Hunt v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

255 P. 70, 123 Kan. 346, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1927
DocketNo. 27,311
StatusPublished

This text of 255 P. 70 (Hunt v. Missouri Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 255 P. 70, 123 Kan. 346, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 136 (kan 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one by an employee of a railroad company against the company for damages for personal injury negligently inflicted. Plaintiff recovered, and defendant appeals.

[347]*347Bad-order car wheels would accumulate in defendant’s yard, and it was necessary to. remove them. Wheels were in pairs, rigid on a connecting axle which protruded to form a journal on the outside of each wheel. A fiat car would be placed on a track to receive them. The wheels would be rolled by hand on a dummy track to a position alongside the flat car, and would be picked up by a crane and placed in the flat car. In this instance, the crane was of the clamshell type, with heavy chains with loops in the ends hanging from the bucket. The dummy track was practically level, but by “giving the wheels a run” and then “turning them loose-,” they would roll quite a distance. Two men worked together in bringing wheels to the flat car. They would go into the yard together, and each would bring down a pair of wheels. The pair in the lead would be stopped in position for loading, and the rear pair would be stopped back of the other. The chains would be lowered, the man in charge of the front wheels would place the loop in the end of one chain about the left-hand journal, the man in charge of the rear wheels would go forward and place the loop in the end of the other chain about the right-hand journal, and the crane would lift that pair of wheels into the flat car. The chains would again be lowered, and would be adjusted to the journals of the second pair of wheels, and the men would return to the yard for more wheels.

■ Plaintiff was a truck man, whose duties were to put in brake beams, put in car springs, put on car wheels, and do whatever was needed about trucks. While plaintiff and Ed Stancer were at work changing a brake beam on a car, they were directed by the foreman' to load car wheels. Plaintiff testified he had never before loaded car wheels. Stancer testified he and plaintiff had previously worked together loading car wheels. The foreman under whom plaintiff worked testified he used truck men and all sorts of labor to load car wheels, and was of the opinion plaintiff had previously served •in that capacity. Plaintiff admitted there was nothing technical or complicated about that work, it was a laborer’s job, he had seen it done repeatedly, and any sixteen-year-old boy could do it.

Stancer brought down the first pair of wheels, and plaintiff followed with another pair. These wheels were loaded, and the work was prosecuted in the usual manner until, according to the testimony of the foreman, the flat car, holding twenty pairs of wheels, was filled with the exception of one or two pairs. According to Stancer, the car held twenty pairs of wheels, and he was bringing [348]*348down the last pair when the accident occurred. Plaintiff did not know how many pairs had been loaded when he was hurt, but thought the number might, be ten or twelve. In any event, the work had progressed for some time, and plaintiff said it required no skill or experience or book-learning or any particular knowledge to understand the wheels were heavy, would roll on the dummy rails, and would pinch a man’s leg if it were caught between two wheels.

If one pair of wheels came in contact with another pair, the flanges would strike, and the diameters of the wheels were such that the axles would be held apart so a man could safely stand between them. A man was safe if he stood outside the dummy rails, and the only way he could get pinched was by standing astride one rail.

Plaintiff brought down a pair of wheels ahead of Stancer, Stancer’s pair followed, plaintiff straddled the left rail of the dummy track, and his leg was caught between the left wheels of the two pairs. Plaintiff did not testify to the facts of the accident. He did not describe his movements from the time his wheels stopped under the bucket of the crane until he was injured. He did not know whether he had put the chain on the journal of the wheel on his side, or was in the act of putting the chain on the journal, or was waiting for the chain to be lowered, when he was injured. His best guess follows:

“I was in the act of chaining my end of the wheel, or was looking up, one or the other. The best I can figure it out, I must have stepped back to get out of the way of that chain swinging; ... As it was coming down it was swinging around all over, but you just grabbed it and put it on.
“I think Ed [Stancer] was over at the east side of that pair of wheels, and I was on the west-hand side where I should have been to hook the loop on this outside journal. I stepped back upon the rail and got pinched, to get out of the way of that chain that was swinging.”

Afterward plaintiff said that immediately upon being pinched, he saw Stancer standing back by the shed out of which the wheels were rolled. When his attention was directed to the discrepancy between his statements relating to Stancer’s position, he said Stancer was supposed to be there to chain his side. Plaintiff was then asked if he did not know wheels were likely to come out of the shed and along the track at any time. He avoided direct answer by saying: “Well, I and Mr. Stancer had worked together quite awhile.” He was pressed for an answer to the question as follows:

[349]*349“Q. You knew wheels were liable to come along this track at any time, and you didn’t see Ed, did you?”

His answer was, “No, not at any time, I didn’t.” He did not say he did not know Stancer’s wheels were likely to come down when he brought down wheels ahead of Stancer. Near the close of plaintiff’s cross-examination the following occurred:

“Q. Then if you were going to try safety first, why didn’t you look up the tracks in the direction from which these wheels rolled, before you stepped on the track. A. Sometimes you can, and sometimes you can’t.
“Q. You didn’t happen to take time this time. I want you to look this jury right in the eye, and tell them, if you can, any place where the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, Ed Stancer, or Mr. Eord, or anybody is at fault for your accident.- A. Well, I lay the fault for the simple reason that they called us-off of our job, and put us on a job we wasn’t used to working on.”

That was not the ground of negligence charged in the petition, and on redirect examination plaintiff’s counsel was obliged to ask him twice for other reasons for holding defendant responsible, before he remembered no warning was given him before he was hurt. He testified, however, that just as the wheels came together he heard a voice yell “Joe,” his given name.

The engineer testified plaintiff and Stancer went to the shed for wheels. While they were getting the wheels he swung the crane around so the bucket hung over the dummy track. The bucket was ten or twelve feet above the track, and the chains hung four or five feet below the bucket. Plaintiff’s wheels came out of the shed first, and when his wheels got down about even with the bucket, he was standing in the middle of the track between the two car wheels. Either then or a little later he stepped from between the rails. Stancer’s wheels were then coming, and the engineer, Stancer and the foreman called to plaintiff. Plaintiff brought his leg around crosswise of the rail, and when Stancer’s wheels reached him he was astride the rail.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 70, 123 Kan. 346, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-kan-1927.