Molt v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.

120 P. 809, 44 Mont. 471, 1912 Mont. LEXIS 9
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1912
DocketNo. 3,043
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 120 P. 809 (Molt v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molt v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 120 P. 809, 44 Mont. 471, 1912 Mont. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SMITH

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that on the 3d day of March, 1906, he was an employee of the defendant company in its roundhouse at Missoula; that he was directed to go into a certain pit under a locomotive engine and clean parts of the engine; that the pit was in a dangerous condition by reason of the negligence of the defendant in failing to properly light the same; that it allowed parts of the engine, tools, blocks, and pieces of iron to accumulate therein; that plaintiff stepped upon said accumulation of engine parts and other materials, without knowing that they were there, was violently thrown down, and thereby injured. A second cause of action is predicated upon [477]*477an alleged negligent failure of the defendant to furnish its employees with sufficient torches and oil to light the engine pits, thus breaching its duty to furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place in which to work. Among other defenses, those of contributory negligence and assumption of risk were interposed. Plaintiff had a verdict and judgment in the court below, and defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

1. "We shall first dispose of a contention advanced by the respondent. His counsel claim that this court cannot consider [1] the appeal from the order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial, for the reason that before the order was entered an appeal from the judgment had been perfected; and therefore the lower court was -without jurisdiction to take any further steps in the cause. The situation disclosed by the record well illustrates the infirmities in, and the anomalous situations too often resulting from, our cumbersome, intricate, and most unsatisfactory system of appellate procedure. Appeals from orders denying new trials should be abolished by the legislature at its next session, without delay. This court has repeatedly held that, as a general rule, an appeal, properly perfected, deprives the trial court of further jurisdiction in the cause. (See Glavin v. Lane, 29 Mont. 228, 74 Pac. 406; Hynes v. Barnes, 30 Mont. 25, 75 Pac. 523.) But these, and analogous cases, must be read and construed in the light of the fact that the statute (sec. 6794, Rev. Codes) gives the district court power to grant a new trial, and section 7098, Revised Codes, gives the right of appeal from an order granting or refusing a new trial. Furthermore, section 7107, Revised Codes, by implication, recognizes the right to appeal at different times. In case of appeal from a judgment, the lower court loses jurisdiction over the judgment; but it still retains jurisdiction over the motion for a new trial, with power to rule thereon. Proceedings on motion for a new trial are independent of the judgment and, in a sense, collateral thereto. Any other interpretation of the authorities would, in some cases, deprive the losing party of his statutory right of appeal. (See Naglee v. Spencer, 60 Cal. 10; Rayner v. [478]*478Jones, 90 Cal. 78, 27 Pac. 24; Knowles v. Thompson, 133 Cal. 245, 65 Pac. 468.)

2. Plaintiff testified: “I was thirty-two years old when this accident happened. I had learned the machinist’s trade in Germany, bnt never worked at it over here, where I had followed stationary engineering. I worked one day getting the pits open, and ran the stationary plant that night. The morning of the third day I went to work as a helper; helped Machinist Everts fitting driving boxes. My torch got dim, and I went to the tool-room to fill it. The can was empty. We worked for a while, and Everts told me to go over again. I found the can still empty; got an order for oil from the foreman, but was told at the storeroom there was no oil there. Everts said, ‘We will have to do the best we can without it. ’ It was then late in the forenoon. We worked till 3 P. M., and finished, and Everts told ■me to help Memory. We put on a couple of cylinder heads, and then Memory took me to the side of the engine, and said, ‘Go down there and clean off these binders.’ I went to the pit and sat down to get in, holding with my right hand. I slipped down, and when I thought I had solid footing I let go and turned around, and while I was turning around .something slipped and turned over under my foot. I fell over backward, and was knocked senseless. The roundhouse was dark. You could hardly do anything without a light. You could not see in the pit from where I was working, and I never had been in there, and knew nothing about the condition inside. I seen one of the binders standing up alongside of the pit, one of the ends sticking out, and could not see anything; but I did see this one. It was darker in the pit, because the engine was standing over it. I do not know what was in the pit. When I thought I had a solid footing, I let go. This was about 4 or half-past 4 in the afternoon. My apprenticeship as machinist was four years in the old country, and I became a machinist four years before coming to America. Q. As they take off the parts of engines, they lay them down at convenient places, where they can put them on again when they want to put them back? A. It was not customary where I used to work, where I learned my trade. [479]*479On the outside platform, beside the engine, that morning, there was one or two driving-wheels; they were in the drop pit. There might have been other parts up on the floor. I noticed the cylinder heads there. The detached driving-wheels and blocks belonged to the engine over the pit into which I fell. I could not have gotten into the pit through the frame as I did, unless the driving-wheels were off. The driving-boxes that Everts and I were fitting were detached and between the two engines, twelve feet from their normal position. They were held fast in proper position on the engine by wedges and binders. The latter was what Memory told me to wipe off, and they and the wedges had to be removed before you could get the driving-boxes off. There are four wedges for each driving-box, and there are three or four driving-boxes on each side and one binder for each driving-box. I had worked an hour with Memory on the cylinders before the accident. I never worked in a machine-shop in this country, and the machine-shops we worked in in the old country did not have any pits, but had elevated tracks, and we could walk right under the engine. The blocks on which the drivers rested when we were fixing them were different sized wooden blocks. They were in the drop pit, where we were working. We used them to get the drivers up high. That engine was in there to be repaired, and I was putting back the parts when Memory told me, ‘Co down here and clean off these binders.’ We were then standing where the drivers would have been, if in place, right opposite the engine. He pointed to the pit, and the lower end of the binder that I saw leaning against the pit must have been resting slantwise on the floor. Q. Did you see anything of the other binders? A. I don’t know. Q. Did you see anything of the wedges? A. No, sir; I did not know what was in the pit, or anything about it.”

Everts testified: ‘‘Molt’s work showed ability. The pit was full of parts of the engine, eccentric straps, bolts, binders, binder pulleys, brake shoes, wedges, blocks, bars, chains, ropes, and tools that we were using underneath. Molt had not assisted in putting any of these pieces in the pit. From where Molt and I worked, you could not see the condition of that pit, because it [480]*480was too dark. There were a few electric lights around.

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Bluebook (online)
120 P. 809, 44 Mont. 471, 1912 Mont. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molt-v-northern-pacific-railway-co-mont-1912.