Kennedy v. Lake Superior Terminal & Transfer Co.

57 N.W. 976, 87 Wis. 28, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 128
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 N.W. 976 (Kennedy v. Lake Superior Terminal & Transfer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Lake Superior Terminal & Transfer Co., 57 N.W. 976, 87 Wis. 28, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 128 (Wis. 1894).

Opinion

Orton, C. J.

This action is brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for a personal injury caused by the negligence of the defendant company on the 22d day of December, 1891, at the city of Superior. The original complaint charged the defendant with negligence for having in use on its cars, adjacent to and on both sides of the draw-bar, projecting blocks or double dead woods,— an unusual attachment, and in the highest degree dangerous to life and limb of persons employed in coupling the cars; and, secondly, for suffering and allowing heaps of ashes and sticks of wood to lie close to the margin of the tracks of the road, and between the rails thereof, in the place where the plaintiff was coupling cars at the time of the injury. The complaint then charges that the plaintiff, while coupling said cars, struck his toe or foot against one of the heaps of ashes, and thereby was caused to stumble and fall at the same time the said cars came together, so that his left arm was then and there caught between said attach[30]*30ments on said cars, and the hand and wrist thereof were then and there crushed and mangled, and it became necessary to cut them off.

In the amended complaint, after repeating the above charges of negligence, the negligence of the engineer of the train in operating said engine so as to push the car attached to the same at a dangerous rate of speed and with great force against the other car, is charged, for the first time, as another cause of the injury; but the manner and means of the injury are the same as in the original complaint, — • that the plaintiff struck his toe or foot against one of the said heaps of ashes, and was caused to stumble and fall at the same time as the cars came together, so that his left arm was then and there caught between the said attachments or bumpers, and the hand and wrist thereof were crushed, etc. Then there is the general charge that the injury was caused by the negligence of the company in using said attachments, and by allowing the said heaps of ashes to so lie between the rails, and by the negligence of the engineer, as aforesaid.

It will be observed that, while these three causes of the injury are alleged, only one of them — the heaps of ashes — is shown to have caused it, and the manner in which it caused it. The complaint does not show, or attempt to show, how the other two causes produced the injury, or how they could have produced it, or how they combined with the “ heaps of ashes ” to produce it; whereas, it is particularly described how the heaps of ashes caused him to stumble and fall just as the cars came together, so that his left arm was caught and his hand and wrist crushed. This is a full and complete statement of the injury, and just how it was produced by this one cause. There is no room for anj' other cause. It is complete and exclusive in itself, and there is no other statement of it, or how, otherwise, it was or could have been produced. It will be seen [31]*31hereafter that the testimony of the plaintiff goes no further than the complaint in this respect.

The evidence shows substantially that on the morning of said '22d day of December, 1891, about 9 o’clock, the engineer was backing one car or more, attached to the engine, along and in a side or spur track in the city of Superior, towards a single car standing near the end of said track towards an open street, for the purpose of coupling onto said single car and taking it away. The plaintiff, who was foreman of the switching force and in the employment of the company, standing near by, saw that there was no brakeman near there to couple said cars when they came together, and attempted to do this service in his place. He first mounted the single car to set the brakes to keep it from running off the end of the track when the cars came together, but finding the brakes useless he came down and blocked the wheels of the car. When the car attached to the engine came within two or three car-lengths of the other car, he stood opposite the opening between them, and gave to the engineer a “car-length” signal. The engineer did not seem to respond, and he then gave him the signal to slow up, and he did not respond to that, and when the moving car came within eleven or twelve feet of the stationary car he gave him the signal to stop. The moving car was running three or four miles an hour, a dangerous rate of speed for coupling. He then went between the cars, and saw that the link of the moving car was hanging down, and he took it in his left hand, and walked along Avith the car, facing the stationary car; and he testified then as follows: I commenced stumbling over these ashes, and then my arm was caught between these double dead-woods. This is the time I was hurt.” The engineer had not obeyed the signal to stop, and had not taken the slack out of the cars. When asked by his counsel to describe more minutely how the injury happened, the plaintiff tes-[32]*32tilled: “Well, when I was in there, I went to make the coupling, of course, and I stumbled over these ashes, and with the speed of the train and everything, why, I got caught.” When he took hold of the link, the cars were about ten feet apart. He took the link in his left hand, to guide it into the drawbar. He generally made the coupling with one hand alone. He testified on cross-examination as follows: “Well, the accident occurred in this way: I went in to make a coupling, and there was a lot of ashes piled up in there, and I stumbled over the ashes, and got caught, — unbalanced myself, and could not handle myself.” He then said that the cars had got within three or four feet of each other when he took hold of the link, and the next thing was to make the coupling. When asked, “ What did you do next?” he said: “Oh, I stumbled. I could not say whether I made the coupling or not.” He then repeated: “I took hold of the link with my left hand. It was ashes I stumbled with. I know it was ashes, because I looked around. I don’t presume I had hold of the link when I was caught.’r ' _

The plaintiff did not state how or in what manner the speed of the train or the peculiar character of the bumpers on the cars caused or contributed to his injury, and it does not appear anywhere in the evidence. These two facts, as causes, do not seem to be connected in any manner with the plaintiff’s injury. This should be proved or shown, or the jury could not find that they were, or one of them was, the proximate cause of the injury. It does not appear but that the plaintiff would have made the coupling and safely if he had not stumbled and fallen over the ash heap or lost his balance.

The court withdrew from the jury both the character of the bumpers and the fact of the ash heaps as causes of the injury, and submitted to them, as the only questions as to the cause, whether there was the want of ordinary care on [33]*33the part of the engineer in charge of the switch engine, and whether.the want of ordinary.care on his part was the proximate cause of the injury the plaintiff received; and the jury answered “Yes” to both questions. The jury found also that there was no want of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff that contributed to produce the injury he received, and this was the whole of the plaintiff’s case, besides the verdict for the damages to the plaintiff of $7,000.

The plaintiff testified that when he stumbled and fell over the ash heaps his arm was caught between one of the side bumpers and the drawbar. It does not appear clearly but that he would have so fallen and had his arm caught in that way if the speed of the engine had been only one mile per hour, instead of four.

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Related

Kennedy v. Lake Superior Terminal & Transfer Railway Co.
66 N.W. 1137 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1896)
Lagage v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.
65 N.W. 165 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1895)
Menominee River Sash & Door Co. v. Milwaukee & Northern Railroad
65 N.W. 176 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.W. 976, 87 Wis. 28, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-lake-superior-terminal-transfer-co-wis-1894.