Hach v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad

93 S.W. 825, 117 Mo. App. 11, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 26
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 93 S.W. 825 (Hach v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hach v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad, 93 S.W. 825, 117 Mo. App. 11, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 26 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiff’s husband, a locomotive engineer, was killed on February 25, 1904, while in the employ of defendant company. His engine was derailed and toppled over, carrying him under it and crushing him so that he died. The great weight of the evidence goes to show the accident was caused by the breaking of one of the north rails of the railroad track and that the rail broke because a rotten tie gave way under the weight of the locomotive. This tie was immediately beneath a [13]*13joint where the ends of two' rails came together. As the locomotive ran over the joint, the decayed tie broke, and in consequence the weight of the engine bore down the east end of the westernmost of the two rails which met at the joint and broke it at a point some six feet from the joint. When the tie gave way, the end of the rail was left unsupported and it bent under the load of the engine so far that it snapped in two. When the front wheel of the engine reached the broken end, the wheel was deflected from the rail and the engine careened over and fell down an embankment.

Much testimony was introduced that the roadbed was in bad condition in the vicinity; that the ballast had been washed out by the pouring down of rainwater from a hill on the' south side of the track and that a great many of the ties were rotten. Defendant’s foreman in charge of that section swore the roadbed needed working-all along and that he had a force inadequate to keep it in good order. His superior, the roadmaster, gave evidence to the contrary.

The negligence charged against defendant was permitting, its roadbed to be in an unsafe condition at the place of the accident, and failing to replace with good ties the rotten ones beneath the rail that broke under the locomotive.

, The answer was a general denial of the allegations of the petition and a plea that the death of deceased was due to his own carelessness; a plea unsupported by the testimony.

A perusal of the record cannot fail to impress anyone with the conviction that deceased lost his life as a direct result of the bad condition of defendant’s roadbed, and that this condition was due to defendants neglect to provide a sufficient section force to keep the .road in repair. It is, therefore, with reluctance that we have yielded to the conviction that prejudicial error occurred in the trial of the cause which requires us to return it for a retrial.

[14]*14The case was instructed on the theory that defendant was an insurer of the reasonable safety of its roadbed and track, instead of on the theory that it only insured their safety in so far as they could be kept safe by diligence. The first instruction given for plaintiff declared that defendant owed deceased the duty of keeping its track and roadbed in a reasonably safe condition. This charge omitted to state that defendant’s duty was to use ordinary care to keep its road in a reasonably safe condition. The second instruction given at plaintiff’s request, declared that if her husband was killed by the overturning of his engine, and it was caused to overturn by the breaking of one of the rails of defendant’s road, and the jury found that at the time and place of the occurrence the railroad track was out of repair and unsafe, and that some of the ties under the broken rail were decayed and the derailment of the engine was due to such decayed condition of the road, plaintiff was entitled t,o recover. That instruction omitted to state, as a fact essential to plaintiff’s recovery, that the decayed ties and unsafe condition of the road must be ascribable to lack of ordinary care on the part of defendant. These omissions were emphasized by the refusal of an instruction requested by defendant which told the jury in substance, that if they found the employees of the defendant did not and could not, by careful examination and inspection, detect the unsound and decayed condition of the ties the verdict should be for defendant. If the instructions for the plaintiff had hypothesized all the facts essential to a recovery, we might not consider the refusal of the instruction just mentioned as ground for reversal; inasmuch as there was proof that the section gang was too small to make adequate inspections. Defendant has ño cause to complain of the instructions, except for. the failure to carry into them as a condition of recovery, that defendant must have been negligent in respect to the condition of its roadbed and ties. The company avus [15]*15charged with the duty to deceased of maintaining its track and roadbed in a reasonably safe condition so far as that could be done by the exercise of ordinary care. But if the decayed part of the tie which caused the rail to break under the weight of the locomotive was not yet large enough to be detected by proper inspection, and such inspections were made regularly, defendant was not to blame for not having replaced the tie with a sound one. An employer is accorded time and a chance to detect a fault which may arise in the applicances an employee must use, and his liability for any causalty which may occur from the defect, begins when he has had reasonable opportunity to discover and correct it. Though to our minds the weight of the evidence supports the proposition that the track was unsafe, and that this was imputable to the lack of a sufficient force of men on the section to properly inspect and maintain the track, all the testimony was not that way and hence issues arose for the jury as. to what the facts were. Defendant’s road-master swore that he visited the scene of the wreck the morning after it occurred, and examined the track. After testifying regarding the broken rail he gave this testimony :

“Q. Did you notice any broken ties? A. No, sir.

“Q. You never? A. No, sir.

“Q. You never noticed any broken? A. No, sir.

“Q. There were no absent ties? A. No, sir.

“Q. Were the ties sound or rotten? A. Sound ties.

“Q. Sound ties? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Now, could anybody have gone along there,, any workman, no matter how skilled in the working or construction of a railroad, could he have gone along there, if there was anything the matter with them could he have told it by looking at the ties? A. No, sir. .

“Q. It was a fresh break? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Could anybody, however expert he might be, and however skilled he might be, come along there and [16]*16tell there was anything the matter with the rail, that it was going to break, that something was going to happen could he have told that? A. No, sir.................

“Q. Then, you don’t mean to say there was no broken tie there at the wreck, do you? A. The wreck had broken up the ties there at the time of the Avreck, yes, sir — there was broken ties Avhen the wreck occurred.

“Q. You don’t Avant the jury to understand that there Avas no broken tie there at the time of the wreck? A. The wreck broke the ties.

“Q. The Avreck broke the ties?' A. Yes, sir.

“Q. When did you get there at this Avreck? A. 9 :30 the next morning.”

Another Avitness (Beard) swore that though the tie Avas decayed under the point in question, the track at the place of the Avreck was in a reasonably safe condition. The section foreman SAVore he had been over the road there on the morning preceding the accident and Avas over it every day or two on an inspection trip, but did not discover any rotten ties. A portion of his testimony Avas the following:

“Q. Did you see that place before this Avreck? A. Yes, sir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.W. 825, 117 Mo. App. 11, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hach-v-st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railroad-moctapp-1906.