Louisville & N. R. v. Lankford

209 F. 321, 126 C.C.A. 247, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1795
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
DocketNo. 2,365
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 209 F. 321 (Louisville & N. R. v. Lankford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Lankford, 209 F. 321, 126 C.C.A. 247, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1795 (6th Cir. 1913).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

On the night of December 6,. 1910, the intestate, while employed .in defendant’s railroad yards at Paris, Tenn., as a switchman, in making up an interstate train was run over by the engine in use for such switching. When last seen before the accident he had just set the switch, which was on the left-hand, or fireman’s side of the engine and was apparently proceeding to cross the track 5 or 6 feet in front of the engine. He was found about IS or 20 feet further up the track, just outside the left-hand rail, one foot cut off and his body badly crushed. It was plaintiff’s theory, stated in the declaration and relied upon at the trial, that deceased stepped upon the pilot and was thrown therefrom through a lurch caused by the engine passing over a “low joint” in the track. The engineer and another witness testified that decedent told them that in trying to turn on the pilot he slipped and fell off. He died within an hour after the accident. The grounds of defendant’s negligence relied on, as far as submitted to the jury, were the use for switching purposes of a road engine carrying a pilot, and without a front foot-board, instead of a switch engine, which has a front footboard and no pilot, and an out-of-repair and unsafe condition of the track. The defenses were a denial of negligence on defendant’s part and assumption of risk and contributory negligence on the part of deceased. The [323]*323suit was brought under the Employers’ Liability Act.1 At the close of the testimony defendant moved for peremptory instruction in its favor, which was denied, and the case submitted to the jury. Verdict was rendered for plaintiff, on which judgment was entered. The errors argued relate to the refusal to direct verdict, t;he denial of several requested instructions, and the submission of the alleged defective condition of the track as a ground of defendant’s negligence; the criticism here being that there was no evidence tending to show either that the engine lurched or that there was any condition of the track which might have caused such lurching. It is hot contended here that a maintaining of the track in the condition last stated would have no tendency to prove negligence.

[1] 1. The motion to direct verdict was properly denied. There was testimony tending to show negligence on defendant’s part in using a road engine for switching purposes. There was evidence (including the construction of the pilot, referred to later) from which the jury might properly infer that decedent was expected to ride on the pilot during switching movements. Notwithstanding defendant’s evidence to the contrary, a question of fact for the" jury was presented. There was evidence that a road engine was less safe for this purpose than a switch engine, because of the lack of front footboard, the pilot having no foot room except a narrow “rim” perhaps 3% inches wide, which was less secure than a footboard; that defendant had then and there shops at which the road engine could have been properly equipped for switching purposes by taking off the pilot and putting on a front footboard, which required not more than one to two hours at the most ; and that the road engine had been in use for switching purposes at least part of the preceding night, all of the day before the accident, and from 7 o’clock in the evening until the accident, which occurred about midnight. The effect (upon the motion to direct verdict) of the alleged failure to prove that a defect in the condition of the track contributed to the accident need not be considered, in view of what is said in a later portion of the opinion as to the proof on that subject.

[2] The defense of assumption of risk presented at least questions of fact for the jury. Texas & Pacific R. R. Co. v. Swearingen, 196 U. S. 51, 62, 25 Sup. Ct. 164, 49 L. Ed. 382; Sterling Paper Co. v. Hamel (C. C. A. 6th Cir.) 207 Fed. 300, 304. It is conceded that, if plaintiff has a right of action, the suit is properly brought under the Employers’ Liability Act, by which the defense of contributory negligence as a complete bar is abrogated. The question of such negligence as reducing recovery was submitted to the jury.

[3] 2. If the record justified submitting the condition of the roadbed as a ground of negligence, it follows that the judgment must be affirmed. This is so as to the defense of assumption of risk, because the requests upon that subject (assignments 8, 9, 10, and 15) ignore the condition of the track and make decedent’s acquaintance with the condition of the engine and its use bar recovery. An assumption of risk as to the engine obviously would not have the effect stated, provided other negligence, not assumed, proximately contributed to the [324]*324accident Request No. 5 was-properly denied. It motonly ignored the condition of the roadbed as' a ground of negligence but made riding on the pilot, with knowledge of apparent and obvious danger, and without necessity, imperatively reduce the damages’ to a nominal sum, in’ contravention of the terms of the Employers’ Liability Act, which makes the damages recoverable by the empíoyé bear “the same relation to the full amount as the negligence attributable to the carrier bears to the entire negligence attributable to both.” Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. v. Earnest, 229 U. S. 114, 122, 33 Sup. Ct. 654, 57 L. Ed., 4096. Request No. 7 is not only subject to the same criticism of ignoring the condition of the roadbed as contributing to the accident but, so far as applicable, was in effect covered by the charge actually given.

[4] We are thus brought to the question whether there was evidence tending to show that the defective condition of the track proximately contributed to the injury. There was no testimony that the engine “lurched.” There was, however, evidence to the effect that the track had been torn up, in the course of repairs, for a considerable distance, including'the entire space from the switch mentioned to and including the place where the deceased fell; that the ties merely rested upon the ground, no ballasting having been done, the spaces between the ties being left entirely open. Defendant’s counsel concedes that “the jury were warranted in finding that the track was not level nor filled in at the point where McClure stepped upon the engine and was thrown off.” The engineer, who was a witness for defendant, in answer to a question, put upon cross-examination, whether he did not know that “it is customary to have low joints in tracks where there is no ballast, particularly in switching yards such as that track was,” said, “Well, the low joints were there, but I could not say anything about this track for they had just repaired it just a short time before;” adding however, that the repairs were not completed. The jury might, we think, properly infer from all the evidence, taken together, that the inequalities mentioned had not been corrected.

Can it then be said that there was no evidence from which the jury was at liberty to infer that the unevenness of the track contributed to the accident? In other words, does the record support only a conclusion that the deceased would have slipped and fallen regardless of the unevenness of the track ? The test of the propriety of submitting the condition of the track as a contributing causé of the accident is whether reasonable men would differ in the conclusion to be drawn in that respect from the evidence. C.

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Bluebook (online)
209 F. 321, 126 C.C.A. 247, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-n-r-v-lankford-ca6-1913.