Illinois Central Railroad v. Beaver

3 Tenn. App. 67, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Tenn. App. 67 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Beaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Central Railroad v. Beaver, 3 Tenn. App. 67, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

This is an action for damages by defendant in error against the Illinois Central Railroad Company and Y. & M. Y. Railroad Company, plaintiffs in error, to recover damages for alleged personal injuries sustained as the result of the alleged common-law negligence of plaintiffs in error. The suit resulted in a judgment in the court below in favor of defendant in error for the sum of $4,500.

For convenience we will refer to the parties in their original status of plaintiff and defendant.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved for a peremptory instruction, which motion was by the court overruled. At the conclusion of all the evidence the defendants renewed the motion for á peremptory instruction in favor of defendants, which motion was likewise overruled by the court.

A motion for a new trial was made by defendants and this motion was also overruled, and from the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial and rendering judgment on the verdict of the jury against defendants, the defendants have appealed to this court and have assigned numerous errors.

We find the facts as disclosed by the record to be as follows: At the time plaintiff received the injuries complained of he was employed by the Buffalo Construction Company, which company-was erecting a large cotton seed house for the Valley Cotton Oil Company on its property in the City of Memphis; plaintiff’s duties as a laborer on said building consisted in part of erecting certain center and side posts for the support of the roof of the building, and he was employed as a rigger. At the time of his injuries he was on or near the top of the center pole about forty-five feet high. It appears that this center pole was movable. In order to hold the center pole or post in position it was supported by guy ropes. One of the guy ropes was fastened to the railroad iron of a spur track which passed along six or eight feet north of the north end of this building. At the time of the accident resulting in the injuries to plaintiff, this guy rope was fastened to the south rail of the spur track by being passed under the rail between the ties and attached to an iron bar so as to hold the rope without passing over the rail. It was so attached to the rail that in extending up to the post it was at such an angle as to be struck by a passing car, that is a passing car would not clear the rope. It appears that this spur track only served the Valley Cotton Oil Company, and at the time of the injury to plaintiff the spur track was only used for bringing in car loads of materials used in the construction of the building, *69 and in taking out tbe empty cars after the same had been unloaded. The building had been under construction for three or four weeks, and during which time cars were brought in on this spur almost daily, and the empty cars taken out. This guy rope supporting the center pole on which plaintiff was at work was moved or slackened frequently so as to permit the change of the location and position of the center pole, about every hour. Prior to the day before plaintiff received his injuries, this guy rope had been attached to the rail of another switch track immediately north of the track where it was attached at the time of the injury, but on the day preceding the day on which plaintiff was injured the rope had been moved and attached to the south rail of the spur that ran nearest the building being constructed and had not been moved or changed that morning. Plaintiff had been on or near the top of this center post about thirty minutes, when two gondola cars loaded with cinders for this plant were shunted or kicked from the lead track several hundred feet east of this building, and by their own momentum rolled down this spur track and against the rope attached to the south rail of the track, breaking the rope and causing the pole to fall resulting in the injuries sustained by plaintiff. When these two cars were detached from the engine and shunted or kicked onto this spur track a switchman was placed on the cars for the purpose of stopping the cars at the proper place for unloading. The switchman was standing on a platform or beam between the two cars because of the location of the brakes of the respective cars, and so that he could operate the brakes of the two cars from that position. The cinders were piled onto these ears in a way so that the view of the switchman .standing on the ledge or platform between the cars was so obstructed he could not see down the track, except by leaning and looking around the edge of the front ear.

There was no person on the ground to observe the approach of ears bringing materials for this building, and to be on the lookout for cars coming in onto this siding. It appears that a few days before this accident, and while this guy rope was stretched across this spur track to another track immediately north, a switching crew bringing a car of materials in on this particular spur assisted in loosening the guy rope so that the car could pass underneath it, but it is not shown that this particular switching crew knew that the guy rope was fastened to the track. It is shown that the defendants railroad companies employed numerous switching crews, about sixty, in its yai’ds in Memphis, and no particular crew was assigned to the switching and the placing of cars to the several respective industrial plants served by the numerous switches and spurs and side tracks of the defendants. It does appear, however, *70 that when cars were to be taken out of this spur track after having been unloaded, it was the custom of those in charge of the switching operations to have some of the switching crew to go in advance of the engine and notify any employees of the construction company working in or about the cars that they were about to be moved, or to see that there were no employees in the cars before attaching the engine and taking them out. Plaintiff in his testimony, states that he knew that one of the guy ropes supporting the pole on which he was at work was fastened to the railroad track in the way and manner described; that he had been on the pole about twenty or thirty minutes when the rope was torn loose causing the pole on which he was at work to fall; that he never at any time saw the cars until after he was injured; that he was not paying any attention to the track, and that he was facing the west, the opposite direction from which any cars could come onto the track; that he had not noticed other cars coming in on this spur track during the four days that he had been employed on the building, but knew that ears loaded with materials for the building were being delivered on this spur track. He did not claim to have ever seen or to have known of any of the switching crew to go in advance of the cars to notify the workmen that the cars were being brought in. He did not claim that he knew or thought that any person was stationed on the ground to keep a lookout for cars while he was at work on the center pole.

It also appears that there were not any cars on this spur track, or other obstructions at the time these two cars were shunted onto this spur, except the guy rope which was fastened to the south rail. The switchman on these two cars did not see this guy rope until the front end of the front car struck it. The rope was an inch and a quarter or an inch and one-half rope.

It is alleged in the declaration, that the spur track to which this rope was attached was on the property of the Yalley Cotton Oil Company,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. App. 67, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-beaver-tennctapp-1925.