Pendergrass v. Southern Railway Co.

103 S.E. 150, 114 S.C. 78, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 27, 1920
Docket10362
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 S.E. 150 (Pendergrass v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pendergrass v. Southern Railway Co., 103 S.E. 150, 114 S.C. 78, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 92 (S.C. 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

Plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant, under the Federal Employers’ Riability Act (U. S. Comp. St., secs. 8657-8665), for $2,000 damages for causing the death of his intestate, Alex. Pendergrass, by negligentiy kicking a car into a sidetrack, so that it struck another car under which intestate was at work and caused it to run over him.

Pendergrass was a colored laborer, and, on the day he was killed, he was employed as helper to Baldwin, a car *81 repairer, and was subject to his orders. In defendant’s yard, at York, there are two sidetracks, diverging from the main line, to wit, the oil mill track and the transfer track. Upon the latter, cars are placed which are to be transferred to and from the Carolina & Northwestern Railroad, a connecting line. There was on this track a flat or gondola car in bad order, which the Carolina & Northwestern had declined to receive. Baldwin and Pendergrass were sent to repair it.

Defendant’s rule 26 provides that a blue flag displayed at one or both ends of a car indicates that workmen are under or about it; and, when thus protected, it must not be coupled nor moved; that workmen will display the blue signals, and .die person who plants one is the only one authorized to move it.

Another rule (393) reads:

“They must not allow running or flying switches to be made where it can be avoided, and when unavoidable, such movements must be made with all the care necessary to absolutely prevent accident.”

Defendant devoted some effort to an attempt to prove that rule 393 was not intended to apply to the practice of kicking cars, and some of its witnesses testified that running and flying switches are the same, and described the manner in which they are made and wherein it differs from kicking cars; and they said there was no rule against kicking cars in yard switching. But it is inferable from the tes^mony of some of them that it is contrary to the rules for cars to be kicked, unless they are equipped with hand brakes and have a brakeman on them to control them. There was no brakeman on the car that caused the death of Pendergrass.

There is little, if any, difference in the probable consequences of flying or running switches and kicking cars. In both, the car is turned loose on the track, under a momentum previously given to it, and it runs without control from the engine. No doubt, the rule was intended to avoid the *82 consequences of such operations rather than the operations themselves, by whatever name they ipay be called.

Keeping in mind the purpose of the rule, we think there is no doubt that it was violated, when the car was kicked into the transfer track, because defendant’s witnesses admitted that thére was no necessity and no reason for doing so, except that it saved a little time, and that it could have been avoided.

In fact, they denied that Pendergrass was killed by a kicked car, and said that the movement of the car under which he was at work was caused by the train backing into the transfer track slowly and carefully, under control from the engine, for the purpose of coupling to a box car in front of the bad order car, so that it could be taken from the transfer track to another place; and, of course, in that case, there would have been no reason to kick the car into the transfer track. They admitted, however, that they kicked a car into the oil mill track before Pendergrass was killed, and that they kicked several cars into the transfer track, but said that was done after he had been killed.

We state the substance of the testimony of the material witnesses on the main points of contention as to whether the injury was caused by a kicked car, and as to whether Baldwin and Pendergrass had been working on the bad order car, or had merely inspected it to find out what was to be done.

Theodore Witherspoon: On the day Pendergrass was killed, he and a white man had been working on the air brakes of a car on the transfer track. There were two other cars on the track. These were box cars. The flat car was between them. They were working in between them. Some time afterwards, saw Pendergrass standing about 10 feet from the track. Think the white man had gone somewhere.

Nita Witherspoon, wife of Theodore: Saw the freight train come around there; about the time the engine was at *83 the trestle, they let a box car loose, and it just came like a streak up the track; have often seen them do that; they do it very often; there was no one on that car; it just came like a streak, faster than the engine, and the next thing I heard was the crash against the box cars. Was sitting on the porch at my house, when that car was kicked down there, and it came by me. Didn’t pay any attention to it after it passed. It was afterwards I heard the crash,

Thomas Reid: Saw Pendergrass sitting under car; had tools and was hammering on something, when -I passed. Train was on main line. Saw train come over on transfer track. They kicked two cars back on gondola. Knocked car under which he was working about 30 feet. There was no one on cars kicked in.

Baldwin, the car repairer: Was sent with Pendergrass from Rock Hill to York to repair bad order car on transfer track. Carried a keg of tools and blue flag. When we got to the car, I looked to see what was the matter with it. The brakes were off — the brake staff was broken off. Had to go back to the shop to get one. While I was going, I looked up and saw that the local freight had gotten to the station. If there was any defect in the air, I couldn’t find it, and I wanted to get the engine to put the air on the car. Deft Pendergrass there, standing out watching the growing crops. Told him to stay there and watch the tools, and also to watch for the engine and head it back in there, because I wanted to get the air on the car. Did not tell him to go under car or to do any work while I was away. I went across. The engine went around and came back in there. Didn’t know they were going in there. Saw them cut loose from the cab, and ran to catch them. While I was on the way, they backed up, and I got on the engine and rode back, and, while I was on the engine, Truesdale (a brakeman) came up and told me they had killed my helper. Saw nothing under the car, except the torch, which is carried to find if there is a leak. (Another witness said there was also a *84 wrench under the car.) I did no work on the car before I left — simply made an examination, and only found the brake staff was broken. I stood at the side of the car and tested the couplings with a wrench, which I told him to hand me. I squatted down at the side of the car and reached the coupling with the wrench. Did not go between rails. Did not put up blue flag, because we had not gone to work. We never use flag on inspection — not until we find something to do. I am the one that puts up flag. If he undertook to do some work (while I was away), it would have been his duty to put up flag. I was in charge of the flag, but it was his duty to put it up; the rules' say the man that does the work shall put up the flag. I was in charge of the work, and had to tell him what to do. The work was to be done under my direction.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mann v. Seaboard Air Line R. Co.
136 S.E. 234 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 150, 114 S.C. 78, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendergrass-v-southern-railway-co-sc-1920.