Gann v. Railroad

47 S.W. 493, 101 Tenn. 380
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 493 (Gann v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gann v. Railroad, 47 S.W. 493, 101 Tenn. 380 (Tenn. 1898).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is an action for personal injuries, tried by the Court and jury, and resulting-in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $1,250. The defendant railroad has appealed and assigned errors.

The first error assigned is to the admission of certain statements made by Cox, immediately after the' accident occurred, as to the cause of it, and how it happened. It is insisted they were not part of the res gestee, and were, therefore, inadmissible. We need not pass upon this assignment, as the statements made by Cox would not change the result of the case or place it in any different light than if they had been rejected.

It is next insisted that the negligence which caused the accident in this case was the personal negligence of Cox, and not official negligence, and that the Court not only failed to make the proper distinction between the two classes of cases, but refused to charge a request which would have pointed out the difference.

It appears that Cox was a section boss and Gann was a section hand under him; that. Cox had authority and control over Gann; that he was subject to his orders; that Cox had the right to employ and discharge at will, and had complete control of the section and hands upon it.

[382]*382It appears that Cox one evening ordered the section hands to get on a handcar, to go to a point on the road known as “Ramsey’s Bottom,” to measure up a lot of old iron. Cox,' as was his custom, took a position at the brake, for the purpose of holding it and guiding the movements of the car. Gann and the other hands, under direction of Cox, operated the propelling lever which drove the car. The accident occurred on a steep down grade, and the car was running at about fifteen miles an hour. The brake was a peculiar one, and appears to have been of Cox’s own invention. The main insistence is that Cox negligently applied, or failed to apply, this brake in such manner as to suddenly check the car. It appears that it acted upon a principle the reverse of the ordinary brake, and that it was necessary to hold it off, or it would apply itself automatically and immediately stop the car unless held off. The' sudden checking of the car, in consequence of Cox letting the brake loose, forced the lever down on plaintiff’s knee, and drove the leg bone down into the ankle, permanently injuring the plaintiff. He fell from the car, and it was at once stopped, and Cox went back to where he was laying, and, according to the proof of two witnesses (though contradicted by Cox himself), stated that he did not go to do it, that his coat was about to get caught in the wheel, and he reached back for it with his left hand, and that threw him around so that the bake handle came, out from under his right [383]*383arm, and the brake went on. This is the statement to which objection was made. There is nothing in it prejudicial to the defendant in this case upon its theory.

It is insisted that Cox, in operating this brake, was a fellow-servant with Gann and the other hands, not filling the place of the master, but, for the time being, in the work and doing the service of a servant.

The Court charged the jury, in substance, that, under the facts as thus stated, Cox and Gann were not fellow-servants, and the defendant would be liable for Cox’s negligence. He was requested to charge, in substance, the reverse of this proposition, and declined.

It has been held in this State that a section boss and his subordinates occupy the relation of master and servant as to each other. It is evident, however, that a man may occupy the position of a master or vice principal in some respects and in the doing of some acts, and that of a fellow-servant in other respects and in doing other acts. If a superior undertakes to do the work of a fellow-servant, and puts himself in the place to do the work of a fellow-servant, he becomes one as to that particular work, and his negligence in such case is that of a fellow-servant, and not that of a vice principal. An individual may act in a dual capacity, not, it is true, at the same moment and in the same act, but he may, while generally acting as vice principal and [384]*384standing in the place of a master, lay aside that character and authority, and occupy, for the time being, the place and do the work of' a fellow-servant, and while thus engaged in the particular act he is, in the eye of the law, a fellow-servant, and the principal is not responsible for his negligence.

This distinction is clearly pointed out in the case of Railroad v. Bolton, 15 Pickle, 277, and cases there cited. See, also, Allen v. Goodwin, 8 Pickle, 385.

The distinction is plainly and forcibly stated in Stockmeyer v. Reed, 55 Fed. Rep., 259, as follows: “The question is not one of rank. If the superintendent was acting at the time in the capacity of a fellow-servant, and his negligence caused the injury, the master is not liable. Notwithstanding his superior power, such superintendent is still a servant, and, in respect to such acts and work as properly belongs to a servant to do, he is, while performing them, discharging the duties of a servant.” See the same case on appeal, 74 Fed. Rep., 186. The same distinction is held in Arkansas. St. L., A. & T. Ry. Co. v. Torry, 58 Ark., 217 (24 S. W. Rep., 244), and cases there cited. So, likewise, in Indiana. Nall v. Railroad, 129 Ind., 264; Taylor v. Railroad, 16 Am. St. Rep., 372. New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and other States hold the same doctrine. Hawkins v. Railroad, 142 N. Y., 416 (25 L. R. A., 396); Ross v. Walker, 139 Pa. St., 42 (23 Am. St. Rep., 160); Harrison v. Detroit, 79 Mich., [385]*385409 (7 L. R. A., 623). And the same doctrine is held in North Dakota, Minnesota, Georgia, Oregon, Yirginia, Vermont, Kansas, California, Massachusetts, West Virginia, Illinois, South Carolina, Rhode Island, and other States. The States of Ohio and Missouri may he said not to recognize the distinction clearly and fully. And Texas, under an Act of the Legislature of that State, defining the relation, seems to be undecided, if not antagonistic to the view. T. & P. Ry. v. Reed, 88 Tex., 439 (31 S. W. Rep., 1058); Sweeney v. Railroad Co., 84 Tex., 433 (19 S. W. Rep., 555). See the subject elaborately discussed in Vol. 47, Central Law Journal, of August 12, 1898, page 130 et seg. See, also, Bailey’s Personal Injuries Relating to Master and Servant, Sections 1834, 1972, 2154, 2176, 2535.

The Court was asked to charge that if plaintiff was one of a gang of laborers at work on the defendant road, and if the gang was under Cox, as foreman, and if Cox had charge of the brake, and the inj ury was brought. about through the negligence of Cox in letting the brake loose and suddenly stopping the car, or throwing it on and suddenly stopping the car, the negligence would be the personal negligence of Cox, as distinguished from his official negligence, and defendant would not be liable; that, in order to charge the defendant, Cox must so far stand in the place of the master as to be charged in the particular matter with a duty toward the defendant, which, under the law, the master [386]*386owed to him, and his negligence in such case could not be such an obligation. This was refused, and was, we think, error. We think the case is almost identical with that of Railroad v. Bolton, 15 Pick., 276, and with that of

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 493, 101 Tenn. 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gann-v-railroad-tenn-1898.