O'Hare v. Chicago & Alton Railroad

95 Mo. 662
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 95 Mo. 662 (O'Hare v. Chicago & Alton Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Hare v. Chicago & Alton Railroad, 95 Mo. 662 (Mo. 1888).

Opinions

Nobton, C. J.

Plaintiff recovered judgment for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the defendant, from which judgment defendant has appealed.

The petition substantially sets forth as the cause of action, the following, viz. : That plaintiff was an employe of defendant as a yardman in Kansas City, and that, on the eighteenth of March, 1883, defendant was engaged in moving from its yard and depot in the western part of the city, a train containing an unusually large number of cars, and for that purpose was using an engine at the head of said train in pulling it, which engine was under the control of Jesse Langer as engineer, and also another engine at the rear end of said train pushing it; that, on account of the length of the train, and the nature of the track and surrounding obstacles, those employed on the hindmost engine could not see those employed on the front engine or front part of the train and viceversa; that said Langer, engineer in charge of said front engine, was incompetent, reckless, and negligent, and unfit for the position, of which defendant had knowledge; that defendant negligently and carelessly had and used as the rear car of said train, one, the bumpers or deadwoods of which were so constructed as to greatly enhance the danger of injury to any person coupling or attempting to couple the same to any other car or engine. It is further averred that it was the duty [666]*666of plaintiff to attend said engine in the rear of said train, and do whatever coupling was then required; that, as said train was proceeding eastward, from said western depot and yards, the said engine became uncoupled, and that it became plaintiff’s duty to couple the same to said car, the bumpers of which were constructed as aforesaid ; that, while he was proceeding to couple the same in the usual and customary manner, with due care on his part, the said Danger carelessly and negligently, and. without any signal or notice being given,'reversed said engine at the front of said train and caused said cars to be thrown ba.ck suddenly and with great violence to the rear, so that plaintiff having no notice thereof could not withdraw from between said bumpers and rear engine, where he had his right arm for the purpose of making the coupling, and that, by means thereof and the dangerous construction of said car and bumpers, plaintiff’s arm was caught between said bumpers and engine, inflicting an injury resulting in -the loss of his right hand and a portion of his arm. The answer, after making certain admissions as to defendant being a corporation, etc., denies the averments of the petition on which plaintiff bases his cause of action, and avers substantially that plaintiff’s injury was caused by his own negligence.

During the trial plaintiff offered W. E. Bridges as a witness, who testified that he was the agent of defendant and in charge of the freight offices both at Twelfth street and Grand avenue ; that he kept a book containing a letter-press copy of reports of accidents to' persons and property ; that these reports were then sent to the division superintendent at Slater; that the custom was to make reports to him which he copied' into a book, which he . produced, and was asked to reacj in evidence from said book the letter-impression copies of certain reports of an accident. This was objected to- on the [667]*667ground that said reports were incompetent and irrelevant, and on the ground that they did not show how the • accident occurred, or have any tendency to show any incompetency in running or managing an engine on the-part of Langer, and as not being any knowledge to the company. No objection was made to the evidence on the ground that the original report instead of a copy should be produced. The objection was properly overruled, inasmuch as the evidence offered tended to show that a collision had occurred between switch engine 47, and train number 94; that Langer was engineer of said switch engine, and trusted it to be run by a non-employe- and incompetent engineer, who could not manage it, and hence the collision.

It is next insisted that the court erred in refusing to-give an instruction asked by defendant in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. In passing upon a demurrer to evidence the court is required to make every inference of fact in favor of the party offering the evidence which can reasonably be made. Buesching v. Gas Light Co., 73 Mo. 219. No controversy in this case-' is made by the evidence as to the following facts, viz.: That the train in question was being moved by am engine at Its front and in charge of Langer as engineer, and by an engine at the rear end of the train in charge of one Green as engineer; that the hindmost car in the train was a United States rolling-stock car; that while-the train was in transit plaintiff discovered that said, car was uncoupled, and undertook to couple it, and while doing so received the injury for which he sues. '

The disputed questions are : Was this United States' rolling-stock car extra hazardous to plaintiff whose duty it was to make couplings ? Was the engineer Langer in charge of the front engine incompetent and reckless, and if so did defendant have knowledge of it % Did said Langer, negligently and without warning, reverse his-engine, thereby causing, said train to be suddenly and> [668]*668violently thrown back while plaintiff was engaged in making the coupling, and causing him to be injured? Was the injury the result of plaintiff’s own negligence ? As to all these disputed questions it may be said generally that the evidence is conflicting, as the following summary of it will show :

Witness- Mallory testified that the United States rolling-stock cars are considered among all railroad men as man-killers, owing to the danger when a man goes to make a coupling; that the drawheads are constructed in ordinary western cars so that it gives a man from about twelve to fourteen inches room for his hand, but when he goes in between these cars he has no room at all. He has got to get underneath or on top. ' The western cars do not- have these side bumpers. All the western roads have a different kind of .car as to coupling. Any car with side bumpers is dangerous. These cars with bumpers are used on some eastern roads. The Hannibal & St. Joseph road had a good many of this kind of cars in use.

■ There is evidence on the other side tending to show that all the roads have carried more or less of - these United States rolling-stock cars and received them from ■other roads; that the Hannibal & St. Joe road had about three hundred of them leased. Plaintiff testified that the Chicago and Alton road had none of the United States rolling-stock cars and that said cars were more dangerous than others because of the construction of the •bumpers and deadwoods. As to his knowledge of the car in question he testified as follows: “This js the first United States rolling-stock car I had seen for a good while. If I had seen any I don’t recollect it, but not to the best of my opinion while I was switching there, until I got caught with this car.”

The evidence as to the incompetency of Hanger tended to show that he had been laid off by defendant for sixty days for having left his engine in charge of ■one Ketchum, who undertook to run it in his absence, [669]*669and in doing so collided with another train; that he sometimes handled cars roughly. Witness Prudens testified “ that he had been working with Langer a year and a half; that he sometimes handled cars px*etty roughly.

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Bluebook (online)
95 Mo. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohare-v-chicago-alton-railroad-mo-1888.