Harney v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

80 Mo. App. 667, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 224
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Mo. App. 667 (Harney v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) 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
Harney v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 80 Mo. App. 667, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 224 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

GILL, J.

On the night of January 8, 1897, plaintiff’s husband, who was a brakeman in defendant’s employ, was [671]*671crushed and killed while trying to uncouple a car on a sidetrack at Mirick station near Lexington. The crew was at the time making up a west bound train from a lot of cars loaded with coal. The nature of the complaint is thus disclosed in the petition:

Statement. “Plaintiff avers that in the midst of said loaded cars standing upon said sidetrack there was one car numbered thirty-nine (39) coupled to another car which was wholly defective and dangerous in this, to wit: That the draw-head or draw-bar (as it is sometimes called) thereto, which is used for coupling cars together, and was designed to insure the safety of decedent in coupling or uncoupling said cars, was drawn out of one end of said car and in lieu thereof the defendant at that time and place was using an iron chain for the purpose of coupling said car at that end, and that the dead-wood or bumper belonging to said car number thirty-nine (39), .used in connection with said draw-head or draw-bar, was wholly defective, shattered and broken and the cross-beam belonging thereto was entirely gone, all of which was intended and designed, in a car properly equipped, as additional protection from danger to one engaged in the act of coupling or uncoupling cars.

“Plaintiff avers that the use of said chain in lieu of said draw-head or draw-bar; the defective, shattered and broken condition of said dead-wood and the absence of said cross-beam, made the operation of uncoupling said car, at that time and place, hazardous and dangerous, as the defendant well knew. Plaintiff avers that said decedent, her said husband, had no knowledge whatever at the time of the accident hereinafter set forth, or at any time whatever, of the defective condition of said car, or that said draw-head or draw-bar was gone from car number thirty-nine (39), and that in lieu thereof defendant was using a chain, and that the said dead-wood was in said defective, shattered and broken condition, and that the crossbeam thereto was gone, and that on the evening of the 8th day [672]*672of January aforesaid, the conductor in charge of said train and the crew thereof, including the decedent, ordered said decedent to uncouple said car fr-om the others and to set the same out of said train. Plaintiff avers that tire said conductor was a superior officer appointed by the defendant, and that by the rules and regulations of said defendant, said decedent was compelled and bound to obey said order of said conductor in the premises, it being within the authority of said conductor to make such, order to decedent.

“Plaintiff avers that the said decedent was a careful, prudent, cautious .and reliable man in the discharge of his railroad duties as such brakeman and that in a careful, prudent and cautious manner he attempted to obey said order to uncouple said car and to s.et the same, out of the train, but as decedent was in the act of uncoupling said car, the locomotive attached to said train of cars, so standing upon said track was suddenly set in motion, drawing said cars, including said car number thirty-nine (39) forward, and the same was as suddenly stopped whereby the said car number thirty-nine (39), for the lack of said draw-head or cross-bar, and because of said broken, defective and shattered dead-wood, and the loss of said cross-beam belonging thereto, crashed against the car, to which the said defective car was attached and between the said cars the decedent’s head was crushed, the occipital bone, near the temple being crushed in and his breast bone broken and the said decedent was then and thereby so injured that death was instantaneoiis. Plaintiff avers that said injury and death were caused solely and entirely by defendant’s negligence in not providing proper, safe and sound instrumentalities as herein aforesaid for decedent to perform the act of uncoupling said car number thirty-nine (39) and that said decedent in no way contributed thereto by any negligence.”

The answer, in addition to a general denial, charged contributory negligence, that the deceased brakeman well knew of the defective condition of the car and the absence of the [673]*673draw-head, etc., that he was advised thereof and warned to be careful in using the same, that said defects were open and obvious, and that said deceased therefore assumed the risk.There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $2,500 and defendant appealed.

Master and servant: negligence: assumption of risk: contributory negligence: evidence. The main ground relied upon for reversal, is that a demurrer to the evidence should have been .sustained. After a very careful consideration of the entire evideuce in the light of the law applicable thereto, we have concluded the point not well taken. The jury was entirely justified in finding that defendant was negligent in the matter of furnishing reasonably safe coupling appliances to car number-39. The allegations of the petition in that respect were amply supported by the evidence. It was proved that this car loaded with coal, was taken up on the day in question at Rocky Branch Switch near Higginsville; that it was then in a very imperfect condition, having lost one of its draw-heads, and in order to haul the car it had to be chained to another. It was there loaded with coal and billed to Beloit, Kansas. When said car reached Mirick station, on its way to Beloit, it. was placed with other cars loaded with coal on a side track to be taken up and forwarded to its destination by a train to be made up at that point, and connected with which train the deceased worked as a brakeman. The evidence also tended to prove that when the car arrived at Mirick in addition to the loss of the draw-head, or draw-bar, so necessary for safe coupling, the end of the car had become so battered and broken that the deadwood, bumpers and cross-beam used to keep the cars apart, had become lost or so disabled as to be worthless for the purposes intended. It seems that even in the absence of the draw-bar, these dead-wood, bumpers, etc., if in place and proper condition, would have been sufficient to hold the cars apart so as to allow the brakeman to enter between the cars and disconnect them as' Harney was attempting at the time he was killed. [674]*674With these out, however, the cars would come so close together as to crush a man between them; there would in fact then be no space left between the ends of the cars. That this was the condition of car 39 when Harney went in to make the coupling, is not only shown by the testimony of -parties who examined the car next morning, but is also proved by the fact that Harney’s head was crushed by the coming together of the ends of the two cars. Eor if the ordinary bumpers or dead-wood had been in place the cars could not have approached each other nearer than eight to twelve inches, which was more than sufficient space for the head of the deceased.

The continued use of the car in its defective and dangerous condition was a clear violation of that duty resting on the master to provide reasonably safe appliances for the servant.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Mo. App. 667, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harney-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1899.