McClintic-Marshall Const. Co. v. Forgy

246 F. 193, 158 C.C.A. 353, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1336
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1917
DocketNo. 4685
StatusPublished

This text of 246 F. 193 (McClintic-Marshall Const. Co. v. Forgy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClintic-Marshall Const. Co. v. Forgy, 246 F. 193, 158 C.C.A. 353, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1336 (8th Cir. 1917).

Opinions

AMIDON, District Judge.

This is an action to. recover damages for death by wrongful act. The plaintiff below, Elnora Forgy, widow of decedent, prevailed, and the defendant, the McClintic-Marshall Construction Company, brings error.

[1] These are the facts: The defendant was engaged in constructing a bridge across the Missouri river at Kansas City, for the Burlington Railroad and Armour & Co. It was a large enterprise requiring several years for its completion. To aid in the work, defendant built two sets of double tracks; one running north and south parallel with the approach to the bridge, the other two east and west crossing the first tracks at right angles. The latter were known as service tracks. At the west end they were connected with the yards of the Burlington and Wabash railroads so that cars loaded with materials could be brought in over them by means either of switch engines or the crane cars owned by defendant. These tracks terminated at their eastern end in what was known as storage and assembling yards, where material for the bridge was unloaded, and some work done assembling different parts.

For the purpose of handling the bridge material, defendant had two1 locomotive crane cars, to each of which were attached three ordinary flat cars upon which material could be loaded. The cranes were themselves mounted on an ordinary eight-wheel railroad fiat car. They each weighed 86 tons, and had a capacity of 30 tons. The cars were propelled by the same engine that operated'the cranes. The cranes, together with the boiler, engine, and machinery, were mounted upon a frame which rested upon small wheels arranged in a circle. These in turn ran on a circular track on the surface of the flat car. In swinging, the crane did not have an independent motion, but the entire framework revolved about on the circular track. In other words, the crane is what is known as a “whirly.”

The boiler was upright. At the bottom was the ash pan, next the grate and fire box, above this were the flues,.and at the top were the hood and smokestack. The boiler was inclosed in a cab. It and some of the machinery was covered by a semicircular roof. The cab was nearly flush with the end of the car when the crane was pointing in the same direction as the car.

The flues are fitted into an upper and lower flue sheet. They are not only expanded so as to fit tightly into the sheets, but extend about one-eighth of an inch beyond them, and are then beaded against the sheet at each end.

These locomotive cranes were known as Nos. IS and 17. Forgy, the decedent, was engineer qn No. 15. For some time prior to the accident, the flues on his engine had been leaking. On the morning of March 28, 1911, he and another workman were directed to take out the leaking flues preparatory to installing new ones. In doing this he was directed by the superintendent to place his crane car, and the cars usually attached to it, on one of the service tracks at a point little used. The crane and the cars were run in on this track by their own power. The crane car was then uncoupled and removed about 3 or 4 feet from the flat cars, leaving the latter standing on the track to the west, the [195]*195direction from which they had come in and from which they would have to he taken out.

We pause here to call attention to the fact that the flat cars were separated from the crane car at the time they were set in on the service track, thus clearly indicating that in the judgment of the men it was necessary for the workmen engaged in removing the flues to get in on the track between the flat cars and the crane car.

The removal of the flues was commenced at about 9 o’clock in the morning by Forgy and the assistant master mechanic, a man by the name of Marshall. The hood and smokestack were removed so that one workman could get down to the upper flue sheet and by means of a hammer and cold-chisel cut off the beading. There is conflict in the evidence as to how the other workmen reached the beading at the other end of the flues. On the east side of the boiler as it stood at the time, there was a door inside the cab leading to the Are box. Some of the evidence tends to show that the bottom of the flues was reached through this door. There was another door leading to the ash pan, opening on the west side of the boiler and cab. It was 18 inches long and 7 or 8 inches high. In our judgment the weight of the evidence shows that the lower beading could be most conveniently reached through this door. The ash pan and the grate had been removed, and this also confirms the evidence that at least part of the work was done through this opening. That is the usual method of reaching the bottom flue sheet of such a boiler for the purpose of removing the flues. The light is better than through the door inside the cab. All the evidence shows that the flues were driven out from below and removed through the opening left at the top by taking off the hood and smokestack.

At about 4 o’clock in the afternoon Forgy was standing on the ground at the west end of his crane car, between it and the flat cars, looking up through the ash pan door into the boiler, with his hammer and chisel in his hands. At that time crane No. 17, with its three freight cars attached, by direction of the superintendent ran in on the siding for the purpose of removing the other crane and cars to a point in the yard where the flue chambers could be cleaned out with a hose. No immediate warning was given to Forgy. No. 17, with its loaded cars, struck the three flat cars that were standing on the track, and pushed them against the other crane car. Forgy was caught between the two drawheads and killed.

Did defendant owe deceased the duty to warn him before disturbing the car on which he was working? Defendant answers that question in the negative. It offered evidence to the effect that it was not customary on jobs of this character to warn workmen of the movement of the cranes or cars; that it was the practice and duty for men to look out for themselves. This evidence was not directed to workmen engaged on the class of work that Forgy was doing. We are of the opinion that when the nature of his work is considered the company-owed him the duty of reasonable care for his protection. It was impossible for him to do his work and keep watch of the movements of engines. For all practical purposes the situation is identical with that of a workman engaged in repairing a railroad car. The rule in force [196]*196on nearly all railroads in the United States for many years requires that such a car (1) be protected by a blue flag by day and a blue light at night; (2) that only the workmen repairing the car can remove the warning. There was no direct evidence in the trial court in relation to this rule, but it has been quoted in text-books and in countless judicial opinions, and may properly be referred to in determining whether the judgment below should be reversed. The trial court, in order to avoid the danger that the jury would give plaintiff the benefit of the fellow-servant law of Missouri (which is applicable only to railroads proper), excluded evidence as to this rule. We think the situations were so nearly identical that the evidence might well have been received. But be that as it may, we think it may at least be considered by this court in determining whether the trial court properly left to the jury to say whether defendant exercised reasonable care with respect to Porgy. In our judgment that question was one of fact and not of law. The rule which has been stated with increasing emphasis by the Supreme Court is expressed in the following language in Kreigh v.

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Bluebook (online)
246 F. 193, 158 C.C.A. 353, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclintic-marshall-const-co-v-forgy-ca8-1917.