Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Bixler

12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 653, 1895 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 464
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMarch 14, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 653 (Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Bixler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Co. v. Bixler, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 653, 1895 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 464 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Eaubie, J.

The case oi the Eake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Company against George M. Bixler, is a proceeding in error brought to reverse the judgment of the court below, in an action on the part of Bixler against the company, to recover for injuries received while in the performance of his duties as a brakeman on the road.

The petition alleges certain acts oi negligence, upon which a cause of action or rignt to recover is based.

It seems that Bixler was the head brakeman upon the freight train of the company and had been in its employ for some time, and on the o'ccasion m question, was on the freight train running from Ashtabula to Youngstown. When they arrived at Andover, they put the train upon the side track, to wait for a passing train, and the conductor and engineer left the train and went to breakfast, and while they were gone, Bixler, the head brakeman, and Campbell, the rear brakeman, proceeded to change some of the cars from the center to the head of the train, the fireman undertaking to manage the train, through the engine, and by means of that to move the train. After it was coupled up over the crossing, it broke in two, at a point where there was a car that had what is called an Ames drawbar on it for coupling, and in recoupling the cars together at that point, the plaintiff was injured by having his hand caught in the machinery or appliances of the car. The negligence stated in the petition, in regard to these facts, are as follows:

. “ And plaintiff says that said defendant was guilty of negligence in the premises in this, to-wit:
“First. That it suffered and permitted said Ames drawbar so out of repair as aforesaid, to remain upon and be used on said car in the manner and lor the time aforesaid.
“Second. That its conductor commanded and caused said work of transferring cars, as aforesaid, to be done, and left and abandoned the train (with the engineer) at the time and in the manner aforesaid.
“Third. And because of the other acts of negligence herein above set forth.’’

The acts oi negligence above set forth, are found in this allegation: “That when the train arrived at said station at Andover aforesaid, said conductor wrongfully and negligently permitted the fireman to act as engineer for the time being, and orderéd and directed him, said plaintiff, with said fireman, and one other brakeman, to transfer certain cars [655]*655near the center of said train, to a position near the head thereof, by switching the same in place, which train he, said conductor and said engineer, then and there wrongfully and negligently left and abandoned, remaining absent therefrom about thirty minutes, and thereupon and in obedience to said order, said fireman and the two brakemen undertook to do the work,” and in the doing oi which, as I have stated, the plaintiff had his hand caught and was iniured.

The court had a peculiar case before it to try from this petition. The negligence charged against the conductor turned out to be the principal point oi the case, and we find irom what I have just read, and what the petition charges, “That when said train arrived at said station, at Andover, atoresaid, said conductor wrongfully and negligently permitted the fireman to act as engineer for the time being, and ordered and directed him, said plaintifl, with said fireman, and one other brakeman, to transfer certain cars near the center of said' train, to a position near the head thereof, by switching the same in place.” It is on the iace of it, pretty difficult to discover what negligence there was in this; but we pass that by for the present and I go at once to the charge of the court.

The court gave the eleventh and fourteenth requests of the counsel for plaintiff to the jury, as the law ot the case, to which counsel for defendant below excepted, and those requests are as follows:

Eleventh. “It is the duty of the company to see that safe and proper cars and appliances are furnished and maintained, for the running of their trains.”

Fourteenth. “In the absence of notice to the contrary, a servant has a right to assume the master will periorm the duty imposed upon him, of furnishing proper, adequate and perfect implements and applú anees, necessary for the performance of any duty required of the servant.”

In these requests it will be seen, that the court, without any qualification whatever, instructed the jury, in regard to absolute and perfect appliances. Is that the law ? If it is, then the company is an insurer of the perfect condition of its appliances. “Safe” and “perfect” are absolute and not relative terms. When a thing is safe, it is safe absolutely, and you cannot make it any more so. When a thing is perfect, •you cannot make it any more so. “Perfect” and “safe” ends the whole matter and you cannot make anything, where it is safe, more safe, or where it is perfect, more perfect. So the terms are absolute and not relative.

The duty of an employer to a servant, is to use that care and prudence that is generally used by prudent, persons in the same business, and to furnish safe and proper appliances for the performance of that duty, by the servant, or in regard to which the servant is to perform his duty, and that care is satisfied when the employer furnishes such appliances as are generally used in the business; and that is very far from being required to furnish safe and perfect machinery. In these respects the court placed a duty upon the defendant company, that the law does not impose; therefore it was error.

The requests asked by counsel for the company below to be given, were those numbered eight and ten. The eighth was refused and the tenth was given, with modification.

Eighth. “If you find from the evidence, that the injury to the plaintiff was caused by the negligence of the fireman in moving said [656]*656train, the plaintiff cannot recover, tor the reason that the fireman was a fellow servant oí the plaintiff, and for any negligent or careless act ot said fireman in this case, the plaintiff cannot recover.”

Tenth. “If you find irom the evidence in this case that the plaintiff would not have been injured, except for the acts ot the fireman, the plaintiff cannot recover.”

Upon page 103 of the record, just after the requests which the court gave to the jury, and instructed them was the law as the requests on the part of the plaintiff, we find the court gave the tenth request ot the defendant, with this qualification.

Tenth. “If you find from the evidence in this case, that the plaintiff would not have been injured, except for the acts of the fireman, the plaintiff cannot recover, unless those acts were done under and in full compliance with the orders of the conductor.”

And in the same connection this matter is referred to by the court in its charge, on pages 109, 112 and 119.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 653, 1895 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-shore-michigan-southern-railway-co-v-bixler-ohiocirct-1895.