Hoke v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northern Railway Co.

88 Mo. 360
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 88 Mo. 360 (Hoke v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoke v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northern Railway Co., 88 Mo. 360 (Mo. 1885).

Opinion

Ray, J.

This was an. action, for damages for an injury alleged to have been done to plaintiff by defendant and its employes while engaged in loading a wrecked car upon a wrecking train of defendant. The action was commenced in the Lincoln circuit court, and afterwards transferred to that of St. Charles, where there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for ten thousand dollars, from which the defendant appealed to the St. Louis court of appeals, where the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded, from which the plaintiff appealed to this court.

The case is reported in 11 Mo. App. 574, where the general facts of the case appear, except that the record shows the extent and nature of the powers, duties, and jurisdiction of Tracy, as road master of defendant, more fully than appears by the opinion. The controlling question in the case, and upon which it was made to turn in the court of appeals, is whether the plaintiff and said Tracy were fellow servants in the transaction in which the injury was received, or whether said Tracy in said transaction acted as vice principal or alter ego of the defendant company. The court of appeals in effect held that the plaintiff and said Tracy were fellow servants, and that it did not appear that the injury complained of arose from any negligence of Tracy’s in the matter of employing hands, or in any matter in which he replaced the master, or in any of the business in which he was vice-principal or alter ego of the master, and that plaintiff could not, therefore, recover, and for that reason reversed .the judgment of the trial court and remanded the cause, and the propriety of this ruling is now the [364]*364question before us. The record shows not only that said Tracy was road master of defendant’s road, with power to employ and discharge hands, but, also, that as such road master he had jurisdiction over the road bed and track of defendant throughout its entire line ; that his duties were to keep road bed, track, cattle guards, and fencing, in repair; that he had authority to employ and discharge section* foremen, foremen of construction and wrecking trains, bridge watchmen, and, also, all men and laborers in his department; that his authority and jurisdiction extended alike to laborers, section foremen, foremen of construction or wrecking trains engaged in the work of .clearing away or removing a wreck from the road bed or track, or any special foreman engaged in the special work of clearing away such a wreck.

The record also shows that in August, 1879, a supply train of defendant’s cars, consisting of three box and three flat cars, had been wrecked on defendant’s road, near Foley station,. and the evidence on the part of the' plaintiff tended to show that the plaintiff at the time of the injury complained of was working in defendant’s employ as a laborer under Michael Fitzgerald, an agent and servant of defendant, who was superintending, or bossing, the body of laborers, of whom the plaintiff was one; that plaintiff was acting as a laborer under the direct supervision, direction, and control, of John Tracy, who was defendant’s road master, and as such had control of the road bed and track of defendant’s entire line, with the powers, duties and jurisdiction heretofore stated in that behalf; that said Fitzgerald was section and construction foreman of defendant, and was assisting said “Tracy in superintending plaintiff and other laborers in removing the wreck and loading a flat car,” whose wheels and trucks had been broken off, upon a wrecking train, both of which were owned by defendant, and being controlled by defendant’s agents. The wrecking train was composed of an engine and flat cars, and [365]*365had been cut in two, some of the cars attached to the engine being south of the wrecked flat car, and other cars standing still north of the wrecked car. The flat, or wrecked, car had been lifted upon the track of defendant’s road when the train was cut in two and the north end of the wrecked car had been lifted, up and placed on the first car in the wrecking train north of the wrecked car, and the other laborers and plaintiff, under the control and supervision of Tracy and Fitzgerald, were attempting to place the south end of the wrecked car on the first car of the wrecking train, immediately south of the wrecked car, so that the first car on the south might be pushed under the wrecked car. This wrecked car was held up above the level of the first flat car south by levers resting on the floor .of the first flat car south, the north ends of which levers extending a few inches under the south end of the wrecked car, and while the wrecked car was held up by the levers plaintiff was ordered by Fitzgerald and Tracy to go under the wrecked car and push out one of the levers. Plaintiff obeyed the order, and whilst pushing at the lever, Tracy, intending to signal the engineer to move the .engine north and thus force the flat car on which the levers were resting under the wrecked car, by carelessness and mistake signaled the engineer to move south, in consequence of which the engine was moved south and thereby drew the flat car and levers from under the wrecked car and caused the same to fall on plaintiff, crushing and crippling him for life. The testimony on the part of the defendant, on the contrary, tended to show that Tracy gave the right signal, but that the engineer, by mistake and carelessness, moved the engine south instead of north, thus causing the accident. On this point the testimony is conflicting as to what signal Tracy gave, but all agree that if he gave the signal the plaintiff’s witnesses say he gave, he gave the wrong signal, caused the cars to move the wrong way, and thus occasioned the accident and injury in question, and so the jury found.

[366]*366The material instructions given and refused in the cause are set out in the opinion of the court of appeals, and are' as follows :

“ Those given for the plaintiff are two in number, as follows:

“1. If the jury find, from the evidence, that one John Tracy was the road master of defendant’s railroad, and as such road master was the superintendent for the defendant of the work of removing and loading up the wreck in question, and had entire control and charge thereof, with power to employ the section foreman and section hands, and that the plaintiff was subject to his orders and directions, then the jury are instructed that said Tracy was not a fellow servant with the plaintiff, and that said Tracy’s acts and conduct in connection with said work were, and are, the acts and conduct of the defendant, so far as this case is concerned.

“2. If the jury believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff, while employed by defendant as a section hand, on or about the fifteenth day of August, 1879, in the discharge of his duty as such section hand, was ordered by his superior to step under the wrecked car and push out a certain lever, and that in the discharge of said duty, and in obedience to said order, plaintiff stepped under said car, and while engaged in attempting to carry out said order, the defendant, through negligence or mistake, and without warning to plaintiff, gave to the person in charge of the engine, a signal to move said engine and the cars attached to it southward, when the proper signal would have been to move the engine and the cars attached to it northward, and that in obedience to said signal the person in charge of the engine moved said engine and cars attached to it, southward, and that in consequence thereof said wrecked car fell upon and injured the plaintiff, the verdict must be for the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Mo. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoke-v-st-louis-keokuk-northern-railway-co-mo-1885.