Mattison v. L. S. & M. S. R. R.

3 Ohio N.P. 190
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 190 (Mattison v. L. S. & M. S. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mattison v. L. S. & M. S. R. R., 3 Ohio N.P. 190 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Charge of the Court.

PRATT, J.

Gentlemen of the Jury: — On the 19th day of May, 1894, William Mattison, the plaintiff in this case, commenced his action in this court against the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company, and thereafter tiled herein his amended petition, to which the defendant, the Railway Company, has filed its answer; and upon the issues made by this amended petition, and this answer, this case has been upon trial and is now submitted to your determination under the instructions which the court will give you as to the law.

The plainttf alleges for his cause of action against the. defendant — after setting forth the incorporation of the defendant company —that he, the plaintiff, had been in the employ of said company from the year 1879 down to the 9th of April, 1892; that he is a man of sober and industrious habits; that he has served said company in the capacity of a brakeman until the year 1885, and after that as conductor, performing all his duties faithfully and well, and becoming proficient in the knowledge of his duties in the capacities in which he was employed. That he had never done any other work— knew nothing of any other kind of work— that he was, in March, 1892,earning,and bis labor was worth-8120 per month. That because of- his standing and knowledge of hiB work and his experience, he was appointed by his fellow workmen to represent them in several conferences with managing officers of the defendant company and his superiors. That, as such representative, he objected to certain rules adopted by the defendant company and by all other trunk line railroads in the United States, to take effect November 15, 1890, and numbered 625 and 626, and commonly known as “black list rules,” which read as follows:

“625. No person suspended or dismissed from one department or division of the service shall be employed in another without the consent of the head of the department or division from which he wás dismissed, subject to the approval of the superintendent and assistant superintendent, or general superintendent.
“626. No person from any other railroad shall be given employment in the service of the company,unless satisfactory evidence is produced as to previous record, character and ability.

He then alleges that shortly after this meeting this defendant company, by its officers and managers, conspiring and intending to injure plaintiff, and with malice, unlawfully, wrongfully and maliciously discharged plaintiff from its services and employment, without cause or provocation. And he further alleges: “That thereupon, the defendant, conspiring and confederating together with a great many other railroad companies, all acting in concert, to defraud and injure plaintiff and deprive him of the income and benefit of his knowledge and skill as a railroad man, and to further injure plaintiff and prevent him from securing employment in his chosen avocation, trade and calling, maliciously, wrongfully and unlawfully caused the said “black list” rules to be enforced as against this plaintiff, thus preventing him from securing employment from any other railroad company. ’

“That by reason of the premises and the wrongful, malicious and unlawful acts of the defendant company, plaintiff was and is prevented from securing employment in his chosen avocation in which he had, so as aforesaid, become proficient and skillful, and in the pursuit of which he was able to, and did, make and earn good wages, to-wit: S120.00 per month and he charges and alleges the fact to be that the defendant company wrongfully.unlawfully and maliciously enforced said “black list” rules, numbered 625 and 626 against plaintiff, and demanded and procured the enforcement of said rules against him by other railroads, to his great damage. ”

“Plaintiff further alleges that, being thus shut out from his chosen advocation, he was compelled to seek work elsewhere.”

And by way of making a claim for damages, he alleges that he was earning and receiving as conductor $1,440.00 per year ;that he could only find work as a policeman, and that as such, he could earn only $720, for fhe first year and $800 per year after that; and that he is now thirty-two years of age. And he further alleges that the defendant company, thereafter, seeking further to in[191]*191jure plaintiff, wrote letters to the Chief of Police of Toledo, Ohio — under whom he was employed — and demanded that he be discharged and removed from the police force of the city, and that defendant is still trying to procure such removal; and, by reason of the premises, he asks judgment against the defendant in the sum of $50,000.

To this amended petition the defendant flies its answer and admits the incorporation of the defendant; that the defendant worked for the company, as stated by him ; that he is now in the service of the city of Toledo as policeman; that rules numbered 625 and 626 are two of the rules of defendant company, averring that they were proper and adopted in good faith as in its judgment it was competent for them to do in the management of their business; and the answer denies each and every other allegation of the amended petition.

The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to sustain, by a preponderance of the evidence, such part of the issues thus made as are necessary for him to recover,and as to th's I will now give you the rules of law by which you are to be governed.

The defendant company in the conduct of its business, had the right to make reasonable rules and regulations for the government of its employes in the conduct of that business, and the defendant company had the right to select officers and employes to whom it would entrust the carrying on of the different branches of its business. It is not alleged or charged in this case that this plaintiff was engaged or employed under any contract by which either the company was bound or required to retain him in its service for any definite period of time, nor that the plaintiff was bound or required to remain in-its service for any certain length of time ; and so far, therefore, as the regulations between plaintiff and defendant weie concerned, his employment might be terminated at any time, with or without cause, and simply at the wish or will of either party; and it would make no difference, therefore, either as to the discharge by the company or as to the plaintiff leaving the employment of the company, what the motive was for the action of. either. The defendant company, however, while it thus had the right to end plaintiff’s employment by the defendant company, was not authorized to interfere with or prevent the plaintiff from obtaining employment elsewhere, and the question for you to determine from the evidence before you in this case is: Whether the defendant company, through its officers or agents, representing the company in the hiring or control of the plaintiff, or of a class of employes of which he was one, did, by their action in enforcing the rules of the company, render it impossible for the plaintiff, as he charges in his petition, to obtain other émployment in his chosen vocation as a railroad man.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattison-v-l-s-m-s-r-r-ohctcompllucas-1896.