Lyttle v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway Co.

47 N.W. 571, 84 Mich. 289, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 584
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 47 N.W. 571 (Lyttle v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyttle v. Chicago & West Michigan Railway Co., 47 N.W. 571, 84 Mich. 289, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 584 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Morse, J.

On June 19, 1886, the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as a switchman in its yards at Muskegon. He had been in such employment since February of the same year, and had an experience of about three years before that time as a switchman for the company. While on the. foot-board at the rear end of a tank to a locomotive, the engine running backwards, he was injured in attempting to uncouple cars. He brought suit against the defendant in the Kent circuit court, and recovered a verdict of $4,000..

At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved that the court direct á verdict in its favor, on the ground of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, and also for the reason that the evidence did not tend to show any negligence in the defendant, as alleged in plaintiff’s declaration. The declaration was in four counts, and [291]*291charged negligence on the part of the defendant in the following particulars:

1. In not providing a hand-rail across the rear end of the tender of said locomotive, after complaints made, and a promise by defendant that it would be provided.
2. In not providing the tender of said locomotive with a proper foot-board at the rear end thereof, in a reasonable state of repair, after notice to defendant of its defective condition, and a promise that the same would be repaired.
3. In allowing an unskillful and incompetent person to run and operate the said engine, after complaints made to defendant, and a promise on the part of defendant to plaintiff that, if he would continue in its employ, said unskillful and incompetent person should not run the engine any more.
4. And the fourth count of said declaration is a combination of all the above-alleged acts of negligence.

The motion was overruled, and- the defendant thereupon submitted testimony in its defense.

On the trial, the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the switch-engine with which he was working was defective in that it had no hand-rail on the rear part of the tender, whore" it is customary to have such a hand-rail for the men to take hold of in getting off and on, “in case they were to fall, or anything;” that the foot-board was out of shape. This is the step at the rear of the tank. It was supported by two heavy irons, bent at the bottom to place the step on. These irons were bent back so they touched the brake beam, and the corner of the step was broken off, leaving it in bad shape.

“ The end of it was bent down towards the track, and then it sloped instead of standing level; it was bent down, and then sloped down towards the track. A handrail is an iron rail, and is fastened to the deck of the tank. The deck of the tank is the platform the tank sets on, and it projects out; and a hand.-rail is arch-shaped, [292]*292and goes right down through these timbers, and fastened.”

On the night of June 10, having previously complained to his foreman, Martin Shannon, he reported these defects to the yard-master, McKiever (now dead), and was about to quit work, as he informed McKiever, on that account. McKiever told Pease, who plaintiff supposed was the assistant master mechanic, that it was dangerous, and he wanted it fixed, and Pease promised to fix it the next Saturday night. Relying on this promise, plaintiff kept at work expecting the defect to be remedied. He swears he would not have continued in the employ of the company if it had not promised to fix it. He also complained to Shannon about the fireman, one Marine Hector, running the engine, that he was not fit to handle an engine, and he would not work behind the engine if he was going to run it. He also reported to McKiever, who told the engineer to keep his place, that the fireman was not to handle the engine. The plaintiff and another switchman, George Race, quit work, and were about leaving the yard when McKiever asked them what was the matter, and plaintiff told him he was not going to work any more if the fireman was going to handle the engine. McKiever said if they would go back to work he would see that the fireman did not run the engine any more. At the time the plaintiff was hurt, this fireman was running the engine, the engineer having stepped off for a few moments. The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that Hector was an incompetent man to handle the engine, and did not understand the signals.

/•'He imagined he saw a signal when he didnZ. Sometimes he would shut it off and stop without a signal, and sometimes go ahead without a signal, and that was the reason we complained that he was not fit to handle the engine.”

[293]*293Plaintiff testifies that he continued work in this instance for the reason that they agreed not to let the fireman handle the engine.

There was a box about six- inches wide by two inches thick running the width of the tank. It was his custom, when getting on the foot-board, to take hold of the front end of this box, which gave him some security, but, at the time of the injury, a portion of the top of the box was split off, so that he could not hold on to it. It was brokén off that morning. The box was not put there to take hold of, but to carry tools in, links and pins. At the time of the injury, about 10 o’clock in the forenoon of June 19, 1886, the engine ivas backing at the rate of five or six miles an hour, pushing three freight-cars. Plaintiff stepped on the foot-board on the right-hand side of the engine, which was going in a southerly direction, and was reaching for the coupling pin to pull it in order that the cars might be “kicked in”'on a side track by the momentum given them by the engine. As plaintiff was about to pull the pin, the fireman suddenly shut off steam and reversed the engine, without any .signal from the plaintiff, and without giving him any notice of his intention to do so. The sudden stopping of the engine took up the slack between the tank and the caito which it was attached, plaintiff was thrown violently forward, and, having nothing to catch hold of or hang on to, lost his balance, and fell upon the track. One of the wheels ran over his right foot, making amputation necessary at the ankle joint.

It is also evident from all the testimony that the injury to plaintiff was occasioned by the defect in the step, or foot-board, and the absence of a hand-rail, or something to take hold of, together with the action of the fireman in shutting off the steam. This' act of the fireman was the immediate cause of plaintiff’s fall, [294]*294although, if it had not been for the defects spoken of^ he might perhaps have saved himself. The fireman, a witness for the defendant, testifies:

“When I shut off the steam, it took up the slack between the tender and the car. Lyttle did not lose his-balance until the steam was shut off."

There can be no fault imputed to the plaintiff, except in that he used the step and undertook to do the-uncoupling knowing of the defects that existed, and the want of a hand-rail; but he testified that he had used it about 100 times a day for a week ending that day without being jerked off or falling off.

“ There would have been no danger to me in the use-of the tender if it had not been for that sudden jerk. * * * I was jerked so I was falling, and had to-get out, or go under."

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W. 571, 84 Mich. 289, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyttle-v-chicago-west-michigan-railway-co-mich-1890.