Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Diggs

167 S.W.2d 879, 205 Ark. 150, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 312
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1943
Docket4-6904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 167 S.W.2d 879 (Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Diggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Diggs, 167 S.W.2d 879, 205 Ark. 150, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 312 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

MoHaney, J.

Appellee brought this action against appellant to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by Mm on August 9, 1941, while in the employ of appellant as a section hand, which injuries, it was alleged, occurred by reason of the negligence of other employees of appellant in the section crew with him.

On said date the section crew consisted of four men and the foreman. They were engaged in replacing a defective rail in appellant’s track in Sevier county with a new rail. The old rail had been removed and the new rail placed in position, and it became necessary to close the opening or shorten the space between the end of said new rail and the adjoining rail, which is called “driving expansion.” In doing this the crew used an old rail as a battering ram by sliding it back and forth across the oiled 2-inch metal strip extending across the end of a push car and ramming it against the angle bar bolted to the new rail. About 7:45 a. m. on said date, while preparing to drive expansion in the third new rail placed in the track that morning, expansion having already been driven in two of them, appellee was injured when the old rail used as a battering ram fell from the push car, caught his lower left leg between it and the track rail and crushed it, causing the injuries hereinafter more fully detailed. .The push car was on the track near the end of the new rail to be driven. The tracks ran north and south. In order to get the push car in position to drive the new rail properly, it was lifted from the track with the west wheels resting on the ties between the track rails, and the east wheels on the east end of the ties, east of the east track rail. In order to get the north end .of the push car slightly further to the east to get a better angle for driving the expansion, appellee went to the northwest corner, Tollett, another employee, went to the northeast corner and foreman Todd at the north end thereof, between appellee and Tollett and east of the old rail on the push car to lift it over further to the east. Sparkman and Perry, the other two members of the crew, undertook to handle the rail. Sparkman straddled the south end of this rail and Perry went to the north end. In order to take the load of the rail off the north end of the push car, so that it could be more easily moved east, Sparkman bore down on the south end of the rail (which extended about 12 feet beyond the south end of the push car and a like distance beyond the north end, said rail being 31 feet long and weighing 878 pounds) and the north end was elevated above the ground some 5 or 6 feet. When the north end of the push car was moved to the east, the rail so held was allowed to fall off the west side of the car and to injure the appellee.

This action was brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, appellee being engaged in interstate commerce at the time. The foregoing facts werp alleged and the injuries suffered by appellee were detailed. Numerous acts of negligence were alleged and damages prayed in a large sum. Appellant’s answer was. a general denial, and pleas' of the statute of limitations, assumption of risk and contributory negligence were interposed. Trial resulted in' a verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of $25,000. This appeal followed.

For a reversal of this judgment, appellant first insists that the court erred in giving appellee’s requested instruction No. 1 and in refusing to give its requested instructions 1 to 12 inclusive, except No. 11, No. 1 being a request for a directed verdict on the whole case, and the others being several requests for directed verdicts on the particular acts of negligence alleged. Instruction No. 1 for appellee is long and somewhat involved. 1

The instruction is first attacked as a whole, because, as charged, it “was confusing, ambiguous and unintelligible.” While it is quite, lengthy and, therefore, somewhat involved, we do not agree with appellant that it was either confusing, ambiguous or unintelligible. Seven acts of negligence on the part of foreman Todd were submitted, and certain acts of negligence on the part of Perry and Sparkman were submitted, all in conjunctive form, thereby requiring appellee to prove all acts of negligence in order to recover which was a greater burden than the law requires, for, if appellant were proven negligent in any particular charged and such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, he not having assumed the risk, he would have been entitled to go to the jury on such charge. But appellant cannot complain of the form of the instruction in this respect, because it was more favorable to it than it was entitled to. Of course all acts of negligence charged and submitted to the jury must be supported by substantial testimony, and if not, reversible error is committed. This is true because, as said in St. L.-S. F. Ry. Co. v. Lane, 156 Ark. 465, 246 S. W. 494, “Otherwise the jury might have found for plaintiff upon allegations of negligence of which there was no proof.” See other cases there cited.

In addition to the general attack upon said instruction, specific attacks are made on it because, it is urged, there is no substantial evidence to support the giving of clauses Nos. 1, 5 and 7. No. 1 submits the charge as to whether foreman Todd was negligent in using and permitting “the use of a defective push car with grease on its surface.” It is argued that there was no evidence that the car had “grease on its surface,” except on the 2-inch metal strip on either end of the car. This is true and we think the jury could not have misunderstood what was meant, and no doubt if the attention of the court and opposing counsel had been called to this fact, the point would have promptly been conceded. No specific objection thereto was .made. The objection now is too. late and not well taken. The other objection to this clause is that there is no evidence that a defect in the push car caused the rail to fall. We cannot agree. It is undisputed that said car was old, dilapidated and the frame broken near the northeast corner, and that Todd had requested a new one. It would give under weight. We think the jury had the right to consider the condition of the car in determining whether its use under the circumstances was negligence. 'Clause No. 5 of said instruction relates to the charge of negligence of Todd in permitting and directing Sparkman “to bear down on the south end of said rail and keep the north end thereof suspended over plaintiff while he assisted” Todd and Tollett in moving said car to the east. It is now said the rail was not “suspended over plaintiff,” but no specific objection was made to this language. Whether directly over him or not, the fact is the north end was elevated near him and the rail pivoted on the oily edge of the south metal strip of the push car, with the south end of the rail near the ground. The point is not well taken. The other objection to this clause is that there was no proof that Sparkman was negligent in bearing down on the south end of the rail. We cannot agree. We think the jury had the right to find that the whole procedure used in driving expansion was negligence and that each separate act constituting the whole procedure was negligence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stewart v. Key Co.
590 S.W.2d 872 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1979)
Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Taylor
190 S.W.2d 968 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 S.W.2d 879, 205 Ark. 150, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-southern-railway-company-v-diggs-ark-1943.