Musgrove v. Manistique & Lake Superior Railway

244 N.W. 132, 259 Mich. 469, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 999
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1932
DocketDocket No. 117, Calendar No. 36,395.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 244 N.W. 132 (Musgrove v. Manistique & Lake Superior Railway) 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
Musgrove v. Manistique & Lake Superior Railway, 244 N.W. 132, 259 Mich. 469, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 999 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

North, J.

This is an action by plaintiff to recover damages on the ground that her decedent’s death was caused by negligence chargeable to defendant. Decedent, Thomas L. Musgrove, was a brakeman working in connection with other members of a switching crew employed by defendant company in its railroad yards in the city of Manistique. The crew consisted of a conductor, two brakemen, the engineer, and fireman. While they were working on the night of April 3, 1930, the engine, moving forward and in a southerly direction, was coupled onto three tank cars standing on a siding which extended from the main switch track. Thereafter the train was backed in a northerly direction onto the main switch track; it then again proceeded in a southerly direction over a switch and upon another siding extending in a southwesterly direction. On this siding there were two groups of flat cars, four cars in each group. From the point where the first coupling was made plaintiff’s *472 decedent proceeded in a westerly direction across to where the flat cars were standing for the purpose of making the couplings to these cars. When the train moved northward the other brakeman went with it to throw the switch, and the conductor also went with the train to guard the highway which crossed the tracks in this locality. After the switch was thrown the engineer on signal proceeded in a southerly direction and passed over the crossing for the purpose of picking up the flat cars. It is fair to infer from the testimony that plaintiff’s decedent had adjusted the coupler on the northerly end of these flat cars and had thereupon gone to the southerly end of the first group of four cars. It is plaintiff’s contention that the testimony fairly indicates he did this incident to preparing the couplers between the two groups of flat ears so that they could be coupled together. The coupling between the leading tank car and the most northerly one of the flat cars was completed; and thereupon the conductor walked down the tracks toward the point where the coupling was made, and, hearing a call, asked of plaintiff’s decedent: “Do you want me to back up or go ahead?” Decedent called back: “I am hurt.” He was found on the westerly side of the track about eight feet from the south end of the fourth flat car, his foot caught under the second wheel of the south truck. He had received severe injuries, and died the following morning. The members of the switching crew agree that it was known to all of them that the switching operation they were performing included as one transaction picking up the three tank cars, backing out on the main switch track, going forward onto the second siding, and making a coupling with the first four flat cars, then proceeding to couple onto the second group of flat cars.

*473 Plaintiff’s declaration alleges that it was the duty of the defendant and of the co-employees of the deceased to use reasonable care in switching and coupling cars so that deceased would not he exposed to unusual or undue danger in the performance of his duties; and that it was also the duty of defendant and decedent’s co-employees not to hack the locomotive and its attached cars up to and against the flat cars to which coupling was to he made without being signaled to do so, and to know the location of such cars and to have a man stationed on the rear end of the train which was hacking up who would be able and whose duty it would he to signal the engine crew and to assist in making the coupling; and, further, it was the duty of the other members of the train crew to so handle the train that the coupling could and wonld he made gently and without violence. Alleged neglect of these duties is asserted by plaintiff as the cause of the injuries to, and death of, her decedent.

On the other hand, defendant asserts that decedent’s duty was to he at the northerly end of the first group of four flat cars, where the coupling was to he made, and that he sustained his injuries because of his failure to remain at the point where this coupling was to he made instead of placing himself in another and dangerous location. Also defendant contends that there is no evidence in this record that the alleged custom of placing another employee on the forward end of the moving cars was certain, uniform, and invariable, or that it was universally observed and known to the defendant railroad company, or that the company had promulgated such a rule; hut, on the contrary, that it is shown in this record that this was not the custom where, as in this case, there was a brakeman in the field to signal the engineer when to proceed and *474 ■when to stop; and it is further defendant’s contention that all the testimony which bears upon this phase of the case is to the effect that this entire switching operation was conducted in the usual and proper manner.

Plaintiff recovered a verdict on trial by jury and had judgment for $16,000. Defendant has appealed, and as reasons in support thereof asserts: (1) The trial court should have granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and also its subsequent motion for judgment non obstante; (2) there was no evidence of negligence chargeable to defendant or of a causal relation between defendant’s negligence, if any, and decedent’s injuries; (3) that proper instructions were not given to the jury as to assumption of risk, contributory negligence, and proximate cause; and (4) there being no evidence of damage except that incident to the pain and suffering of plaintiff’s decedent, the damages are excessive.

A careful review of the record in this case satisfies us that there was testimony which fully justified the trial court in' submitting to the jury the question of whether there was an established and definite custom on the part of the defendant requiring the placing of a man on the forward end of moving cars in switching operations in the nighttime for the purpose of assisting in making the operation more safe by way of signaling the engine crew and protecting the one making the coupling. So far as the record discloses the defendant company had no rules governing this phase of its' operations; and each of the four members of this switching crew, who for years had been working together, gave testimony tending to support plaintiff’s claim in this particular. We are also satisfied that it was a question of fact for the jury whether plaintiff’s decedent *475 at the time of receiving his injuries was in the proper place and performing a part of his duties in connection with this switching ''operation. The coupler on the northerly end of the first four flat cars had been placed in position so that the coupling was automatically completed; and the record is wholly consistent with plaintiff’s claim that her decedent had gone to the other end of these four cars for the purpose of adjusting the coupler between the two groups of flat cars so that this final coupling of the proposed operation might also be made. It is plaintiff’s theory that her decedent was in the act of adjusting the coupler at the south end of the first four flat cars at the time the engine and three tank ears struck them with undue force and without decedent being in any way warned thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 N.W. 132, 259 Mich. 469, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musgrove-v-manistique-lake-superior-railway-mich-1932.