Hawks v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.

16 Ohio C.C. 377, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 414
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. 377 (Hawks v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawks v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co., 16 Ohio C.C. 377, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 414 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

This action is prosecuted to reverse a judgment rendered in the court of common pleas in favor of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company, John Hawks brought suit against the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company claiming in his petition that he had been injured in one of his hands by having it crushed between the draw-bars of two cars which he was attempting to couple. He alleges therein that while he was in between the cars and attempting to make a coupling, to the knowledge of the conductor having charge of the train which he was making up, while he was attempting to pull out a pin, which had in some way become fastened, that “the said conductor carelessly, wrongfully and negligently directed the said engineer to start his said engine and the said train of cars back; and that the said engineer carelessly, negligently and wrongfully under the order of said conductor backed his said engine and the said cars, whereby and by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the said conductor and the said engineer in backing up the said train at the said time, and without any fault on the part of the said plaintiff, the said plaintiff’s right hand was caught between the draw-bars of the said two cars that were to be coupled,and mangled and crushed.”

Tbe case was tried in the common pleas to a jury, who found against Hawks. It is claimed that judgment is not supported by the evidence, and that the court erred in tbe submission of the fourth request asked by the defendant below.

We have read the evidence in this record, all of it, carefully; some of it more than once. We should have first said that they were engaged in making up a train in the Lake Shore yard, It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff below, Mr. Hawks, that the engine was attached to a train of cars, fifteen or twenty, on one of the switch [379]*379tracks, and it was proposed to attach it to some cars which were standing on another track. There was, standing on another track, a string of ears, coupled together, ten or fifteen in number; and there was also, some distance beyond, a string of cars — -three other cars — coupled together, and it became necessary to attach all of these cars into one train. The engine with the fifteen or twenty cars attached, pulled out of the side track it was on, on to a lead track, and then backed down on the other track on which were standing these cars. The first cars to be reached were the ten or fifteen cars, and for that purpose a brakeman by the name of Whistler was dispatched to that point to make the coupling. At the same time Mr. Hawks and another brakeman, named Ginneman, were bent together down to make the coupling when the first standing lot of cars should be backed down to the three ca^s. Hawks and Ginneman went down there. It was some little distance from, where the train would come in on that track. They went first to the long string of cais and took out the link which was in there, and then went down to the three cars,, and there they found that the pin had - become bound, and it was difficult to get it out; that it didn’t come out readily, and they didn’t get it out. The engineer backed his train down on this track, and Mr. Whistler, who was at the first batch of cars, gave his signal for the trains to back down to make the coupling. Mr. Hawks testifies in relation to his part of the transaction, that he went in there, and he says that he and “Andy” — -that is Ginneman — hammered at the pin and couldn’t get it out. He says: “He pulled up about that time — he was backing in on No. 4; he struck them pretty hard, I will admit that, and they come down and struck these three cars and bounded away,so that it left a space of four or five inches; my hand would go in easily between the two drawbars. I walks out and swings down the conductor — J couldn’t see the engineer.”

[380]*380‘‘Q. Just give the signal that you gave the conductor, mow? (And the witness gave the signal.)
“Q. What did the conductor do? A. He answered me.
‘1Q. State whether he repeated it to the engineer or not ? .A, He answered me on that corner where I should judge be could see the engineer.
“Q. Then what did you do? A. I went in. I thought it was just as safe as if I was at home. I went in to put ■my link in the draw-bar.; by that time Andy says ‘Look ■out.’ I jerked my hand out just that far, and these three fingers were gone, he heard them strike above”--and the mars came together and struck him.

That statement is made by Mr. Hawks, and substantially corroborated by Mr. Ginneman, who was also » witness; and it turns largely, of course;' upon the statement of Mr. Hawks, that when he found that they were backing down this train upon him, and that he couldn’t get out the pin, he went out and gave a signal to the conductor to stop— which I presume meant also the train was then at a stop, to bold it there until some other signal should be given. The •conductor, of course,knew that he had gone down there for the purpose of making that coupling.

Mr. Winslow was also a brakeman on the same train, and he was called by the plaintiff as a witness and testifies in bis behalf, and after describing the first part of the operations, "he says that: ‘‘When the cars came down first, he was near the engine attached to the train, and Mr. Whistler ■tried to make the coupling and didn’t make it, and thereupon, of course, the engine and cars attached would come vto a full stop.” Mr. Winslow says: ‘‘Mr. Whistler tried to •make the coupling of these fifteen cars that stood in beyond there; he missed the coupling, and they ran down to the other cars and stopped; then I saw. Mr. Hawks step in to make this coupling.

‘‘Q. Then what was done? A. Mr, Whistler came out and gave a signal to back up.
[381]*381“Q. At that time, were the cars standing still, or not? A. The cars were standing still when Mr. Whistler came out and gave the signal to back up.
“Q. When he gave that signal to the conductor, what was done? A. Backed the cars up.
“Q. Did the conductor repeat the signal to the engineer ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you see him do that? A. Yes, sir; I stood right alongside of him at the time.
“Q. When he repeated the signal to the engineer, what did the engineer do? A. He backed the cars up so that Mr. Whistler could make the coupling.
“Q. What happened after that? A. Mr. Hawks came', out from the cars acting very queer; when I got up close: by him we could see that he was hurt.
“Q. Did you see the cars run down to those three cars?. A. Yes, sir.

It will oe observed from Mr. Winslow’s testimony that: he does not describe the signal which Hawks says he gave- and which Gfinneman says he thinks Hawks gave (for he-saw the first part of it) to the engineer to stop the train,, but he says that the train was backed down at the time-Hawks was stru-k, by the signal of Whistler only, Whistlerbéing ready to make his coupling and having failed at the-first attempt, he gave a signal to back again, and thereupon: the conductor repeated that signal to the engineer,and the engineer obeyed it, and then it was that Mr. Hawks was injured.

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16 Ohio C.C. 377, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawks-v-lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-co-ohiocirct-1896.