Missouri Pac. R.R., Thompson, Tr. v. Armstrong

141 S.W.2d 25, 200 Ark. 719, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 27, 1940
Docket4-5978
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 141 S.W.2d 25 (Missouri Pac. R.R., Thompson, Tr. v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pac. R.R., Thompson, Tr. v. Armstrong, 141 S.W.2d 25, 200 Ark. 719, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 128 (Ark. 1940).

Opinions

Holt, J.

Appellee, Calvin' Armstrong, while unloading a gondola coal car at Murfreesboro, Arkansas, received personal injuries on account of an alleged defect in the floor of the car and sued jointly the MurfreesboroNashville Railroad Company, Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Guy A. Thompson, trustee for the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, Kansas City Southern Railway Company and the Binkley Coal Company.

A demurrer filed by the Kansas City Southern Railway Company was sustained by the trial court, and appellee dismissed his cause of action against the Binkley Coal Company. The cause proceeded to trial against, the remaining railroad companies — the Missouri Pacific and the Murfreesboro-Nashville. A verdict ivas returned in favor of the Murfreesboro-Nashville Railroad Company, but against the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Guy Thompson, trustee, in the sum of $2,000.

The negligence charged against the MurfreesboroNashville Railroad Company is that appellee, while in its employ, unloading a car of coal, was injured through failure of the railroad company to furnish him a reasonably safe .place in which to work.

The negligence charged against the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Thompson, as trustee, is that they “negligently and carelessly furnished to the Binkley Coal Company, the original shipper of said car of coal, one Kansas City Southern gondola car Number 27198, without notifying said shipper of the dangerous and unsafe condition of said car and without making any inspection to ascertain the dangerous and unsafe condition of said car.”

Appellant denied every material allegation in the complaint, and in addition defended on the ground that appellee’s injuries were “due to and brought about by his own fault and carelessness in not watching and looking where he was stepping while working in the car. and unloading the same; and in not using ordinary care for his own safety while unloading said coal from said car; in not observing said hole and defective condition of said car, which plaintiff well knew ivas in the floor of said car at the time, and plaintiff’s injuries, if any, were due to his own contributory negligence, and same is pleaded as a complete bar and defense to this suit.”

The evidence is to the following effect:

The Missouri Pacific Railroad Company was the initial carrier. It furnished Binkley Coal Company at Jenny Lind, Arkansas, the gondola coal car in question which belonged to the Kansas City Southern Railway Company. The Murfreesboro-Nashville Railway Company is the consignee and the coal car was delivered to it by the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company at Nashville, Arkansas, and it moved the car over its own track to Murfreesboro, where it placed the car on a siding and employed appellee, Armstrong, to unload the car at ten cents per ton.

At about 11 a. m. on March 17, 1939, appellee, while shoveling the coal, and after lie had finished about half of the work, uncovered a hole in the car floor about an inch and a half to two inches wide and some fourteen inches long. His attention was called to the hole for the first time by bringing a board up on his shovel and then observing the slack coal running through the hole. This board contained two “rusty” nails on each side bent outward. Appellee testified that, the board was not nailed down and that he placed it back as he found it and proceeded with his work. Shortly thereafter, while lifting* a lump of coal which weighed about 150 pounds, and just as he turned around with this lump of coal in his arms, he stepped into this hole, injuring his leg, and sustained other injuries which resulted in a hernia developing, about the size of a “hen egg.” He also had a tooth knocked loose which later had to foe extracted.

There is evidence that appellee stepped .on the edge of this board covering the hole and that on account of the “rotten” condition of the floor his foot broke through, enlarging the hole.

There was the additional testimony of two other witnesses, Mr. Griffin and Mr. Ferrett, that they saw the board covering the hole at the time the car was loaded at its origin.

Appellee’s hernia could probably be corrected by an operation costing about $250.

It is earnestly insisted by appellant that the trial court erred in sending the case to the jury for the reason that no substantial evidence appears upon which to base a verdict. After a careful review of the record however, we have reached the conclusion that this contention cannot be sustained.

It is the duty of appellant to furnish its shipper with á car in such condition that it could be used with reasonable safety by appellee in unloading* same and its failure to exercise ordinary care in this respect would subject it to liability in damages to appellee when damaged by reason of such neglect.

In 22 R. L. 0. 932, § 177, the textwriter says: “It is well settled that a common carrier owes a duty to consignors and consignees of goods shipped over its railroad to exercise ordinary, care to provide reasonably safe cars, and that it is liable for injuries received by them or their servants while unloading or loading a defective-car, where the defect in the car. is the proximate cause of the injuries and there is no contributory negligence. . . . The liability of a carrier for furnishing an unsafe car to a shipper is not affected by the fact that the car has been delivered to the shipper on the latter’s private track. The failure of a shipper receiving a car for loading to examine it for defects may be found not to break the causal connection so as to prevent the negligent act of the carrier in furnishing the car in a defective condition from being the proximate cause of injury to the servant of a shipper because thereof.”

And in § 178: “Where a consignee receives a car from a connecting carrier, and he or his servant is injured by reason of a defect in it, there arises the question of the liability of the different carriers who have handled the car. As to the initial carrier, its duty is to select a safe and proper car upon which to load the freight, and it is liable to the consignee for the consequences of not performing its duty.”

In St. Louis & San Francisco Rd. Co. v. Fritts, 85 Ark. 460, 108 S. W. 841, this court said: “As a preliminary question, it may be stated to be settled that railroad companies owe to persons engaged in the work of loading and unloading ears the duty to furnish cars in such condition that they can be used with reasonable safety, and a failure to exercise ordinary care in this respect will subject the company to liability to damages to one who has sustained injury by reason of such neglect. Elliott on Railroads, § 1265c. ’ ’

Whether appellee was guilty of negligence such as would preclude recovery, we think, as has been indicated, was a question for the jury.

A case in point is that of Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Lewis, 103 Ark. 99, 145 S. W. 898, where the facts are very similar to those presented here. There the injured employee was unloading a car of tile and while so doing, discovered a hole about eight inches wide and some twenty inches long. After discovering this hole, he proceeded with his work without placing any covering- over the hole.

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141 S.W.2d 25, 200 Ark. 719, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pac-rr-thompson-tr-v-armstrong-ark-1940.