L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Shook

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 9
CourtOttawa Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 9 (L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Shook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ottawa Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Shook, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 9 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

In the case of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad Co., v. Fanny Shook, admx. This is a petition in error, brought to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas in a case in which Fanny Shook, admx., above named, was plaintiff and the Railroad Company was defendant. The action was brought in the court of common pleas to recover damages under the statute commonly known as Lord Campbell’s, act, for negligently causing the death of decedent, James A. Shook, who was the husband of Fanny Shook. Mr. Shook was a brakeman in the employ of the railway company and had been in their employ for a period of about two years prior to the accident which resulted in his death. He was killed on December 21, 1884, and it is alleged that his. death was occasioned by his head coming in contract with a bridge which had been constructed and maintained for a number of years, across the tracks of the railway company on the east side of the Maumee river, which is a point within the limits of the city of Toledo. At the time of his death, he was on the top of a freight tiain of cars and was engaged, as the evidence tends to show, in setting and unsetting or releasing the brakes.

[10]*10The complaint is, that the company negligently put into its train of cars the car upon which the defendant was standing at the time of the accident resulting in his death, 'and that that car was of unusual height— a car commonly known as a refrigerator car — and was so high that a brakeman on its top, engaged in the prosecution of the business of the company, could not safety pass under the bridge — in other words, that he could not pass under the bridge standing in an erect posture on the top of the car without bringing his head in contract with the bridge. The bridge was constructed, perhaps thirteen years since, by the city of Toledo, and has been maintained by the city ever since. The company had nothing to do with its erection or in maintaining it; it was a structure erected and maintained by the city during all that period of time. The plaintiff below did not complain of the company for erecting or maintaining the bridge, but simply complained of the defendant for putting this car, or cars of the same character, into its trains, requiring the plaintiff’s decedent to prosecute the business of the company as a brakeman upon the top of such cars and thus exposing him to danger without giving him notice of the danger to which he was exposed.

It appears that M-r. Shook was in the employ of the company as a brakeman for the period, of about two years. There had been some intermission in this service, perhaps, but not for any considerable period of time. His “run,” as it is ordinarily called, was between Air Line Junction, tying to the westward of the Maumee river, and Collinwood, tying east of Cleveland.

The testimony shows that at the time Mr. Shook entered into the service of the company, the company had been in the habit of putting cars of the kind complained of — refrigerator cars — which ranged from one to two feet or more higher than the cars which were in ordinary use —into its trains, loaded, as the testimony tends to show, at the packing houses, and were sent through to the eastward, and, when unloaded, were returned with the trains, mixed and intermingled with other freight cars as it happened. It seems that on Sunday morning, December 21, 1884, somewhere from eight to ten o’clock in the morning — as the train approached Toledo from the east, a signal was given to put on the brakes just before reaching this bridge at which the accident occurred. This was required because, about two hundred feet to the westerly of the bridge, was a railroad crossing of the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton track which crosses the railroad of the Lake Shore company at that point. The decedent was the rear brakeman. When the signal was given to put on the brakes, he had gone forward from the rear part of the train setting the brakes as he proceeded forward toward the middle part of the train — which consisted of some forty or forty-five cars apparently — and when the signal was given to release the brakes again he had turned and was passing backward towards the rear part of the train, letting off the brakes in order that the train might pass on over the river until it should approach the Wabash crossing just on the west side of the river. There is testimony showing that he was on the top of the car, letting off brakes, and there was the testimony of one witness — Callahan — who says that he saw him in the act of stepping over towards the brake when he was struck by the side of the bridge and knocked from the end of the car down between the cars. The testimony shows that his body struck the ground — which was covered with snow — about fifty feet to the westward of the bridge, indicating that he had fallen between [11]*11the cars and had either caught or been caught by some of the machinery or apparatus of the train and been carried in that position until the train had passed under the bridge and had reached a point about fifty feet beyond, when his body appears to have come in contract with the ground and was dragged fifty feet further, where blood was found upon the ground. He was found upon the front end of the car upon the north side of the train — a car known as a Red Line car, immediately in rear of the refrigerator car, which the testimony of Callahan shows he was standing upon immediately before. He was found under the end of the car close in the vicinity of the forward wheel and caught by the brake, his head to the westward, in the direction in which the car was going, badly mangled, badly injured, and his legs crushed. He was taken out, taken to a hospital, but died almost immediately after he was taken 'from under the cars. His hat was found between the draw bars of- the refrigerator ■car and the Red Line car immediately in the rear of it, and was “pinched," as the witness states it, between the draw-bars.

It is disputed on the part of the plaintiff in error that the decedent was knocked from the car by a bridge; it is insisted that he slipped and fell from the car and that the testimony of Mr. Callahan in that particular is not worthy of credence, from the fact that it is said he made no report of the transaction; that he didn’t go to the spot where the man had fallen and paid no attention to it; that he was at the spring getting water and went home, and his father insisted that there were no marks upon his head to indicate that his head had come in contract with the bridge.

Without going very carefully into that branch of the case it is sufficient to say that we do not feel warranted in finding that the verdict of the jury in this particular, was contrary to the weight of the evidence; it was for them to give such credence to the testimony of Mr. Callahan, who testified directly upon this point, as they felt it their duty to do in the light of other testimony attending the transaction, and we assume, for the purpose of the view we take of the case, that Mr, Shook was knocked from the top of the car by his head coming in contract with the bridge, as is claimed on the part of the plaintiff below.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-s-m-s-ry-co-v-shook-ohcirctottawa-1896.