Paster v. Pennsylvania R. R.

43 F.2d 908, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3968
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 1930
Docket343
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 43 F.2d 908 (Paster v. Pennsylvania R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paster v. Pennsylvania R. R., 43 F.2d 908, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3968 (2d Cir. 1930).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

Paster, the plaintiff, was an assistant yardmaster employed by the defendant in one of its freight yards in Philadelphia. The accident which injured him happened between three and four o’clock in the morning of November 28, 1928, while he was engaged in his work in the yard. He sues under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 USCA §§ 51-59). The yard has many tracks leading off a leader, those here important being numbered fifteen, sixteen and seventeen. . A freight train was being made up on these, of which the rear end of some seventeen ears stood on track seventeen. On track fifteen stood a string of some seven cars and four on track sixteen. The engine was on the east end of the string on track fifteen facing east, in which direction the train was to. move. It went forward off track fifteen and backed west upon track sixteen until it had coupled to the four cars standing there. This made eleven cars in all, which were to be the forward end of the train. While these were so standing, ten loaded coal cars were shunted upon track sixteen from the west by gravity and came in contact with the west end of the eleven ears, their momentum moving the train forward some distance. Between two of the four cars which had originally been upon track sixteen two men were at work, one of whom was the plaintiff; the other was a brakeman called Heney. The plaintiff’s foot was run over by the wheel of the .west car of those two between which he was at work. He charged that the defendant was negligent in letting the ten loaded ears come down the track with too great momentum, and in sending them down at all after another assistant yardmaster, Sullivan, in charge of the switch tower, had agreed not to do so.'

The. defendant for a defense alleged that the fault was Paster’s because the work on which he was engaged was repair, and because a rule of the defendant required ear inspectors, whose work Paster was doing, to set a blue signal at the switch while repairing cars, to lock and clamp it and to require the tower switchman to do the same.

*909 Paster’s story was that he had telephoned Sullivan some time before he knew of any trouble in the train, that “we” were going to get the four ears on traek sixteen, which ought in any ease to have gone upon traek fifteen, and that, until advised, he was not to send any cars down that traek. Sullivan agreed not to do so. After the engine and its ears had come upon track sixteen, Heney, who had been going over the whole string, told Paster that a leak had developed in the air brake coupling between two oars, and that he wished him, Paster, to repair it. Paster tried to get hold of a ear inspector whose duty it was to do such jobs, but could find none, and so undertook it himself. He picked up a lantern and got a wrench from the engine, and went along the track till he came to the defective coupling. This he found it very easy to repair; it only took a few turns of his wrench to do it. Thereupon he told Heney it was all right, and that he should couple up the two air hoses. He then started back walking east towards the engine to return the wrench, leaving Heney to couple. He had got only half a car length, when Hen-ey called him back; he had dropped the rubber gasket which made the joint air tight, and could not find it in fhe dark. Paster brought back his lantern and leaned between the ears to give Heney light; while in this posture the ten coal ears struck the string and carried him down with the imparted motion.

The rule on which the defendant relies declared that a blue signal displayed at both ends of an engine, car or train, indicated that workmen were under or about it and that it should not then be coupled or moved. When emergency repair work was to be done raider or about ears and the signal was not available, the engineman and fireman were to be notified and protection must be given those engaged. In practice it was testified by both sides that the blue light was set at the switch when the car was on a yard traek, as here, and the switch was set to close the traek and locked in position; also the switch tower was advised, which closed and locked the switch at that place as well. Thus it became important to decide whether this job involved repairs within that rule. The plaintiff said it did not; Strickland, an employee of the defendant, said that it did; Pries, another employee, said that it did not, perhaps a little equivocally. The plaintiff’s attorney took the position that while turning the angle cock to close the leak was a repair, the subsequent work of coupling was not, and indeed everybody agreed that coupling as such did not require locking the switches. But the defendant argued that in this case coupling was necessarily a part of the repair, since the hose had to be tested before it could be ascertained whether it had been made tight. The issue really contested and which the judge left to the jury was therefore whether coupling was part of the repair.

We do not think that it is permissible to affirm the judgment on the theory that tightening the. angle cock, taken alone, was not a repair. In the first place there was a conflict of testimony about .it, as we have already shown, and the defendant was entitled to argue that it was, however unlikely its success. Again, we think that the ease was tried on that theory with the assent of the plaintiff’s own attorney. During his redirect examination of Paster he told the judge that he regarded it as a repair. Nevertheless, as he immediately afterwards called it an “adjustment,” it cannot be said that at that point he had committed himself finally. But shortly thereafter he was inquiring whether the practice of setting out the blue signal applied to tightening an angle cock. A colloquy took place at the conclusion of which the judge stated his understanding of the issue, as follows: “You claim there were two operations, one is a repair, and whatever rules and regulations apply to repairs are not in the case because the repair was finished. Then came the coupling, what you do when you couple, what is reasonable when you couple? That is a question for the jury to decide.” To which the plaintiff’s attorney answered, “I think your honor has very lucidly and completely stated the law applying to this ease, and I will desist from further redirect examination on that because I think that fully states the situation there.” Considering that this was said while the plaintiff was still on the stand and before the defendant’s case began, it seems to us that there was thereafter a mutual assumption that the work done by Paster himself was a repair within the rule, and we must so take it upon this appeal. We do not so hold; the matter is plainly one of railway practice, not merely an interpretation of a document. It is one which we cannot take from the jury, but it was a material issue, as we shall show.

On the other hand, it appears to us that the actual issue litigated, that is, whether the coupling was part of the repair, was not material. Paster by hypothesis should have locked the switch himself, and have told Sullivan at the tower to lock it, before he undertook to turn the angle cock. At least he should have done one; the evidence seems to *910 indicate that he should have done both. At any rate had he done so, the accident could not have happened, even though the subsequent coupling was not part of the repair as the plaintiff asserts. This is true because he had only got half a car length from the place where he had made the repair before he was called back.

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Bluebook (online)
43 F.2d 908, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paster-v-pennsylvania-r-r-ca2-1930.