Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co. v. Baldwin

10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 333
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 333 (Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co. v. Baldwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court 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 Ry. Co. v. Baldwin, 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 333 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Hull, J.

Joseph L. Baldwin, the defendant in error is the father of Glenn Baldwin, and brought his action to recover for damages which he claims he sustained by way of loss of service, medical expense and otherwise, on account of injuries which his minor son suffered through the alleged negligence of the railroad company. • "

The verdict was for $i, 058. 00. Judgment was entered theron, and this ad ion is brought to reverse such judgment. Two grounds are relied upon by counsel for the railroad company, in this proceeding in error:

First. It is claimed that Glenn Baldwin procured his employment from'the railroad company by falsely stating that he was at that time twenty-one years of age; and that, therefore, rhe railroad company owed him no duty to exercise ordinary care in their conduct toward him

Second. That the railroad company was not guilty of any negligence toward Baldwin, and that he was guilty of contributory negligence at the time of his injury.

Glenn Baldwin made application to the railroad company for employment in April, 1892. He was then only sixteen years of age; his seventeenth birthday was May 3 2y following. He applied first"to the yardmaster at Collinwood, Charles Gilbraith, for a position as switch-tender. Gilbraith gave him a letter which he took to Cleveland and pre[334]*334sented at the office of the yardmaster, where he found George Davis, the son and clerk of the yard mast er,Samuel Davis. George Davis died before the trial below.

According to the testimony oí the plaintiff, upon his making application for employment, George Davis asked him various questions and turned to him and said, “You are not of age, are you? And he answered “No.” That Davis thereupon said “It will have to appear on this appli-action that you are.” And that then Baldwin answered: “You can put me down that I will be twenty-two years in May.” Davis put him down as twenty-one in the written application. Davis then told him that he could not be employed, under the rules of the company, unless he was of age; but Baldwin testifies, Davis said to him “that it was a matter of form, that was all it would amount to.” The various questions, and the the answers of Baldwin, were reduced to writing and signed bv him in the form of the following application for employment,

THE HAKE SHORE AND MICHIGAN SOUTHERN RAILWAY CO.

TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT.

Cleveland, April u, 1892.

Application of Glenn Baldwin, residing at Nottingham, O., for position of yard switchman.

Married or single; single. Age; 21. Weight; ifio pounds.Height; 5 feet, 7 inches. Color hair; dark brown. Color of eyes; grey. Name of parents if living; J. L,. Baldwin. Residence; Nottingham.

If no family or parents living, give names and residences of relatives or persons you desire notified in case of serious illness, accident or death;

Have you any physicial ailments or defects, such as lameness, deafness, color-blindness or short-sightedness, to render you unfit or unsafe for employment in railway service? None.

Where employed at present, by whom, and in what capacity? Not employed.

State what railroad experience vdu have had, giving names of roads, in what capacite employed, length of service on each road and cause of leaving each place. No experience.

Have you ever been suspended from any situation? If so, state particular®, when and where'5 No. sir.

Have you ever been erm^oved by the L. S. & M. S. Rv. before; if so. state when, in what capacity, bn what division, and cause of leaving? Truckman at Collinwood Transfer 'House from February 29th to ?«iarch ir, 1892; left on account of reducing the force.

I enclose letters of recommendation from the following named responsible parties; (Two letters at least must be enclosed.) B. B. Smith, Nottingham. E. M. Oliver, Nottingham.

Signature, GeeNN H. Baldwin.

(Give full name, no initials.)

After this application was signed Baldwin went to work as a switch-man, and after a few months he was given the position of a brakeman, Meanwhile he had been given a copy of the rules of the company, which, among other things, prohibited the employment of minors in such posi[335]*335tions as brakeman or switchman, and these rules were made a part of the contract of employment. Baldwin continued in the employment of the company until the time of his injury, which occurred on February 28, 1895, a period of nearly three years, and from the fall of 1892 until that time he was a brakeman. He performed his duties satisfactorily and was paid his wages therefor bv the railroad company, whose officers, so far as appears, aside from George Davis, [he yardmaster’s clerk, had no infor-amtion that he was a minor.

On the mght oE February 28, 1895, while performing his duties as a brakeman on a freight train called the “Linndale Puller,” which ran from Collinwood to Linndale, west of Cleveland, he was struck by a stringer in an overhead bridge, which had lately been put in while the bridge was being repaired, and injured about his head.

A large number,of cases have beer, cited where it was held that persons wrongfully upon trains were trespassers and not entitled to the protection of the railroad company, and learned counsel for the railroad company insist with great vigor and earnestness that under the state of facts in this case, Baldwin was a trespasser and wrong-doer; that he procured his employment, in the service of the railroad company by false pretenses; that he was wrongfully upon the train where he was injured; that being a wrong-doer and trespasser the company owed him no duty to provide a safe place for him to work and safe appliances and machinery to do his work. No case directly in point has been cited by counsel, and we have found none.

The rule of the railroad company, r'equiring its employees to br twenty-one. years of age, is a reasonable one, but we cannot agree with counsel that the false statement of Glenn Baldwin as to his age made him a trespasser upon the cars and tracks of the railroad company.

It appears that the representative of the company, the yardmaster’s clerk, to whom he applied for employment, knew, either by his appearance or by information, that Glenn Baldwin was not of age, and the first suggestion that Baldwin misrepresent his age came from the clerk of the yardmaster to whore. Baldwin made his application for employment. Although Davis had no authority to waive any rules of the company, he had authority to receive Baldwin’s application for employment and to propound to him such questions a« were required by the railroad company. Baldwin entered into the employ of the company under these circumstances. He had made no attempt to deceive the agent of the company to whom he made this application, but did state his age falsely to the company in the writing he signed. He remained in the employ of the company and its service, performing his duties and receiving his wages, for a period of nearly three years.

But asiae from all this, and puting it as strongly as counsel for the company can put it, that he falsely represented his age to the company and colluded and connived with George Davis to deceive the company, we still think that while he was in the actual service of the railroad company he was entitled to the protection of an employee.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-shore-michigan-southern-ry-co-v-baldwin-ohcirctcuyahoga-1899.