Howard v. Baltimore & Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad

63 N.E.2d 774, 327 Ill. App. 83, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 408
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 6, 1945
DocketGen. No. 43,279
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 63 N.E.2d 774 (Howard v. Baltimore & Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Baltimore & Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad, 63 N.E.2d 774, 327 Ill. App. 83, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 408 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scanlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment in a personal injury case upon a verdict of the jury finding defendant guilty and assessing plaintiff’s damages at $50,000.

It was stipulated that at the time of the accident defendant was engaged in interstate commerce and transportation and in intrastate commerce and transportation and that plaintiff was then an employee of defendant and in the performance of his duties in interstate commerce. The complaint is based solely upon the Federal Employers’ Liability Act and the Federal Safety Appliance Act, and the right of action is predicated upon an alleged violation of the said Appliance Act. In cases brought in the State courts under these statutes the law announced by the Federal courts that bears upon said statutes is controlling. (See Bailey v. Central Vermont Ry., 319 U. S. 350.) Under the said Acts neither contributory negligence nor assumption of risk can be interposed as a defense.

Plaintiff states his theory as follows: “Plaintiff’s theory is that he [a switchman] was required to open the knuckle on a standing freight car, so that a moving car could be coupled to it. He attempted to operate the pin lifter in the usual manner, but the apparatus, being defective, stuck and the pin could not be raised. After repeated unsuccessful attempts, plaintiff finally stepped over with one foot between the-rails, and attempted to operate the pin lifter (which normally hangs down in a vertical position and if operating properly opens the knuckle when it is pulled back or up eight or ten inches — to an angle of about 45 degrees) with his left hand, while pulling on the knuckle with his right. While plaintiff was in this position and while pulling the pin lifter with his left hand it suddenly ‘flew’ up, to a point far higher than normal — three inches above the horizontal — and plaintiff was thrown off balance and upon the ground between the tracks”; that after he fell he was struck by the approaching hopper car and thereby suffered serious injuries.

Defendant states its theory as follows: “It was defendant’s theory of the case that plaintiff’s accident and injuries were not incident to a defective coupler and coupling' operation within the meaning of the Safety Appliance statute; that plaintiff’s negligence was the causal negligence; and that the verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence.”

At the time of the occurrence plaintiff worked for defendant as a switchman. He had been in its employ for twenty-three years. The accident occurred on February 21, 1943, about 12:30 a. m., in defendant’s McDonald yard, near Chicago Heights. The night was dark. “The weather was . . . just about freezing.” There were no artificial lights in that part of the yard where the accident happened. Before the accident a number of preliminary movements of cars were made by the train crew of which plaintiff was a member, but it is not necessary to detail these movements, as they played no part in the accident. Just prior to the accident the crew were moving an engine and two cars attached to it toward a string of twelve standing freight cars for the purpose of coupling them. The twelve cars were standing on track No. 1, where they had been left by another crew. The engine, facing north, and the two freight cars attached to it were being moved backward in a southerly direction along track No. 1 toward the twelve standing cars. The two cars attached to the engine were south of it. The more southerly one was a hopper car. ' It was necessary to couple the south end of this hopper car to the north end of the most northerly of the twelve standing cars, which was a box car. As the twelve standing cars were some distance from the engine plaintiff got on the southerly car of the two attached to the engine in order to ride toward the standing cars. At that time the engine was moving at a speed of about four or five miles an hour. Plaintiff was riding the southeast end of this southerly car, which would be the left-hand corner if one faced the direction in which the car was moving. He was standing on the stirrup and hanging on a handhold. On all freight cars only the left-hand corner is equipped with a stirrup and handholds. On the right-hand corner is the ladder by which the car can be climbed, and also the pin lifter by which the knuckle is opened and coupling effected. It was necessary for plaintiff to ride the southeast corner of the car because the engine was headed north, which placed the engineer on the east side of the train, and the signals between the engineer and plaintiff had to be given from that side. Plaintiff gave the signals by means of his lantern. The testimony of both sides shows that “it is necessary in order to couple cars together to have one knuckle on one car open.” The knuckle on the car which plaintiff was riding was closed and as the pin-lifter was on the opposite side of. the car it was impossible for him to open the knuckle from the position he was then in. When the car on which plaintiff was riding was about five car lengths from the standing cars, he signaled the engineer to reduce his speed, and it was cut down to two or three miles per hour. Plaintiff did not know whether the knuckle on the standing car was open or closed. If it was closed it would be necessary for him to open it and prepare it for the coupling before the moving cars arrived, and therefore he stepped off the stirrup when the standing cars were about four car lengths away and walked rapidly toward said cars. He reached the standing cars while the moving cars were still some distance away. He found that the knuckle on the nearest standing car was closed and he grasped the pin lifter in his left hand and jerked it but it did not work and the pin failed to come up. He gave three more jerks upon the pin lifter but it did not operate. Satisfied that he could not open the coupler from outside of the rails, he then glanced at the moving cars and saw that they were still forty or fifty feet north of him, and, believing that he had ample time to adjust the couplers before the cars would impact, he put one foot between the rails and, holding the pin lifter with his left hand and holding the lantern with the thumb of his right hand, he reached in and grasped the knuckle with the four fingers of that hand. While in. this position and while he was exerting pressure on the knuckle and the pin lifter the latter suddenly and without warning flew up and threw him off balance, and he fell on his back in the center of the track, about six or seven feet north of the end of the car. As he fell he hollered, but before he could get to his feet he was struck by some part of the leading truck or brake rigging on the moving car, and suffered the injuries for which he sues. After taking plaintiff to the hospital the conductor and the entire crew of which plaintiff was a member returned to the place on track No. 1 where the two cars and the twelve cars had been left standing after the accident. The conductor, Schramm, and switchman, English, each made a test of the pin lifter on the north end of the most northerly of the twelve cars — the pin lifter that plaintiff was trying to operate at the time of the accident. Schramm testified that he tried the pin lifter a few times before it came up and when it finally came up “it went way up in the air” but did not open the knuckle.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E.2d 774, 327 Ill. App. 83, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-baltimore-ohio-chicago-terminal-railroad-illappct-1945.