Muster v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

21 N.W. 223, 61 Wis. 325, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 219
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 21 N.W. 223 (Muster v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muster v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 21 N.W. 223, 61 Wis. 325, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 219 (Wis. 1884).

Opinion

Eton, J.

I. The learned counsel for the plaintiff maintained, in his argument, that there is no positive proof that the object thrown from the ear was a mail-bag, or that it was thrown from the mail car, or that it was not thrown by one of the employees of the defendant company. Erom these premises he argued that the case is Avithin the rule of Kirst v. M., L. S. & W. R’y Co. 46 Wis. 489, and Cummings v. Nat. Furnace Co. 60 Wis. 603. That rule is thus stated by ERle, O. J., in Scott v. London & St. K. Docks Co. 3 Hurl. & C. 596: “ There must be reasonable evidence of negligence; but Avhere the thing is shoivn to be under the management of the defendant or his servants, and the accident is such as in the ordinary course of things does not happen if those Avho have the management use proper care, it affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of explanation by the defendant, that the accident arose from Avant of care.” The rule is sustained in numerous cases, many of which are cited in the brief of counsel for plaintiff.

The difficulty with the argument is in the premises upon Avhich it is rested. The pleadings and proofs do not leaAre the cause of the accident in any doubt or uncertainty. The allegations of the complaint are that the defendant “ carelessly and negligently discharged, unloaded, and ejected from one of the cars of said train, through an opening in the side of said car, a large mail-bag filled Avith heavy mail, Avhich said mail-bag with its contents Avas, by the great velocity and momentum of said train, thrown against one of the supports of said scaffold, and thereby said support and the portion of said scaffold on which the plaintiff was standing, Avere displaced and knocked down,” etc. Aside from the alleged speed of the train (which Avill be hereafter considered), all of the testimony on the subject is in harmony with these averments. Hence, it is an established fact in the case that the support upon which the staging of the scaffold rested Avas knocked down by reason of a mail-bag filled with mail matter flavina: been cast asainst it.

[330]*330It is in testimony and undisputed that such mail-bag was thrown from a car between the tender and first passenger coach through a side door by a person within the car. The mail car had a side door, and was located in the train between the tender and such coach. No person other than the postal clerk or agent had any lawful right to enter such car; no mail matter could lawfully have been in any other car on the train; and no person other than such clerk or agent could lawfully discharge the mail-bag. Such is the law, and the evidence does not tend to show that the law was violated in any of these particulars in discharging the mail from the train when the plaintiff was injured. In the absence of such proof it must be presumed that the mail-bag was discharged from the postal car by an employee of the post-office department, and not of the railway company. Such being the presumption, there is no room for the application of the rule above stated.

We do not understand counsel as claiming that the railway company is liable for the negligent act of the postal employee, if it is otherwise free of negligence contributing to the injury of the plaintiff. Such a claim, if made, could not be sustained. The government compels the cpmpany to carry the mails, and designates the trains upon which the same shall be carried. It prescribes the kind of cars which shall be provided, and appoints clerks and agents to take exclusive charge of mails on the trains, and to receive and discharge the same. Such clerks and agents are paid by the government, and are answerable only to the government for the manner in which they discharge their duties. The railway companies upon whose trains 'such duties are performed have no control whatever over them, and it would be just as absurd to hold one of these companies responsible for the negligent acts of such government employees which it had no means of pi-eventing, as to hold the companies responsible for the negligent acts of passengers on their trains committed under like circumstances. ■

[331]*331We conclude that the mere act of the postal employee in throwing off the mail-bag at the depot, conceding it to have been a negligent act, was not negligence on the part of the railway company.

II. But it is maintained that the train was propelled past the depot where the plaintiff was injured at an unreasonable rate of speed, which contributed to the injury, and hence the defendant is liable for such injury, although not responsible for the mail-bag being thrown off at that point.

It is probable that but for the momentum of the train the accident would not have happened. Yet it does not necessarily follow from this that the defendant is liable therefor. To render it liable some negligent or unlawful act on its part must be shown. It is said that the plaintiff did not know that this train passed the depot at such great speed; and, in view of the fact that the mail-bag might be thrown off there, and the scaffold on which he was at work thrown down thereby, the railway company should have informed him of the peril, and was negligent because it did not. This point is not well taken. All the evidence on that subject is to the effect that the mail-bag was usually discharged near the mail-catcher, which was 200 feet west of the depot, and there is no testimony whatever that it had ever before been thrown off at the depot. The company is not chargeable with notice that it was likely to be thrown off at the depot, and hence was not required to guard, by notice or otherwise, against an accident to the plaintiff resulting from its being thrown off there on the occasion in question.

But the'principal ground upon which negligence is sought to be imputed to the defendant because of the speed of the train is found in the regulations of the post-office department on that subject.

Before proceeding to consider such regulations some observations will be made upon the testimony bearing upon the speed of the train. The plaintiff and Roth each thought the [332]*332train ran by the depot at the rate of from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour. Both testified that he first saw it when it whistled nearly eighty rods east of the depot. The plaintiff gives no distance. He raerety says that he was not looking at it more than a minute or two. Neither of them says that he thought of the speed of the train at the time, or that he watched its progress with reference to the time occupied in passing the space between any objects, the distance between which could be ascertained. Besides, the train was running almost directly towards them. The substance of their testimony is that the train was running fast. Their estimates of its precise velocity per hour are most unsatisfactory and unreliable.

On the other hand, it appeared that the train ran on an ascending grade — the steepest on that line of railway — for more than two miles before it reached the Greenfield depot, and that the track on that grade is laid on reversed curves. The train was a heavy one, and there is some evidence that the track was not in a condition favorable to a high rate of speed. These conditions necessarily greatly retarded the speed of the train, and strongly corroborate the testimony of the conductor and engineer to the effect that the train could not have been propelled up the grade past the depot at any high rate of speed. Their estimate of the speed of the train in question at that point is from ten to twelve miles per hour.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W. 223, 61 Wis. 325, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muster-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-wis-1884.