Norfolk & Western R. R. v. Emmert

3 S.E. 145, 83 Va. 640, 1887 Va. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 30, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 S.E. 145 (Norfolk & Western R. R. v. Emmert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norfolk & Western R. R. v. Emmert, 3 S.E. 145, 83 Va. 640, 1887 Va. LEXIS 104 (Va. 1887).

Opinion

Fauntleroy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, Emmert, in the fall of the year 1881, was switchman and car-coupler in the. employ of the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company at their yard at Bristol. As such, it was his duty to shift the cars and trains upon said yard and make up trains to leave the station. The shifting was done by a yard engine and an engineer under the direction and control of the switchman and coupler while engaged in the operation of shifting. On the occasion of the alleged injury complained of, in November, 1881, two freight trains came into the yard, from the east, very close together. The first train stopped on the main track, and the locomotive, which had brought it in, was detached from it, and the yard engine was coupled to the rear end of the train, by the said switchman and coupler, and drew it backwards to a switch and pushed it upon a side track; the caboose, which was the rear car of the train, was unshackled or uncoupled from the car immediately in front' of it, and the yard engine stood there holding the caboose-until the second train came in. The second train stopped upon the main track, and the plaintiff brought the yard engine, with the caboose attached, out upon the main track, and coupled the two cabooses together, and then uncoupled the'caboose of the second train from the car in front of it, and caused the yard engine to draw the two cabooses back for the purpose of putting them upon a track called the coal-pen track, where the cabooses were usually placed, and upon which a caboose was then standing. After changing the switch leading into the coal-pen track, plaintiff went forward, in 'advance of the moving cabooses, for the purpose of coupling them to the standing caboose—it being the custom to so couple the cabooses for the purpose of bringing them out, when needed, to be attached to trains. The plaintiff took his position by the bumper or draw-[642]*642head of the standing caboose, having given to the engineer of the yard engine the proper signals, which were strictly obeyed, and when he attempted to make the coupling, the draw-heads or bumpers passed each other, the draw-head of the moving caboose passing under that of the standing caboose, and the plaintiff was caught between the cabooses. He extricated himself, and, with assistance, he got upon the engine, where he remained one or two hours, and then went to his home, close by, where he was confined to his house some three or four weeks; and then went back into the employ of the plaintiff in error; first in the depot, then on the transfer platform, and afterwards as a watchman at Main street crossing; and, while so last employed, as watchman, he alleges that he caught cold in his injured hips and was laid up twelve months. It does not appear that the plaintiff ever claimed that he was injured on account of any defect in the cars, or by the fault or neglect of the railroad company, or its agents or servants, until about a year after the accident, when he brought this suit.

At the sixth trial of the case instructions were asked for and refused, and instructions were given by the court, of its own, to which exceptions were taken, and the jury renderéd a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $950. A motion was made to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial, upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence; which motion the court overruled, and entered judgment upon the verdict for the plaintiff.

The declaration as amended was demurred to, and the court overruled the demurrer; which action of the court, as well as the refusing and giving instructions as aforesaid, were excepted to, and are assigned as error by the, plaintiff in error. But, in the view which we take of the case as presented in the bill of exceptions, it will not be necessary to consider any of the errors assigned, except the alleged [643]*643error of the court’s refusal to set the verdict aside and to grant a new trial.

The evidence of the plaintiff in the court below (who is the defendant in error here), as set forth in the bill of exceptions, reveals a plain case of contributory negligence, and shows clearly that but for the concurring fault—recklessness and want of ordinary care by the defendant in error—the accident would not have occurred, and that his injury was caused by his own gross negligence, for which the law will not allow him a premium by holding his employer to a liability in damages.

The testimony of the defendant in error, out of his own mouth, is that his duties as car-coupler and switchman were to move cars and trains, and make up trains on the yard; to shift cars to different points, and put them in their proper place in trains; that he was furnished with a list; that the company had car-inspectors and overhaulers on the yard, whose duty it was to look around the cars and see if anything was wrong about them as soon as the train came in; that the overhaulers and inspectors would be ready when the train came in, and would commence at one end and go along the train, tap the wheels, tighten the bolts, &c.; that they were always- there, waiting when the trains came; that it was the duty of the inspectors to inspect all the cars and cabooses; that it was his duty not to shift the cars until the inspectors and overhaulers had gone over them and informed him that they were all right; that it was his duty to have known whether the caboose which he alleges to have been out of repair had been inspected or not before he shifted it; that he could not say whether it had been inspected or not; that the inspectors were there at work upon that train that day; that he shifted the caboose in question just a little while after the train came in; that he uncoupled the bumpers, of the caboose from the train, and it was coupled with a straight link; that he [644]*644didn’t look at it, but stepped in and pulled out .the pin and laid it on the sill of the car in front, and stepped out and waived the engineer (of the shifting engine) back; that the engineer was an experienced engineer, and that when he motioned or signalled to him to come back, or go forward, or stop, he did exactly as he motioned; that he was taking the caboose in on the coal-pen track when he was hurt; that there was one caboose (an old A. M. & O.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.E. 145, 83 Va. 640, 1887 Va. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfolk-western-r-r-v-emmert-va-1887.