McClure v. Detroit Southern Railroad

109 N.W. 847, 146 Mich. 457, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 928
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1906
DocketDocket No. 48
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 109 N.W. 847 (McClure v. Detroit Southern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClure v. Detroit Southern Railroad, 109 N.W. 847, 146 Mich. 457, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 928 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

The plaintiff recovered at the circuit damages under the death act for the death of her husband on the ground that such death was caused by defendant’s negligence. On the 1st day of June, 1901, decedent was employed in defendant’s car shops at Tecumseh, and was directed by the foreman in charge to go into the yards of the company to assist in the repair of a loaded freight car. The repairs consisted of replacing the draw-bar at each end of the car. The work was done under the immediate direction of the foreman of the car department, George Sollers. The men employed were ordered and directed by Sollers, the car foreman, to take the drawbar out of the north end of the car and replace it with a new one. The car stood on a north and south track. The north end of the car was run up by jacks under either corner and wooden horses were placed beneath the car to help sustain its weight. Some difficulty was experienced in getting out the pin which held the car to the trucks, and Sollers, the foreman, ordered that the car be jacked up higher. This was done, but was not followed up by any blocking on top of the horses. The pin was finally [459]*459released and the trucks were run out from under the car, and, while the end of the car rested alone upon the two jacks, Sobers ordered the men to get in under the car and go to work. McClure obeyed the order and was just in the act of stooping down to get in under the car when the north end of the car slued to the west and fell to the ground, falling upon McClure and killing him instantly. T. M. Downing was the master mechanic and had full charge of the company’s business at the shops, and George Sobers was the foreman of the car department, and Soliera was otherwise known and spoken of as the master car builder. There was testimony tending to show that Downing had knowledge that Sobers was not a competent foreman, and said so to witness Dooley, but excused his retention on the ground that he got lots of work out of the men and that he was all right as a driver, but he was no mechanic.

The grounds of negligence relied on were, briefly, as follows: That McClure was wrongfully ordered out of the department in which he was employed to work into another department to perform other and more dangerous work with which he was unacquainted and did not appreciate without first informing him of the dangers incident to said work and how to avoid them; that the defendant failed to exercise due care in the employment of foreman Sobers, and that he was incompetent to the knowledge of defendant.

It is insisted by defendant’s counsel:

(1) That the relation of master and servant was not shown to exist between McClure and defendant.

(2) That the deceased, at the time of his injury, was acting within the line of his employment.

(3) That there is no competent testimony to show that defendant was guilty of a wrong in the employment of Sobers or his assistants.

(4) That the danger to which McClure was subjected was obvious.

1. It appears that prior to June 1, 1901, the railroad [460]*460properties and shops connected therewith had been operated by the Detroit & Lima Northern Railway Company. By an order issued on that day the defendant’s president stated that the defendant “ had acquired all the property of the D. & L. N. and that possession is hereby assumed,” adding, “ Officers, agents, and employés are requested to continue in the discharge of their several duties unless otherwise ordered.” The evidence is not clear that notice of this order had been brought home to Mr. McClure before his injury, or that the local agents or employés knew of it. There was, however, testimony tending to show that one of the cars of the Detroit & Lima Northern had, before this date, been relettered in the Tecumseh shops with the name of the defendant. An inference might be open from this that the deceased and other employés knew of the change. However this may be, the defendant evidently had, as between its predecessor and itself, assumed full control of the property and taken upon itself its operation. It thereby, as to the duty it owed to the employés, occupied the position of an undisclosed principal. The court below was right in holding that, if the defendant company was in fact operating the properties at this time, it was liable as master. Smith v. Belshaw, 89 Cal. 427; Crusselle v. Pugh, 67 Gra. 430. The question in such case is not so much a question of contract right as it is of the duty owed. Cases cited, supra.

2. "Was the decedent called out of the regular line of his employment to perform work not contemplated by the employment? This question was submitted to the jury by the circuit judge. The testimony shows that a car repair shop was maintained at Tecumseh, consisting of a woodworking department, paintshop, etc. It is the claim of defendant, and its testimony tended to show, that’ cars were brought to the shop for repair, and. that the employés in the woodworking department assisted in such repairs and in jacking up cars as occasion demanded; that at times they were (including McClure) called out of [461]*461the shop on the road where wrecks had occurred to perform similar service, and it is insisted that this testimony is uncontradicted and shows that decedent’s employment included such work. Plaintiff called two witnesses to show what decedent’s employment was. Robert Hastings, who was McClure’s boss, and who, referring to the work on the' car on the day in question, testified:

“I had never been engaged in this kind of work before, nor had McClure been engaged in this kind of work, not as I know of.”

On cross-examination he testified as follows:

“Well, to the best of my judgment, I don’t think he [McClure] was out very much. He went out on wrecking gangs two or three times; something like that. I didn’t go with him, and don’t know what he did on those trips. They usually have a derrick, a couple of pairs of trucks, some jacks and blocks, and so on.”

Dooley, who preceded Sobers as foreman, testified that McClure’s duty was assisting Hastings in the woodworking shop. On direct examination he testified as follows:

“His [McClure’s] duty was helping Mr. Hastings. Previous to that he had regular work in the paintshop. After he got into the woodworking shop he used to go out in the yard and bore holes in sills, and put on grabirons, and lift pins, and such things as that, and once in a while carry out timbers and go under the car and cut out a piece that didn’t happen to fit right; he would go under the car and cut it out. He was not engaged in this class of work of car repairing, raising cars, not loaded cars, to my knowledge.”

When this testimony is read in connection with testimony of defendant’s witnesses that McClure, when out of the shop working on wrecks, was one of the crew engaged in jacking up cars, it is manifest that the general scope of his employment included work of this character. It was error to permit the jury to find that he was, on the occasion of his injury, ordered outside the line of his employment.

[462]*4623. It follows from this that Sollers and McClure were fellow-servants, and that, for the personal acts of negligence of Sollers, the defendant is not responsible to McClure’s representatives,, unless it be found that the defendant was at fault in the employment of an incompetent servant in Mr. Sollers. This was claimed, and that question was also submitted to the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 N.W. 847, 146 Mich. 457, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-detroit-southern-railroad-mich-1906.