Louisville & N. R. v. Kelly

63 F. 407, 11 C.C.A. 260, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2398
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1894
DocketNo. 156
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 63 F. 407 (Louisville & N. R. v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & N. R. v. Kelly, 63 F. 407, 11 C.C.A. 260, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2398 (7th Cir. 1894).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

The case is briefly but sufficiently stated in the court’s charge to the jury, as follows:

“The plaintiff, a former brakeman in the service of the defendant railroad company, has brought this suit to recover damages for alleged negligence of the defendant, resulting in crushing the plaintiff’s right hand, and causing permanent injury. In the declaration divers specific acts of negligence are imputed to the defendant, including—First, the want of ordinary care in the employment of an incompetent locomotive engineer, whose unskillfulness, it is alleged in one portion of the declaration, caused the injury; second, the receiving by defendant, in the course of business, cars belonging to other companies, improperly constructed, and out of repair, and in a dangerous condition, thereby greatly increasing tlie hazard of the plaintiff in coupling the same, and that, in consequence of the drawheads or coupling apparatus of said cars being out of repair, the injury occurred; and, third, that its roadbed and yard at Maseoutah, the place of the accident, had holes and pitfalls, which prevented the iilaintiff from obtaining a foothold and making the coupling of ears.”

The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant in error in the sum of $2,250. Error is assigned upon rulings of the court in giving and refusing instructions, and in admitting and excluding evidence.

The recitals in the court’s charge of the acts of negligence alleged in the declaration, it is insisted, had a tendency to mislead the jury in respect to what certain particulars constituted negligence on the part of the plaintiff in error, but, the accuracy of the recitals not being questioned, the objection is necessarily untenable.

The concluding portion of the charge, it is contended, is objectionable, because it did not require the jury to consider whether the plaintiff had knowledge of the supposed incompetency of the fireman and defective condition of the cars and track. The court said:

“If you believe from the weight of the evidence that tlie plaintiff's injury resulted from the incompeteney of the person handling the locomotive at the time, and that due care had not been exercised by the defendant in its selection, or that the cars the plaintiff may have been attempting to couple were out of repair and the risk of coupling thereby materially increased, and the defendant knew of the condition of such cars before the accident, or should have known it, or that the roadbed, where the switching by plaintiff was required to be made, had holes or pitfalls, by reason of which the injury occurred when he was attempting to make such coupling, then your verdict should be for tlie plaintiff.”

This seems to have been intended, and probably was understood by the jury, to be a summing up of the law and facts of the case, and, in order to be in itself complete and fair, needed the qualification that the plaintiff himself was without fault, or was exercising due care, when he was injured; hut the court had already charged quite [409]*409explicitly that to be entitled to a verdict the plaintiff must have proven his averment “that at the time of the accident he was in the exercise of due care and diligence,” and as that proposition, by its terms, embraces every possible ground of recovery, the jury must have regarded it as applicable to the grounds restated and summed up in the last part of the charge;. Otherwise it had no application whatever. Whether or not the plaintiff had knowledge of the danger he was incurring is a matter which is embraced in the question whether he; was in the exercise of due care, and therefore needed not to be stated separately. If an instruction limited to the significance of such knowledge alone; was desired, it should have l>ec;n embodied in a special request.

While the issues in the case are few and simple, and the evidence of correspondingly limited scope, there are before ns, if our count is correct,—covering .13 printed pages of the record,—-28 requests for special instructions, which the bill of exceptions shows to have been separately and severally presented, considered, and refused, and the errors assigned upon most of the rulings are insisted upon. Intending no reflection upon counsel, we are constrained to suggest that there must be a point—it may be difficult to locate— where in sheer self-defense, as well as out of regard for the due administration of justice, a court may refuse to entertain such requests merely because of their excessive number or quantity. Those before us contain frequent repetitions, varied only by references to different details of evidence. Together they constitute an elaborate argument of the case, rather than a clear and succinct presentation of principles in their proper application under the issues to the controlling phases of the evidence. Considered separately, some of them are embraced in the general charge; some of them are unsound throughout, or in minor particulars," which justified their rejection; wiiile others, we find, ought to have been given.

In the order of presentation in the briefs, the first request; was to the effect that if the plaintiff knew that 1 he deadwoods of the cars he was attempting to couple were out of repair, that there were holes and pitfalls in the roadbed, and that the fireman in charge of the engine was incompetent, and remained in the service of the company without making objection, and without receiving any promise that the causes of danger mentioned should be removed, he was not entitled to relief. This was properly refused. If the defendant in error' knew that the deadwoods were out of repair, he must, in all probability, have acquired the knowledge on the spot; and, consistently with the terms of the instruction, his supposed knowledge of the condition of the track, and of the incompetency of the fireman as an engineer may have come to him so recently as to have afforded him no opportunity to make objection or complaint. Besides, even if he had the supposed knowledge, it was a question for the jury whether or not, under the circumstances, he ought; to have attempted to make tire coupling, and in so doing was himself negligent, or to he considered as having voluntarily assumed the risk of his act The question was essentially one of contributory negligence, and the instruction should have been so framed [410]*410as to leave it to the jury. Railroad Co. v. Mares, 123 U. S. 710, 8 Sup. Ct. 321. Of course, there may be cases so clear as to justify the taking of the question from the jury. Schofield v. Railway Co., 114 U. S. 615, 5 Sup. Ct. 1125; Bunt v. Mining Co., 138 U. S. 485, 11 Sup. Ct. 464.

The next request contains the objectionable proposition that “if the plaintiff knew, or had the same means of knowing,” the fireman’s incompetency “as the defendant, then he cannot recover for his injuries.” The railroad company owed to the defendant in error the duty to use due care in selecting firemen, engineers, and others with whom he was required to work, and to that end was bound to a diligent use of its means of knowledge; but the defendant in error was under no duty in that respect, and therefore could be affected only by the knowledge which he had,—including what was within Ms observation at the time of the injury. But, as already stated, if he had actually known the fireman’s incompetency, the question would have been one for the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 F. 407, 11 C.C.A. 260, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-v-kelly-ca7-1894.