Johnson v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co.

64 S.W.2d 674, 334 Mo. 22, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 674 (Johnson v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois 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
Johnson v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railway Co., 64 S.W.2d 674, 334 Mo. 22, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 683 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

Action for personal injuries under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. Plaintiff obtained a verdict for $30,000, of which the trial court required him to remit $10,000. Judgment was duly entered for plaintiff for $20,000 and defendant appealed. Plaintiff and defendant were both engaged in interstate commerce and the action was properly brought under the above mentioned act. Plaintiff was an extra switchman, employed by defendant in its yards at Danville, Illinois. He was injured about seven-thirty A.M., *Page 27 March 9, 1928, while attempting to step upon the front footboard of an approaching switch engine by reason of coming in contact with John Hoctor, conductor of the switching crew, who was on the footboard and who, plaintiff claims, negligently moved over into his path just as he was in the act of boarding the engine, causing him to be thrown from and run over by the engine. His left leg was crushed, necessitating its amputation about ten inches below the knee. Defendant's answer pleaded that plaintiff's injury "resulted from his failure to use ordinary care for his own safety," in that he negligently stepped onto the track between the rails in front of the approaching engine and attempted to board the front footboard from that position, and that he negligently violated a rule of defendant company forbidding switchmen and other employees "to step upon the front of approaching engines; which acts of failure to exercise ordinary care on the part of plaintiff directly caused or contributed to cause, plaintiff's injuries." The answer also pleaded assumption of risk by plaintiff. By reply plaintiff denied the existence of the rule pleaded by defendant and further alleged that if there was or had been such rule it had never been enforced but had been habitually disregarded with defendant's knowledge and consent and had been abandoned "by such habitual nonobservance." Appellant's insistence that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained requires a somewhat detailed statement of the evidence.

The switching crew of which plaintiff was a member consisted of himself who was "field man," one Mayfield, head brakeman, Hoctor, conductor and in charge of the crew, and the engineer and fireman. At the time of the accident there were no cars attached to the engine. It had backed northward past a certain switch in order to get on a switch track called the belt upon which switching work was to be done. As it moved northward Mayfield, Hoctor and plaintiff rode on the front (south) footboard of the engine. There was room, about two and a half or three feet, for two men standing close together, on each side of the drawbar of the engine which projected beyond the footboard. Mayfield rode on the engineer's side and Hoctor and plaintiff on the fireman's side, plaintiff on the inside next the drawbar and Hoctor on the outside at the end of the footboard. The engineer's side of the engine is called in the evidence the right side and the fireman's side the left side. We shall so refer to them. As the engine passed the yard office going north Hoctor and plaintiff alighted. Hoctor entered the office to get his switching orders and plaintiff, at Hoctor's direction, walked southward to a switch stand to "line" (throw) a certain switch. The engine, with Mayfield still on the footboard, moved on northward past the first mentioned switch which was then thrown by Mayfield so as to send the engine onto the belt track. The engine then moved southward, Mayfield resuming his former position on the footboard. *Page 28 Plaintiff testified that as the engine had moved northward Mayfield rode on the extreme right end of the footboard and after throwing the switch to allow the engine to come south for the belt track, resumed the same position. He did not notice whether Mayfield later moved over nearer the drawbar. Mayfield, for defendant, testified that after throwing the switch and getting back on the footboard he signaled the engineer to move forward and "moved over to the drawbar to give Mr. Johnson a chance to get on my side." According to plaintiff's testimony when Hoctor emerged from the yard office he directed plaintiff to relign the switch which, at Hoctor's direction, he had first ligned for another track. Plaintiff did so and then stepped on the track between the rails to await and board the engine as it came south. As the engine came south Hoctor got on, the engine being in motion, and resumed his original position at the left end of the footboard, leaving vacant the space on the left side of and next to the drawbar where plaintiff had previously ridden. At the time Hoctor got on plaintiff was fifty or sixty feet to the south, standing between the rails, somewhat nearer the east than the west rail, waiting to resume his place on the footboard and thus remained until the engine reached him. The engine continued southward toward him, moving at a speed of two or three miles an hour. When it reached him he attempted to board it and as he was in the act of doing so Hoctor suddenly and without warning moved over toward the drawbar into the space plaintiff was intending and attempting to occupy. Plaintiff thus described what occurred: "As I was standing on the right foot, with my left foot raised, making the step; and was in the act of going down with my left foot (to place it on the footboard) I collided with John Hoctor by his moving over in my way," toward the drawbar and into the place where plaintiff was attempting to board, as he further explained. Hoctor's unexpected movement caused plaintiff to lose his hold and his balance and to fall with his leg across the rail. Before he could extricate himself his leg was crushed. He testified that while the engine was coming toward him after Hoctor got on the latter was facing south, toward him, apparently reading his switching list. He had the list in his hands. Plaintiff said Hoctor could have seen him but did not say that Hoctor did in fact see him.

"Q. He wasn't watching for you? A. No, sir; he wasn't watching for me.

"Q. You say you were standing and, as you raised your foot and Mr. Hoctor was still reading his switch list, he stepped over to the center? A. Yes, sir, he stepped over as I was getting on.

"Q. He was still reading his switch lists? A. When I judged the footboard I wasn't looking into his face."

On this point Hoctor, for defendant, testified on cross-examination that when he was just about to get on the footboard or had *Page 29 just gotten on — he said once, "I was on the footboard," — he saw plaintiff who was then standing at the switch facing the engine and outside the rails on the west side or right side of the track and that the engine was then within ten or twelve feet of plaintiff. That was the last time he saw plaintiff until the latter collided with him. He testified he had read his switch lists as he came out of the yard office and at the time plaintiff attempted to get on the footboard had the lists in his pocket. On direct examination he testified: "When I got on I turned around and just about that time Johnson stepped on my left leg and foot. I was in the act of turning around. I was facing the engine and had started to turn around and he stepped up in here (indicating) and kind of grabbed me." The engine was moving south.

"Q. When you got on the engine were you facing the engine or facing south? A. I was facing south."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 674, 334 Mo. 22, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-chicago-eastern-illinois-railway-co-mo-1933.