Maxie v. Gulf Mobile & Ohio Railroad

202 S.W.2d 904, 356 Mo. 633, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 609
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 9, 1947
DocketNo. 40231.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 202 S.W.2d 904 (Maxie v. Gulf Mobile & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxie v. Gulf Mobile & Ohio Railroad, 202 S.W.2d 904, 356 Mo. 633, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 609 (Mo. 1947).

Opinions

Action for damages for personal injuries under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A., Sec. 51 et seq. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for $17,000 and defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff was employed by defendant in repairing and rebuilding freight cars at its Frascati shops in Mobile, Alabama, and had been so employed for many years. It is admitted that defendant maintained and operated the shops and that plaintiff was an employee of defendant *Page 638 therein. On October 23, 1943, plaintiff was severely injured when four boxcar doors, which were standing behind him, fell upon him, knocked him over and crushed him to the ground. That the doors in fact fell upon plaintiff and injured him was conceded at the trial. No issue is presented here concerning the extent of plaintiff's injuries or the amount of the verdict. Defendant offered no evidence. Other facts will be stated in the course of the opinion.

Error is assigned (1) on the court's action in overruling defendant's request for a directed verdict, (2) on the giving and refusal of instructions, and (3) on the overruling of objections to alleged improper and prejudicial argument and a request for a mistrial on account of such argument.

The motion for a directed verdict was based upon two grounds, towit, that plaintiff [906] failed to prove facts sufficient to bring his case under the provisions of the Federal Employers' Liability Act and failed to show "that defendant was negligent in any respect or manner as charged in plaintiff's petition." Appellant now contends "that plaintiff's affirmative showing of the situation placed his case outside of the Federal Act"; and that plaintiff produced no evidence to prove any one of the specific negligent acts or omissions charged in the petition.

The trial court instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that at the time plaintiff was injured, he "was engaged in interstate commerce or was engaged in the performance of duties in furtherance of interstate commerce." The court further submitted the cause to the jury under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine.

[1] It is admitted that defendant was engaged in interstate commerce at the time plaintiff was injured, but it is denied that plaintiff was so engaged then or at any other time. Defendant maintained two repair tracks in the Frascati shops. Upon one of these repair tracks the defendant would ordinarily place freight cars requiring "running repairs." The cars were put in, repaired and gotten out on the same day and so "kept running." Not all cars placed on the track were loaded. The track was under the supervision of Foreman Pennington. Upon the other repair track, the defendant would place other cars requiring from light to heavy repairs. These cars were usually empty and remained on the repair track until they were repaired. If they needed only a few boards in the roof or sides, some patching, or some safety repairs, they might be finished and removed in three days, but cars usually remained three to six days on this track. If complete rebuilding was required, it might take as much as one or two weeks. This track was under the supervision of Foreman Barnett.

"There was lots of light work" on the track where plaintiff worked, but few, if any, cars were repaired in less than three days and often a week or more was required to complete repairs. The foreman directed *Page 639 plaintiff where to work, and between 1940 and 1943, on some six different occasions plaintiff worked (from two hours to a half day) under Foreman Pennington, jacking up cars and putting wheels on cars on the "running repair track." Plaintiff did not know where the cars were from or where they were going. Most of the cars that plaintiff worked on were empty. Except on the occasions stated, plaintiff worked on the general repair track under Foreman Barnett, doing both light and heavy repairs as required by the condition of the cars placed on the track. On one occasion plaintiff's foreman sent him to take a "drawhead" from a coupling to Estonia, Mississippi, to put in a freight car. At another time plaintiff was sent to the Government Street loop to set a freight car "back on center." These occasions were after 1940, but plaintiff did not know where the cars were from or where they were going.

The above facts, concerning the type and kind of work done by plaintiff and the type and kind of work done on the two repair tracks, appeared from the oral testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses. The witnesses were vigorously cross-examined by defendant's attorney on the theory that the work in which plaintiff was engaged on the general repair track, under Foreman Barnett, was limited to heavy repairs on empty freight cars, "dead in the yards," and did not include light repairs to cars in use. If this had been the only evidence concerning the character of plaintiff's employment, its credibility, weight and value would have been for the jury. Wolff v. Campbell, 110 Mo. 114, 120, 19 S.W. 622; Central States, S. L. Ass'n. v. United States F. G. Co., 344 Mo. 580, 66 S.W.2d 550, 552.

Documentary evidence offered by plaintiff tended to show that the car upon which plaintiff was working at the time of his injury was G.M. O. Box Car No. 4656. This car left East St. Louis, Illinois, September 17, 1943, and moved interstate to Mobile, Alabama. During part of the trip it was loaded. It reached the Frascati shops October 16, 1943, and was given heavy repairs and re-painted. The work was completed by October 23, 1943, and the car was ready to be moved out. On October 28, 1943, the same car, loaded with [907] roofing, was delivered to the Southern Railroad for shipment to Morriston, Tennessee. These facts were admitted. During September, October and November, 1943, some 44 other cars moved from Illinois, Tennessee, Mississippi and Louisiana to Mobile, Alabama, and into defendant's shops for heavy repairs and out again into other states. Other exhibits showed the type and kind of repairs made on the various cars during this period, and when the cars subsequently moved loaded in interstate commerce. Appellant refers to these exhibits as "positive evidence as to the nature or character of plaintiff's work." The 44 cars listed remained in Mobile, Alabama, for heavy repairs an average of 15 days. Whether repairs were in progress all of that time does not appear. *Page 640

Appellant bases three assignments on the character of plaintiff's employment: (1) that the court erred in failing to sustain the motion to dismiss because plaintiff's evidence conclusively showed his employment was not under the federal act; (2) that the court erred in giving plaintiff's instruction I, which told the jury that plaintiff, as a matter of law, was engaged in duties in furtherance of interstate commerce; and (3) that the court erred in refusing defendant's instruction E, which would have submitted the issue ("whether or not plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce") as a question of fact for the jury to decide.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W.2d 904, 356 Mo. 633, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxie-v-gulf-mobile-ohio-railroad-mo-1947.