McCall v. Pitcairn

6 N.W.2d 415, 232 Iowa 867
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1942
DocketNo. 46094.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 N.W.2d 415 (McCall v. Pitcairn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCall v. Pitcairn, 6 N.W.2d 415, 232 Iowa 867 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The appellee in this action was a conductor on a train of the- Wabash Railway running from Moulton, Iowa, to Ottumwa, Iowa, and was so engaged on January 15, 1941, the date of the alleged injury. This Ottumwa line connects at Moulton with a line operated by appellants from Des Moines, Iowa, to Moberly, Missouri. On January 15th appellee states that he *869 took his regular run to Ottumwa and returned in the evening of the same day. It was stormy, having been raining lightly and sleeting, and the rain was freezing on the ground. A part of appellee’s daily duties consisted of switching operations in the Moulton yards in the morning and in the evening after returning from his Ottumwa run. About 9 o’clock in the evening on said January 15, 1941, he had returned from Ottumwa with 12 freight cars, including three cars of meat and three carloads of barley, all destined for St. Louis, Missouri, or beyond. ■ While switching the cars in the Moulton yards in order to get the cars destined for out of the state ready for train No. 98 from Des Moines to pick up and take to Moberly, Missouri, he was injured in throwing what is known as No. 3 switch so as to shove the ears of his train through the No. 3 switch track onto the lead track to be picked- up by train No. 98. Train No. 98 makes no stops between Moulton and the Missouri line.

The evidence shows that while so engaged he slipped and fell and slid down a bank about 20 feet, then came back up and went on with his work. He held a lighted lantern in his left hand and was giving signals to the engineer and the brakeman on the train with which he was doing the switching. He finished his work as a conductor in switching the cars and walked home with one of the brakemen. The brakeman was the only person he told about the fall and he made no complaint at the time to anyone else.

There was evidence that up to January 11, 1941, the ordinary and suitable yard switch was in use at No. 3 track. Such switch was thereafter damaged, and it is claimed a heavy mainline switch was installed temporarily and was in use on January 15, 1941. The difference between the regular yard switch and the main-line switch was that the latter had a long reach rod, which required the switch to be placed at the extreme end of the ties to which it was fastened, overhanging a -steep bank, and it was therefore necessary that anyone throwing the switch would have to stand, with his feet wide apart, at the decline where the footing was uncertain and difficult. The switch had only one safety catch. As appellee’s testimony shows, while at *870 tempting to throw the No. 3 switch in question, he fell, and in sliding down the bank twisted and strained in an effort to cheek his fall. He was checked partially by some partly buried ties on the bank and slid to a path where his fall was finally stopped. He climbed back, threw the switch, and proceeded home.

Appellee worked through the following day but testified that his side hurt continuously, which pain increased the next day and the day following. On the day after that he went to the Wabash Railway Company physician in Moulton, who first prescribed medicine, and on the following day gave the appellee a physical examination and diagnosed his condition as an inguinal hernia and recommended an operation. The evidence does not show that there was any intervening accident or injury between January 15, 1941, and the time when the injury was so diagnosed. There was evidence that for some time the appellee had been suffering from an umbilical hernia. Appellee stopped work on January 23d, and on January 25th was operated on for hernia at the Wabash Hospital at Decatur, Illinois. He remained in the hospital until February 15, 1941, but did not return to work until April 1st, when he continued on his old run until May 11th, and 'thereafter, on account of his condition, took a lighter run which paid less money and required the payment of additional expense money. Thereafter, on October 6, 1941, he returned to his old run. There was evidence on the part of the appellee that the main-line switch was in use on J anuary 15th, but there was also evidence on the part of the appellants that such switch was not installed until January 18th and was thereafter replaced by a standard switch on January 20th. Appellee claimed damages for loss of wages by reason of total disability from January 23, 1941, to March 31, 1941, loss of wages and additional expense money on the lighter run from May 11th to October 6th, and for pain and suffering. Appellants’ claim was that if the appellee had a hernia it was not caused by the negligence of the appellants or any of their employees but was a congenital defect which appeared some time after the appellee had fallen while on duty. They further claim that the installation of the main-line switch was the usual and customary thing to do until the standard switch could be *871 installed, and they claim only two days were consumed in making the change.

I. The receivers and the railway company were joined as defendants. The first claim of the appellants is that the court erred in overruling their motion for directed verdict, apparently basing their error on the overruling of ground 1 of their motion for directed verdict, which is as follows:

“ (1) That there is no evidence that the defendants named in the plaintiff’s petition are in fact the receivers of any railway, or that the plaintiff was in the employ of any of the defendants named in said petition.”

Without reviewing all the testimony on that subject, we think that the evidence does show that the railway was being operated by the receivers. The evidence consists of various exhibits, such as vouchers for wages and orders issued in the name of such receivers. While appellants urge that agency cannot be proved by the declarations or statements of the alleged agents, there is reason to believe that evidence that the receivers were operating the road for at least a number of months is sufficient to warrant the belief that they were actually in charge of the road, especially since under the record there is nothing but a general denial of all of the allegations of the petition, and at no place in the record is there any objection of any kind on the ground that such receivers are not proper parties defendant. If they were improperly joined their remedy was by motion, and by waiting until the close of all the appellee’s testimony before making any objection, said receivers are estopped from then asserting it. See Halligan v. Lone Tree Farmers Exchange, 230 Iowa 1277, 1286, 300 N. W. 551, 555, citing Constantine v. Grupe Co., 147 Iowa 142, 124 N. W. 189; Lull v. Anamosa Nat. Bk., 110 Iowa 537, 81 N. W. 784; and Miller v. Keokuk & Des Moines Ry. Co., 63 Iowa 680, 16 N. W. 567. In the Halligan case it is said:

“It is next urged that the trial court erred in treating the ease as having three defendants, the corporation, Lenz, and Hoskins. In plaintiff’s petition, appellant Lenz was referred to ‘as president thereof’ and Hoskins ‘as manager thereof’ (that *872 is, of the corporation). Appellants’ claim is that tbe officers were not sued in their individual capacity but merely as agents of the corporation which was the sole defendant.

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6 N.W.2d 415, 232 Iowa 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-pitcairn-iowa-1942.