 1, and when the same reached and was upon a certain hill or grade in defendant's track near Verona. Missouri, it became necessary in the course of operation of said engine for plaintiff's said husband to move said lever; and in order to move the same either forward or backward it was then necessary for plaintiff's said husband to release said lever from the notches in the quadrant thereof; and plaintiff states that while her said husband was seated upon his seat in the cab of said engine, with his feet projecting towards the head of the boiler, and while said locomotive engine was running and pulling its load, he thereupon took hold of the upper end of said lever with his hand, or hands, and released same from one of the notches in said quadrant so as to move said lever; and plaintiff states that when he did so, by reason of the force, pressure and power exerted upon said lever as aforesaid by said Baker valve, and by reason of its defective and unsafe condition as herein set out, the same was thereby instantly moved and jerked forward with great force and violence, while plaintiff's said husband had hold of same with his hand, or hands, so that then and thereby the upper portion of the body of plaintiff's said husband was suddenly and violently jerked forward by said lever while he was seated as aforesaid in the engineer's seat and that the said lever struck and caught one of his legs between said lever and the boiler head." (Plaintiff seems to plead that, if not equipped with an air reverse, the lever would jump forward whether defective or not.)

The petition then makes five separate charges of negligence, four of which relate to the failure to have the engine equipped with the air reverse attachment above described and the other being as follows:

"(b) And, in that said Baker valve attachment was defective and the valves thereof were defective, insecure and unsafe, and were not in proper working order; which said defects and insufficiencies thereof cannot be more specifically set forth herein because the same are unknown to this plaintiff."

Defendant moved to have the petition made more definite and certain to point out what defects were claimed other than the failure to have an air reverse. After this motion was overruled, defendant answered setting up both a general denial and affirmative defenses. When it came to submitting the case, plaintiff abandoned all of its assignments concerning the failure to equip the engine with the air reverse attachment and in instructions hypothesized as negligence *Page 746 which authorized a verdict for plaintiff, if her husband's death resulted therefrom, the following:

"And if you further find that the said reverse lever gears,valves, attachments and bearings thereof were then in a defectivecondition, and that by reason thereof when the deceased released and undertook to move said reverse lever, the same suddenly jumped forward and caught and broke the deceased's leg, and otherwise injured him; and, if you further find and believe from the evidence that by reason (and on account of the defective andinoperative condition of said locomotive, as aforesaid, if you find the same was in a defective and inoperative condition, thesaid locomotive was not in proper condition and safe tooperate) in the service and use to which the same was then being put; then the defendant was guilty of negligence." (It is obvious that if a thing is in a defective condition it is not in a proper condition, but how can there be a defective condition without a defect? That seems to be the missing link in this case.)

The jury's verdict was for plaintiff on the first count for $10,000, and on the second count for $5,000. From the judgment entered thereon, defendant has appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.2d 47, 333 Mo. 740, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fryer-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1933.