Lehigh Valley R. v. McGranahan

6 F.2d 431, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2028
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1925
DocketNo. 138
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 F.2d 431 (Lehigh Valley R. v. McGranahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lehigh Valley R. v. McGranahan, 6 F.2d 431, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2028 (2d Cir. 1925).

Opinions

HAND, Circuit Judg-e.

The plaintiff was a brakeman at work in the Jersey City yards of the defendant on January 27, 1921. He had been in its steady employ since 1910, and for the preceding four months had worked in these same yards. The accident happened at night, as follows: The crew, which consisted of an engineer, a fireman, two brakemen, and a conductor, were drilling freight ears in the yard. Next to the engine was an open flat car, called a “pusher,” with which it was the habit to push ears upon floats in the Hudson river. A train of 11 freight cars was backed down one track by the engine and the pusher to a point at which it became desirable to add another ear on a parallel track to the south. To do this the engine and the pusher were cut off and went back westward, until they had come to the switch of a cross-over leading to the south track. Thereupon they backed down over the crossover to the south track to get the ear that was to be picked up. Between the point where the cross-over led into the south track and the place where the single car stood was the switch of another cross-over, which led back to the first track, on which stood the 11 cars. The plaintiff was riding upon the end of the pusher away from the engine. As it backed over the first cross-over and onto the second track, the plaintiff, who was riding on the step of the pusher, saw that the switch light for the second cross-over was not closed, and that the pusher would therefore run over that cross-over and back again on the first track, where stood the string of 11 cars. Seeing that a collision was inevitable, and thinking that the train was moving too quickly to jump, he tried to get onto the platform of the pusher. He did not step quickly enough, and was caught between the pusher’s end and the first or second car .of the original string. The negligence asserted was in leaving open the switch which led back from the south track by means of the cross-over back to the first. It was not disputed that the plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce and that the federal Employers’ Liability Act (Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665) applied.

The defendant raises two points: First, that the court’s charge to the jury was erroneous; and, second, that the defendant was entitled to a dismissal of the complaint. In order to understand the supposed error in the charge, it is necessary to state the evidence more fully, and in this connection first to consider the pleadings. The eighth article of the complaint, .which alone alleged fault, charged that the operation of the trains was conducted carelessly by the defendant, its officers, agents, and servants, particularly because the switch over which the train passed was improperly set. The defendant asked a bill of particulars, to which the plaintiff replied that the persons guilty of the negligence alleged were “the conductor, engineer, and fireman of the crew.” Thus the defendant went to trial, knowing that the plaintiff claimed the defendant’s failure to operate the train carefully, and especially to close the switch, was due to the personal carelessness of the conductor, the engineer, and the fireman.

The plaintiff’s story was that the conductor had got off the string of cars before it came to a stop on the first track, and stopped it when he was about opposite the pusher. He then ordered the plaintiff, who, as we have said, was on the pusher, to uncouple it, so-that it and the engine might go back westward to the point of the cross-over leading to the south track. At that time the plaintiff says that the conductor told him he was-to go in on the south track, and that he (the-conductor) would “line up” the switches. The plaintiff relied upon this promise, which necessarily included closing the switch which led from the south track over the second cross-over to the track on which the string-stood. The conductor denied the statement so imputed to him by the plaintiff, and the supposed error in the charge consists in not limiting the jury in their consideration strictly to the question of whether the promise was-made. The learned judge added that 'they were to consider, also, “whether he did all that he (the conductor) as a reasonably prudent man should have done,” a charge which later he refused to modify, when the matter was expressly called to his attention. To support the charge, therefore, it becomes necessary to inquire whether there was any basis for the verdict in case the promise had [433]*433not been made. The defendant asserts that the pleadings raise no other issue, that upon the opening the plaintiff made no other suggestion, and that the evidence contains no justification for the latitude which the District Judge allowed to the jury.

From what we have already stated of the pleadings, it seems to us plain that, if there was evidence aside from the promise which justified a verdict, it was open to the plaintiff to urge it. The allegations of the eighth article of the complaint are most general in their character, and permitted the plaintiff to show any negligence on the part of the conductor, engineer, and fireman which might have resulted in leaving a switch open and in moving the trains over the switch without observing that it was not closed. Nor can we find in the opening to the jury any admission which concluded the plaintiff. We recognize, of course, that an admission of fact made by an attorney at any stage in the trial, including the opening, may be taken as a conceded fact in the case, Smith v. Standard Sanitary Mfg. Co., 254 F. 427, 166 C. C. A. 59 (C. C. A. 2); but we can find no admission in the opening which would have justified the learned court in limiting the jury to the single issue of whether the promise was made. It is one thing to make an admission of fact intended as such, and another completely to state in the opening all possible grounds of recovery. Indeed, in case the evidence had to be in part extracted from hostile witnesses, the second course might be disastrous. We do not think, therefore, that the opening limited the plaintiff to the promise of the conductor and cut him off from showing that the engineer might in season have seen that the switch was open, or that the plaintiff might reasonably have supposed that the conductor would close the switch, regardless of any promise. Nor do we attach any significance to the plaintiff’s statement after the charge that the failure of the conductor to turn the switch was the only question of fact in the case. ■Strictly, indeed, this was true, because the only disputed questions of fact were, first, whether the conductor had promised to turn the switch; and, second, whether, independently of any promise, the plaintiff might reasonably have supposed that he would. The rest was only, What was the proper measure of care to be imputed to the engineer in operating the engine ?

Hence the ease comes down, in our judgment, to one of evidence. If the jury did not believe that the conductor made the promise, was there still any ground to find either the conductor or the engineer at fault, the conduct of both of whom the judge left to the .jury? This in turn depends upon how the work was distributed between the members of the crew The defendant relies altogether upon one part of the plaintiff’s cross-examination, the full force of which can only be learned by a perusal of- the whole. The cross-exammer effectively checked some answers, not strictly responsive it is true, which clearly were intended to say that it was the conductor’s duty to turn the switch as he went up the south track. After this cheek, the cross-examiner procured a categorical assent to the question whether it ivas the plaintiff's duty to throw the switch if the conductor had not made the promise.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F.2d 431, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehigh-valley-r-v-mcgranahan-ca2-1925.