Kamer v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad

32 S.W.2d 1075, 326 Mo. 792, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 721
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 18, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 32 S.W.2d 1075 (Kamer v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad) 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
Kamer v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, 32 S.W.2d 1075, 326 Mo. 792, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 721 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed July 9, 1930; Motion for rehearing overruled October 14, 1930: Motion to transfer to Court en Banc overruled November 18, 1930. This is a suit for damages brought under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. The plaintiff was employed as an air-brake inspector in defendant's railroad yards, known as the Baden Yards, in North St. Louis. In the course of his employment and on the morning of December 25, 1925, he received an injury which necessitated the amputation of his left leg about five inches below the knee, and some other injuries. He had a verdict for $20,000, and remitted the sum of $2,000, as required by the court, preliminary to the order overruling defendant's motion for a new trial. Defendant appealed from the judgment entered in the sum of $18,000. At the time of his injury plaintiff was forty-eight years of age, and had been employed in defendant's yards for more than two years, and prior to that time had been mostly engaged in railroad employment.

The tracks of defendant's yards extend from north to south, and of these some were used for storing cars, others for the switching operations required in making up freight trains. There is a track known as a "rip track" where light repairs were made on defective cars; also, tracks upon which cars are assembled by a switching crew, consisting of an engineer, fireman, a switch foreman and two switchmen, using a switch engine. The work and practice was for the switching crew to assemble on the appropriate track, and couple together cars for the making up of a certain outgoing train. After the cars for such a train were thus assembled and coupled, they were inspected by the car men, and by the airmen or air-brake inspectors who would inspect the air-brake appliances and couple the air-hose. Applicable to the work to be done by these men and for their protection while at such work, there was a rule referred to as the "blue flag" or "blue light" rule. It was as follows:

"A blue flag by day and a blue light by night, displayed at one or both ends of an engine, car or train, indicates that workmen are under or about it; when thus protected it must not be coupled to or moved. Each class of workmen will display the blue signals, and the same workmen are alone authorized to remove them. Other equipment must not be placed on the track so as to intercept the view of the blue signals without first notifying the workmen. When emergency repair work is to be done under or about cars in a train and a blue signal is not available, the engineman and fireman will be notified and protection must be given those engaged in making the repairs."

Plaintiff's working hours began at eleven o'clock at night, and ended at seven o'clock in the morning. On the night in question he began work at eleven o'clock. Shortly thereafter, a freight train designated as No. 93, was made up on a track known as track No. 5. Plaintiff placed blue lights at the end of train 93, and made inspection of the air appliances and coupled the air-hose on that *Page 798 train. This train was pulled out of the yards about 12:30. The next train to be made up, and to require attention from the plaintiff, was a train known as No. 73, and the cars making up that train were being assembled on the track designated as track No. 1. After completing his work on train No. 93, on track 5, plaintiff and some other men went to the inspectors' shanty near the north end of the yards, where some of the men were eating a lunch. Plaintiff made out his card, or report, as to train 93, and then went over to track 5, to get the yard hose, blue lights and other equipment used in the inspection of train No. 93. These lights and equipment were placed near track 1 so as to be ready for use during the inspection to be made of train No. 73, after the cars in that train should be assembled and coupled. The plaintiff testified that as he came back from track No. 5, and was near the north end of track No. 1 and near the shanty, he met Mr. Morgenthaler, who was the switch foreman, and that Morgenthaler directed him to go down to a certain car standing on track No. 1, and see to the knuckle-lock, which was not operating. Asked to state what Morgenthaler said to him, plaintiff answered: "Why, he gave the number of the car, and he said that on the south end of it the knuckle-lock was not operating, and for me to go down and see it, and I asked him whether to put the blue light out and he said, `No, that will bottle up the north end.' He said, `We have several gaps,' and he said, `I will take care of you, and I won't shove them down hard enough so as to bother you at all.'" Plaintiff in response to the instruction given by Morgenthaler went south along track 1, to see about the knuckle-lock. He passed along by twelve cars, standing together on that track. South of these twelve cars, at a distance of four or five car-lengths, were two more cars on track 1, and several car-lengths further south were a number of other cars on track 1. The south one of the two cars mentioned, was the car to which Morgenthaler directed the plaintiff. These were all cars which were to be part of train No. 73. The plaintiff said that about the time he "got down there and with his left hand had got hold of the pin rod to lift the knuckle-lock" he was hit and hurt. The car at which he was beginning his inspection, was suddenly moved forward from the impact of cars moved against the twelve cars, by the switching crew. The wheel of the car at which he was engaged, passed over plaintiff's left leg.

The petition charges negligence in several particulars: In directing and requiring plaintiff to go between the cars and assuring him he could do so with reasonable safety to himself, when defendant and its agents could have known that it was dangerous, and that plaintiff was likely to be injured; in suffering and permitting the cars of the said train to be suddenly moved; in failing to warn plaintiff that said cars would be or were likely to be moved; in failing to furnish and maintain for plaintiff a reasonably safe place *Page 799 in which to work; in failing to exercise ordinary care to ascertain that plaintiff was engaged in work, and in such a position that the kicking of said cars against the others was likely to cause injury to plaintiff; in permitting such cars to be kicked against the other cars with unusual and unnecessary violence.

The answer, after a general denial, pleaded negligence on the part of plaintiff, in that, he knew or should have known that said cars were likely to be moved at any time, and that plaintiff without any care for his own safety, and without any necessity so to do, placed himself in a position of danger, without advising those in charge of the train of his intention. The answer further pleaded the rule and custom requiring the placing of the blue flag by day and the blue light by night, failure of plaintiff to comply with such rule and custom, and allegation that plaintiff, as a reasonably prudent person, would have appreciated the danger, and that he assumed all risks arising out of the circumstances complained of.

The reply was a general denial, and a denial that defendant had a rule or custom requiring blue flags or blue lights to be displayed by employees before the employee should do work at or about a standing train, which would have prohibited plaintiff from doing the work mentioned, under the circumstances mentioned. It further pleaded that no such rule or custom was ever observed, but that such rule or custom was habitually not observed with knowledge and consent of defendant; that if there was any such rule the same was abandoned and abrogated by its habitual non-observance on the part of defendant's employees.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.2d 1075, 326 Mo. 792, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kamer-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railroad-mo-1930.