Munch v. Great Northern Railway Co.

77 N.W. 541, 75 Minn. 61, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 991
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
DocketNos. 11,327—(70)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 541 (Munch v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munch v. Great Northern Railway Co., 77 N.W. 541, 75 Minn. 61, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 991 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

Plaintiff had a verdict in a personal injury action, and defendant appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial. Its main [62]*62contentions are that there was no actionable negligence shown at the trial on its part, and that from the evidence it conclusively appeared that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and for that reason should not have recovered.

Plaintiff was in defendant’s employ as a brakeman, and had been so employed for about two years prior to the day of the accident. He was then engaged in coupling freight cars in defendant’s yard at Crookston. A box car had remained in the yard about 20 days, and was then put at the end of a string of cars, to be coupled onto another car standing on the main track. It was shown that both of these cars belonged to defendant, but there was some dispute as to whether the one last mentioned was a box or a flat. Both cars were equipped with what is known as the “improved standard coupler,” an article somewhat difficult to describe, but which is supposed to couple cars automatically, and without requiring a person to stand between them as they come together. On each coupler is a fixed jaw, and also a movable “hooking jaw,” and it is defendant’s claim that on a straight track, as was the one where the accident happened, and with cars of the same make as were those in question, the coupling can always be made with but one of these movable jaws open. The plaintiff admits that, under such circumstances, the coupling will usually be made, but that to do the work properly, and to make a “sure” coupling, the movable jaws of both coupler^ must be open, and, further, that this is the usual and customary way of doing this kind of work.

A lever runs horizontally along the end of the car from near the outside, to a point a few inches above the coupler, and is there connected with what is called the lifting pin in the coupler itself, by means of a small chain hanging perpendicularly. Standing outside the car, the brake or switch man can operate the lever, and pull the pin up a few inches, so that the movable jaw will swing a short distance to one side. If the pin and other parts of the coupler are in good condition, the pin cannot be pulled entirely out of its socket, but is stopped by a spring and held fast at a certain point. If two cars are coupled, when the pin is thus raised the movable jaw of the coupler thus operated on is pulled to one side by the closed jaws of the other coupler, and the cars uncouple and separate. The jaw [63]*63thus pulled to one side, weighing over 50 pounds, then remains open, unless closed by hand, or by impact, when brought in contact with another coupler. When the coupler is closed, the raised pin drops to its place and remains there.

It stands admitted that, if two couplers are brought together on a curved track, or if they are badly worn, or if the cars are of different makes, they are not sure to work, unless the movable jaws of both are open; for one has to slip past the other, with very little room for variation. The plaintiff was an experienced man, and knew the manner in which these couplers do their work. He also knew that the coupler on the stationary car was open, and the movable jaw in proper position for locking with its counterpart on the moving car. The latter, one of a string before mentioned, was moving slowly, and plaintiff was walking beside it as the stationary car was approached. When within a few feet of the latter, plaintiff pulled the lever of the moving car, and stepped in front of it, between the rails, for the purpose, as he claimed, of opening the movable jaw, that a “sure” coupling might be made. He seized the jaw with his right hand, pulled it with considerable energy, and it immediately swung out of place, too far towards him, and would have fallen to the ground if plaintiff had not used all of his strength in pushing it back. It swung too far, because the pin had been broken in such a way that nothing prevented its slipping entirely out of the socket when raised by the lever, and thus permitting the movable jaw from becoming wholly detached from other parts of the coupler. And before plaintiff could remove his hand and arm, and before he could extricate himself from a dangerous position between the cars, they came together, and his hand and arm were caught in the couplers, and badly crushed, amputation of the arm being necessary. It was shown that the coupling was made, and that another brakeman, who happened to be near by, pulled the lever upon the stationary car, gave the go-ahead signal to the engineer, and thus released plaintiff from a grip which the couplers had upon the injured arm.

As before stated, it is defendant’s contention that from the verbal evidence given upon the trial, and from two couplers of the same size and make, which were brought before the jury, it conclusively [64]*64appeared that, with the movable jaw of the coupler of the stationary car fully opened and ready for business, of which he knew, it was wholly unnecessary for plaintiff to open the jaw of the coupler of the moving car, or to go in front of it, for any purpose whatsoever. If it did so appear, from any evidence introduced upon the trial, it must be conceded that plaintiff had no cause of action. No rule of the company was shown which regulated, or attempted so to do, the manner in which couplings with the standard coupler sho.uld be made, the only rule introduced by defendant being one which required that

“Great care should be used in coupling and uncoupling cars; extra care is required when coupling foreign cars.”

This brings us to a consideration of the evidence upon the vital point above mentioned. According to plaintiff’s testimony, he attempted to make the coupling in the ordinary manner, and exactly as he and other employees of defendant company usually made couplings with the standard coupler. He also testified that he stepped between the rails, and in front of the moving car, when it was five or six feet from the other; and that when he discovered that the pin was broken, and the jaw was sliding out of place, he pushed it back to prevent its falling upon his feet, or in such a way that he would be tripped and thrown under the wheels. When questioned as to the necessity of opening the jaw of the coupler on the moving car, with its counterpart on the stationary car open, he stated that such opening was necessary in order to make a “sure” coupling, although he admitted that sometimes couplings were made with but one jaw opened.

A witness for defendant, the conductor in charge at the time of the accident, then testified that on a straight track couplings could always be made with only one jaw of the standard coupler open, the cars being of the same size; and sometimes it might happen that couplings could not be made with the jaws open on both couplers, in which cases links and pins would have to be used. And, further, that couplings are surer when ■made with both movable jaws open, and that “we often open both; often where one is open we open the other,” in order to make sure of the coupling. It also [65]*65appeared from the conductor’s testimony that occasionally the springs of a car would become worn, and settle down, so that the couplings would not be the same distance from the ground, thus rendering it much more difficult to couple with but one open jaw.

Another witness, a locomotive “foreman” in defendant’s employ, testified on this branch of the case, giving it as his opinion that it was not necessary to open both jaws when the cars were upon a straight track.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 541, 75 Minn. 61, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munch-v-great-northern-railway-co-minn-1898.