Groesbeck v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. of Canada

132 N.W. 1024, 167 Mich. 259, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 624
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1911
DocketDocket No. 39
StatusPublished

This text of 132 N.W. 1024 (Groesbeck v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. of Canada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groesbeck v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. of Canada, 132 N.W. 1024, 167 Mich. 259, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 624 (Mich. 1911).

Opinion

Stone, J.

Emma Groesbeck, as administratrix, brought this action of trespass on the case, seeking to recover damages under the death act (3 Comp. Laws, § 10427), so called, for the killing of Alden B. Groesbeck, yard foreman, in the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company’s yards in Durand, at about 10 o’clock a. m. on the 18th day of M&y, 1907.

It will be noted that the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway Company was not made a party defendant. The following excerpt from the declaration is here made:

“For that whereas, heretofore, to wit, on the 18th day of May, 1907, the above defendant the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada was and is a foreign corporation, but doing business in the State of Michigan, and was operating one or more of its lines of railroads in and through the county of Shiawassee, and the defendant the [261]*261Grand Trunk Western Railway Company was and is a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Michigan, and operating its line of railroad in the county of Shiawassee, and the Toledo, Saginaw & Muskegon Railway Company was and is a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Michigan; all of said railroads being a part and parcel of one and the same system, known as the Grand Trunk Railway system; and all of which railways being so operated together and in conjunction with each other under the management and control of the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada.
“And on account of said railroads being so operated it became and was the duty of said defendants to furnish to any and all of their servants reasonably safe tools and appliances with which to work, and particularly to furnish to switchmen and brakemen cars whose ladders should be reasonably safe and sound for such employes to do the work required of them by.said companies in switching and braking and making up trains, and it was their duty not to require any of their said employés to work upon cars in doing switching and braking that had defective ladders which would give way, or bolts draw out, and thereby cause them to lose their balance, or to slip on said ladders and fall and be injured. And it owed the further duty not to use cars with ladders where the boltings of said ladders to said cars were loose to such an extent that switchmen and brakemen in using them would believe that they were pulling out or off from said car, and cause said brakeman or switchman to believe that said ladders were dangerous and were giving way, and to believe that they were being put in danger of losing their lives, and on account thereof cause such switchmen or brakemen to endeavor to save himself by taking hazardous chances. * * *
“Yet, notwithstanding this fact, said defendants caused to be used in their yards in Durand, on the date aforesaid, a certain car, upon the end of which was a ladder that was defective, in that the sides of said ladder was split, and when an employe in the usual and ordinary course of his employment would take hold of the rounds of said ladder in the usual and ordinary way that said ladder would give way or spring from its fastenings to said car, and would cause one so using said ladder to believe that the same would give way entirely and was dangerous, [262]*262and would cause him to fall. And in doing the work of his employment, when the car was necessarily in motion, it would cause him to believe that he was in great danger of losing his life or receiving severe injuries to his person, and would cause him to take desperate chances to prevent such loss of life or serious injuries.
“And for that whereas, in the yards of said defendants at the village of Durand, Shiawassee county, at the time aforesaid, Alden B. Groesbeck was switching for said defendants in said defendants’ yards at Durand, Mich. And, notwithstanding the duties aforesaid, said defendants were using said car with said defective ladder thereon above described, and it became and was the duty of said Alden B. Groesbeck to mount said car by the ladder aforesaid in the usual and ordinary course of his employment, and acting in the usual and ordinary way of doing his business as switchman he attempted to mount said ladder, and while so doing, on account of the defective condition of said ladder being split, loose, old, worn out, and rickety, it gave way, loosened, and sprung out from its fastening on said car, said car at the time being in motion, and on account thereof said Alden B. Groesbeck believed himself to be in great and imminent danger; and believing that unless he could save himself by attempting to secure a hold of the brake wheel, and getting a safe position on the sill along the end of said car, that he would be killed or receive great and serious injuries, he attempted to so save himself, and in so doing fell, and was run over by said car and instantly killed.”

Upon the trial of the case, one George W. Alexander, a witness sworn on behalf of the plaintiff, testified in substance as follows:

“Direct Examination. By Mr. Chapman: I am secretary of all the companies composing the western division of the Grand Trunk system; the roads are the Grand Trunk Western Railway Company, the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway, the Toledo, Saginaw & Mackinaw Railway, the Chicago, Detroit & Canada Grand Trunk Junction Railroad, and the Michigan Air Line Railway. All these roads are west of the Port Huron tunnel, and are in the western division of the Grand Trunk system. The roads east of the tunnel as far as Toronto are called the middle and southern division and the roads east of Toronto and extending to Portland, [263]*263Me., are the eastern division of the Grand Trunk system. These roads are operated in connection with each other under one president and one general manager. Charles M. Hays was general manager of the whole system on the 18th of May, 1907. A train starting from Muskegon over the Toledo, Saginaw & Mackinaw runs over its own line to Ashley, then over the Ann Arbor Railroad to Owosso, and the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway to Durand; the latter road is a part of the Grand Trunk system. The Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada extends east from the Port Huron tunnel to Portland, Me., and is a part of the Grand Trunk system, so called. I know that the Grand Trunk of Canada does not own or lease all of the roads in the Grand Trunk system. It leases some of them. The Grand Trunk of Canada leases the Cincinnati, Saginaw & Mackinaw Railroad, which extends from Bay City to Durand. I suppose the trains running over the Cincinnati, Saginaw & Mackinaw are made up at Durand. As treasurer, I understand that the expenses in keeping the yards in Durand are borne by the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee Railway. The Grand Trunk of Canada is lessee of the Cincinnati, Saginaw & Mackinaw and the Grand Trunk Western Railway. I should say that the Toledo, Saginaw & Mackinaw Railway would not be interested in any of the expenses at Durand. The money earned by the Toledo, Saginaw & Mackinaw is sent directly to the Old Detroit National Bank at Detroit, and is placed to the credit of the Grand Trunk Railway system. This is true also of the Grand Trunk Western Railway. After it has been deposited in the bank to the credit of the Grand Trunk system, Mr. Frank Scott, treasurer of the Grand Trunk Railway, has authority to draw it out.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 1024, 167 Mich. 259, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groesbeck-v-grand-trunk-railway-co-of-canada-mich-1911.