Neil v. Idaho & Washington Northern Railroad

125 P. 331, 22 Idaho 74, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 26
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 125 P. 331 (Neil v. Idaho & Washington Northern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neil v. Idaho & Washington Northern Railroad, 125 P. 331, 22 Idaho 74, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 26 (Idaho 1912).

Opinions

SULLIYAN, J.

This action was brought under an act of Congress relating to the liability of common carriers by railroad, to their employees -in certain eases (see Supp. 1909, Fed. Stats. Ann., p. 584), to recover for damages sustained by the plaintiff for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him on account of the careless and negligent operation of a switch engine hauling four loaded cars, of coal in the switch-yards of the company at Spirit Lake, in the state of Idaho, on the morning of October 4, 1910, whereby plaintiff was so seriously injured as to necessitate the amputation of one leg just above the knee and the other just above the ankle.

The railroad company defended on the ground that the accident occurred wholly on account of the carelessness and negligence of the respondent. The action ivas tried by the court with a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of respondent for $35,000. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled by the court. The appeal is taken both from the judgment and the order denying a new trial. Errors are assigned in regard to the admission and rejection of certain testimony, the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and the giving and refusing to give certain instructions.

It appears from the record that the appellant was a freight conductor about forty years of age and had been engaged during nearly all of his adult life in railroading. He had been, prior to his injury, brakeman, switchman, yard-foreman, yardmaster and conductor, and since the 14th of July, 1896, had been continuously engaged in train service and in railroad yards. He commenced work for the appellant company September 22, 1909, as a freight brakeman, and in March, 1910, was promoted to freight conductor and continued in that capacity until the time of his injury.

[81]*81At the time of the accident respondent was working as conductor on freight train No. 54, a train running between Spirit Lake, Idaho, and Metalline Falls, Washington. On the morning of the accident his train had been made up in the yards upon what is called the “passing track” by switch engine No. 22, that being the engine which afterward struck the respondent and caused the injury. At the time of the accident, freight train No. 54, of which respondent was conductor, was standing on the “passing track” and was being inspected by the train inspector, whose duty it was to make a complete examination of the train in order to see that everything was in perfect order before it was permitted to depart. The main line track runs in a southeasterly and northwesterly direction. Just north of it is the “passing track” upon which train No. 54 had been made up and was being inspected at the time of the accident, and north of that is the “scale track, ’ ’ so called because weighing scales were connected with it. Said “scale track” was used as one of the switch tracks in said yards. Train No. 54 was made up to leave in a westerly direction. Just prior to the injury, the respondent had gone to the engine on train No. 54 and there talked to his engineer for a short time and delivered him his clearance card and turned and started back toward the rear of his train, and in doing so went over to the “scale track,” some ten or twelve feet from the “passing track,” and walked easterly on said track. It appears that said switch engine No. 22 had passed down the “scale track” three or four minutes before the accident occurred, and was hitched to four cars of coal, for the purpose of switching the same up to the coal chute. The railroad track through the yard had a grade of one per cent, rising in an easterly direction, and said engine No. 22 with the four cars of coal attached was going upgrade when it struck respondent.

Respondent testified that he was walking along the scale track so that he could better examine his train, and was stooping over looking at the brake-rods and brakes to see if they were all in good order. It appears that there was a space of about ten feet between the track on which said train [82]*82No. 54 was standing and the “scale track,” and that respondent could have walked on that space had he desired to do so. But he testified that it did not require him to stoop quite so low to look under his train if he walked on the scale track as it would had he walked on the space between the two tracks. He also testified that when he finished talking with his engineer he stepped right over on the “scale track” and continued to walk down the “scale track” until he was struck by engine No. 22; that as he stepped upon the track he kind of glanced over his shoulder casually to see if anything was coming. He saw nothing at all and thereafter did not look behind him; that it was a calm, quiet morning and that an engine would have to use steam pulling four cars of coal up said grade and would necessarily make considerable noise. It also appears that a large automatic bell on said engine was ringing from the time the train started with said coal-cars up said grade until after respondent was struck, and that said bell could be heard for more than 1,000 feet; that from the point where the engine was hitched to said coal-cars to where the respondent was struck by the engine was a distance of five or sis hundred feet, and there was a slight curve to the left in the track as it extended easterly across said yards. The fireman who sat on the left side of the engine saw the respondent wallring on said track when the engine was about 500 feet from him, and testified that he supposed, of course, he would get off the track when the engine came near him. The engineer testified that he did not see him on the track at all. This was evidently because of the curve in the track. Evidently the attention of the fireman was attracted to his other duties and he paid no more attention to the conductor, the respondent, and he did not see him again until after he was struck by the engine.

It further appears that the train was running from eight to twelve miles an hour and it is not claimed by the respondent that that speed was excessive. There is very little conflict in the evidence as to the manner in which the accident occurred. Eespondent testified that he was making an inspection which was required of him by the rules of the company. [83]*83The evidence on behalf of the appellant tended to show that he was simply walking down the track smoking a pipe, and that he had no duty whatever to perform in the way of inspecting the train, as the train at that terminal point was inspected by an inspector appointed for that duty. There is no dispute but that the switch engine was laboring and, as the witnesses testified, was “working steam” and necessarily making considerable noise. The fact that the automatic bell was ringing was testified to by the fireman, engineer and brakeman on engine No. 22, and by the brakeman and engineer on train No. 54, and by the ear inspector. The engineer on engine No. 22 testified that where the engine hooked on coal-ears was twelve or fifteen ear-lengths of forty feet each from the engine on train No. 54, and that from the time engine No. 22 passed down the scale track to hook on the coal-cars until it came back was not over three or four minutes, and that he set the automatic bell ringing on his engine and that it continued to ring until he shut it off after the- respondent was struck; that said scale track was used particularly for switching cars, and had been used by him constantly every day for a year and a half, and that fact was generally known to all railroad employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 P. 331, 22 Idaho 74, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-v-idaho-washington-northern-railroad-idaho-1912.