Martin v. Union Pacific Railroad

253 S.W. 513, 214 Mo. App. 307, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 139
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 513 (Martin v. Union Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Union Pacific Railroad, 253 S.W. 513, 214 Mo. App. 307, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 139 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*310 BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $7500 and defendant has appealed.

Defendant insists that its instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence should have been given. This necessitates our stating the facts in their most favorable light to plaintiff. There was some inconsistencies in the testimony of some of plaintiff’s witnesses and defendant to a certain degree relies upon the statements of these witnesses that are most favorable to it. However, in stating the facts we take the testimony of these witnesses in its most favorable light to plaintiff as it was for the jury to harmonize the conflicting evidence. [Lamb v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 147 Mo. 171; Bobbitt v. Railroad, 169 Mo. App. 424; Bond v. C. B. & Q. Railroad Co., 110 Mo. App. 131; Cravens v. Hunter, 87 Mo. App. 456.]

The facts show that plaintiff on October 26, 1920, was engaged by the defendant as a laborer in its bridge repair department with two other workmen (Hughes and Morley) under a foreman named Johnson. They were unloading from a railroad car at Muniee, Kansas, hollow, glazed sewer tiling twenty-four inches in diameter, thirty inches in length, and weighing 300 pounds. When the men started to work there were on the car three of these tilings, to be used in constructing a culvert. There were also several large crossing planks on the car; these planks would have made skids upon which to unload the tiling. When all but two of the planks had been taken off the car, Morley said to Johnson, “We had better leave two of these planks on to unload the tiling,” Johnson replied, “I don’t think it necessary.” Morley then said, “They are pretty heavy, Mr. Johnson.” Johnson then said, “O, we can unload them, put the planks off.” Johnson’s directions were complied with and the planks were put off and the unloading of the tiling started.

It was intended to unload the tiling and place it upon a push car upon an adjacent track. The flat car or material car from which the tiling was to be unloaded had a *311 guardrail around the sides and ends ten inches in height and four inches in width. The distance from the top of the railing to the ground was five feet. The material car was eight feet wide and the bed extended over the south rail about eighteen inches. Morley and Hughes were on the car and Johnson and plaintiff were upon the ground. The tiling was to be lowered off of the west end of the car. Johnson located himself at the west end of the car and on the outside of the south rail and directed plaintiff to go to the inside of the rail, which he did, stationing himself with his back to and south of the coupler. Morley and Hughes moved the first tiling to the west end of the car and up-ended it over the ten inch guardrail with the bell end of the tile toward the west. Plaintiff testified that—

“They just dumped it right out and Johnson of course was on the outside and he grabbed one end and me the other. I grabbed hold as good as I could, and aimed to put one hand underneath, and yet it came with such force it mashed me right down. I fell across the rail and it fell on my leg and broke my leg and strained my back. ’ ’

He further testified that the two men on the car did not cheek the speed of the tiling down to Johnson and himself. He had no opportunity to get hold of it. It was so heavy that he could not hold it up and it “crushed” him down. He caught it with one hand as it came over but he and Johnson were unable to check in any degree the speed of the tiling ; that he did not have time to take hold of the end because he could not reach it.

He had been doing bridge repair work for twenty-one years and had often handled heavy objects and was a strong man, but had never helped unload tiling of this size and weight. Plaintiff testified when asked “Had you not been lifting considerable more than that on a great many occasions ¶ ’ ’ answered, ‘ ‘ I had not. ’ ’ That he would say at the time of the trial the tiling was too heavy for two men to handle. He further testified: “We never unloaded anything like that before” and that he relied upon Johnson’s statement as to how the work should be *312 done. There was expert testimony that two men on the ground were too few to unload such a tiling with safety under the circumstances and that there should have been four men; that the proper way to unload a tiling of this kind was by the use of skids.

Plaintiff’s theory of recovery was submitted in his instruction No. 1, which told the jury that—

“If you believe and find from the evidence that . . . Johnson adopted the plan and method of two persons being used on said car, and plaintiff and said Johnson being on the ground to receive said tiling . . . and ordered plaintiff to assist in doing said work in said manner, if so, and that owing to the size and weight of said tiling under all the facts shown in evidence, the said means .and method were dangerous and not reasonably safe for plaintiff, if so, and that it was feasible and practicable and reasonably safe to use and pursue another plan and method of unloading and handling said tiling with the means then at hand and by the use of ordinary care, if so, and that it was dangerous and not reasonably safe to the person of plaintiff for only two men to be used by defendant in receiving and lowering said tiling from said car, if so, and that under the method then being used more than two men on the ground were reasonably necessary at said time and place, if so, and that said Johnson knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, of all the aforesaid facts, if any, before adopting the method being then pursued, and before so ordering plaintiff to so do said work . . . said foreman Johnson was guilty of negligence, if so, or if you further believe from the evidence,” that the employees of the defendant on the car could have so grasped and handled the tiling and lowered the same without injury to plaintiff, but that said employees failed to do so but suddenly and prematurely let it go, and that the two men on the car—“failed to exercise ordinary care to co-ordinate their movements with those of plaintiff and Johnson and to work in unison, with them, if so,'and that thereby and in said respects said employees on said car were guilty of *313 negligence, ’ ’ and if plaintiff was injured by reason of the negligence of Johnson mentioned in the instruction or by the negligence of the two men on the car, then the verdict should be for plaintiff.

It is insisted that there is no evidence upon which either one of these two theories of negligence submitted in plaintiff’s instruction can be based. Of course, if there was evidence to support either, then defendant’s demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled. It will be noted that the first ground of negligence set out in the instruction submits to the jury the question as to whether the method of doing the work, in view of the fact that only two men were being used to receive the tiling, was negligent. It is insisted that plaintiff’s expert witness testified that two men on the ground were sufficient to unload tiling of the character of the one in question' for the first two hours, but that such men could not continue the work all day without skids.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 513, 214 Mo. App. 307, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-union-pacific-railroad-moctapp-1923.