Pennsylvania Co. v. Long

94 Ind. 250, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 6
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1883
DocketNo. 10,622
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 94 Ind. 250 (Pennsylvania Co. v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Co. v. Long, 94 Ind. 250, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 6 (Ind. 1883).

Opinions

Bicknell, C. C.

This was an action by the appellee, a widow, against the appellant, to recover damages for the ■death of James B. Long, her son, seventeen years old, who was killed in the appellant’s service while undertaking to couple two of its cars at the city of 'Vincennes.

The complaint stated that the plaintiff’s son was living with her and had no guardian; that defendant, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff and against her will, employed her son as a workman; that he had no experience in the work and was ignorant of its dangerous character; that the work consisted in part of making up trains, which was very dangerous; that in said work he was required by the defendant to assist in. coupling two passenger cars on a sharp curve, which cars had couplings of different shapes [251]*251and unfit for coupling together, one of them being a straight draw-head, and the other a crooked draw-head, called the Miller patent, intended to fit in another crooked draw-head, and which would not readily connect with a straight draw-head ; that the deceased, while one of said passenger cars was driven backward by an engine toward the other car, was directed by defendant to walk at the rear of the moving car, to couple it with the other, and when the cars came together, the said draw-heads, instead of meeting together and keeping the platforms of the cars apart, as they would have done if properly constructed, passed each other and let the platforms •come together, so that they caught the deceased and killed him, without fault of the deceased or of the plaintiff, to plaintiff’s damage $5,000.

The defendant answered by a general denial.

The issue was tried by a jury who returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000, with answers to the defendant’s interrogatories, as follows:

1. Does the evidence show that the injuries from which the plaintiff’s son died were received while making a coupling between two couplers known as the common draw-bar and the Miller coupler? Answer: Yes.
“ 2. Does the evidence show that both these kinds of couplers were in common use together upon the railroads of Indiana and at Vincennes, at and about the time of the injury? Answer: No.
“ 3. Was the plaintiff’s son informed how to make the coupling? Answer: No.
“ 4. Was the plaintiff’s.son cautioned against the danger involved in making couplings? Answer: Yes.”

A motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment by the defendant were overruled; judgment was rendered on the verdict and 'the defendant appealed.

The errors assigned are overruling the said motions.

Ten reasons were presented for a new trial, but the first of these is abandoned by the appellant. The second is that [252]*252“the court erred in excluding from the jury the evidence of Robert Henry, a witness for defendant, which evidence consisted of statements made by James B. Long at and during the time he was in the employment of the defendant, and during the four or five days next before the day of the injury ; that he, said James B. Long, knew how to coujile cars, and had made couplings often before that time 'in the defendant’s yards at "Vincennes.”

As against the plaintiff, these declarations of her son in her absence were mere hearsay, and were properly excluded. The rights of the mother could not be defeated or qualified by such declarations of the son. Such declarations, in reference to an employment entered into without the mother’s consent, could not affect her 'legal rights resulting from such employment and its consequences.'

The third cause for a new trial is that the court erred in giving instructions to the jury. Instruction No. 2, given by the court of its own motion, is as follows:

“ The facts necessary for the plaintiff, under the allegations of her complaint, to prove, in order to entitle her to a verdict, are the .following: That in the month of December, 1879, James Long was in the employment of the defendant, and, at said time, while in the line of his employment and epgaged in the effort to couple two passenger cars, he was crushed and killed between-the platforms of the two coaches; that the plaintiff was the mother of said James, and that his father was dead at said date; that without the plaintiff’s consent the defendant employed said James, he being under twenty-one years of age, to work in its railroad yard, and that among the duties of said employment was the coupling of cars; that on the night he was killed he was engaged, under the direction of .the defendant, in assisting to make up a passenger train, and in pursuance of the direction of the defendant was required to pass and did pass onto the track between two cars in. order to effect the coupling, and that, while he was between the cars, and owing to the want of adapta[253]*253tion to each other of the Miller patent and common draw-bar couplers ou the two cars, the platforms of the two cars came so nearly together as to crush and thereby kill him; that the effort to make such coupling was dangerous to the person making it; that the plaintiff incurred some expense in his burial, or that his services from the period of his death until of full age would have been of some value to her.”

It is claimed that this instruction is erroneous, because it states that there may be a recovery by the parent, where the employment of the minor is without the parent’s consent. The appellant claims that there can be no recovery by the parent unless the employment was not only without the consent, but was also against the known will, of the parent.

In Grand Rapids, etc., R. R. Co. v. Showers, 71 Ind. 451, the averment and the proof were that the employment of the child was against the parents’ will, and this court held that such an employment might be the basis of liability. Where, however, the employment is without the parents’ consent, and nothing further is shown, it is presumptively against the parents’ will.

The right of the mother to recover in such cases is recognized in Ohio, etc., R. R. Co. v. Tindall, 13 Ind. 366; Hollingsworth v. Swedenborg, 49 Ind. 378 (19 Am. R. 687); Rogers v. Smith, 17 Ind. 323; Long v. Morrison, 14 Ind. 595; Boyd v. Blaisdell, 15 Irid. 73.

There is no intimation in any of these cases that the liability of the employer to the parent can not exist, unless the child was employed against the parents’ known will. We think the instruction was not erroneous in this particular.

The appellant’s counsel objects to instruction No. 2, that it told the jury, substantially, that if the deceased, being under twenty-one years of age, was put at work by the defendant in a dangerous place, the plaintiff ought to recover; but such is not the effect of the instruction. Its statement is that if the deceased, being under twenty-one years of age, was employed by the defendant, without the plaintiff’s consent, and [254]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 Ind. 250, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-long-ind-1883.