Pipkin v. Midland Valley Railroad

19 P.2d 701, 137 Kan. 150, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1933
DocketNo. 30,960
StatusPublished

This text of 19 P.2d 701 (Pipkin v. Midland Valley Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pipkin v. Midland Valley Railroad, 19 P.2d 701, 137 Kan. 150, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 74 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This action was brought by F. M. Pipkin against the Midland Valley Railroad Company under the federal employers’ liability act to recover damages for injuries which he sustained while employed by the defendant as a locomotive fireman, caused, it is alleged, by a defective and unsafe track negligently maintained and, also, the excessive speed of the train over the defective track. At a trial with a jury the general verdict was in favor of plaintiff, awarding him damages in the sum of $15,000, and with it the jury returned the following special findings of fact;

“1. Was the plaintiff familiar with the track in question and with the operation of locomotive and trains over it? A. Yes.
“2. How much experience had the plaintiff had as a locomotive engineer and fireman? A. 17 years.
“3. State approximately the extent of the 'experience of the plaintiff either [151]*151as a locomotive engineer or fireman operating a locomotive over the track in question. A. 11 years.
“4. How many times had the plaintiff worked as a-fireman on a locomotive over this particular track from October 24, 1928, to the date of the accident? A. 27 times.
“5. If you find that there existed a defect in the track at the time of this accident causing plaintiff to fall, state of what such defect consisted. A. Bad track, bad ties and low joints.
“6. If you find there was a defect, state whether or not it was such as to render the track unsafe and dangerous to employees operating trains over the same. A. Yes.
“7. If you find the track was defective and thereby unsafe and dangerous to employees operating trains over it, how long had such condition existed? A. Middle of November, 1928.
“8. If you find that the track was defective and thereby unsafe and dangerous to employees operating trains over it, was such defective condition and the danger therefrom obvious to an ordinarily prudent person, with the experience of the plaintiff, operating over the same under the same circumstances under which-the plaintiff operated over it? A. No.
“9. Was the condition of the track in question such that a person of ordinary care and prudence under similar circumstances as the defendant would anticipate danger or injury therefrom? A. Yes.”

Defendant- operates a railroad from Fort Smith, Ark., to Wichita, Kan., which passes through Silverdale, near which the defendant has a water tank. At the time of the accident plaintiff was operating as a fireman on a passenger train, and as it approached the tank where water was to be taken for the engine, plaintiff prepared a solution, designed to improve the quality of the water, which it was his duty to prepare and carry over the tender to the water tank on the engine and there pour it into the tank of the engine before taking water from the track tank. It was his practice to mix the solution and carry the bucket containing the solution from the engine out over the tender, which was his duty, and be ready to pour the solution when the train stopped. Then he was to open the manhole, pour the solution into the tank of the engine and pull down the spout and fill the tank of the engine with water. Plaintiff testified that on December 5, 1928, as he left the engine and started over the tender, it made a big sway back and forth, and the lurch threw him from the tender about fifteen or twenty feet on stony ground at the side of the track with such force that his body bounced about five feet from where it struck the ground, breaking both arms, one at the elbow of the left arm, and causing other severe injuries of a permanent character. There seems to be little if any [152]*152controversy as to the character and extent of his injuries. There was testimony that as the train approached the tank around a sharp curve on the side o'f a hill over the defective track, it was traveling at a speed of thirty miles an hour. The controversy between the parties at the trial centered largely on the condition of the track on the curve approaching the water tank at the side of the track.

Testimony was offered tending to show that the curve was six hundred feet long, and the track on it was laid about six feet from the edge of a bluff, and at times the water from above had moved the track; that there was a lack of ballast of the track, and that the section men had even used wet soil for the purpose of tamping, raising and adjusting the track; that many of the ties under the rails were rotten and some of them broken; that the track had slipped as much as five inches, and that when it was straightened by the section men, mud was tamped about the ties. There had been excessive rains just prior to the accident, weather records showing that 6.17 inches of rain had fallen during the month preceding the accident, and that trains passing over the curve rocked violently back and forth, especially when driven over the low joints in the track. Testimony was to the effect that the train entered the curve at a speed of thirty-five miles an hour and that when brakes were applied it was slowed down. The application of the brakes, it is claimed, caused the lurch of the tender which threw the plaintiff from the train.

There was great conflict in the evidence as to the condition of the track. Witnesses- for the defendant stated that in fact there was nothing wrong with the track. The jury, as we have seen, found that it was “a bad track, bad ties and low joints.”

Defendant insists that the plaintiff’s evidence was insufficient to sustain the charge of defective track or excessive speed, and that negligence of the defendant was not established. Manifestly there was evidence tending to show that the track was defective and so defective as to warrant the finding that there was negligence in its maintenance, and that the fall and injury to plaintiff was the result of the negligence.

Among the witnesses produced by plaintiff was that of a section man who worked on the section which included the curve where the accident in question occurred. He had been working on that section from the middle of October, 1928, until the accident occurred on December 5, 1928. The day following he and other section men [153]*153were ordered to look after the track at the curve, and he said that the track was muddy, that it had slipped and was out of line five or six inches, both rails had slipped about two car lengths of the curve; that the outside rail was lower than the inner rail and should have been higher; that there was no ballast between the ties nor at the end of the ties; that it was just a swinging track, only the centers of the ties were resting on the ground; that many of the ties were rotten and the spikes which they drove in the ties would not hold; that about every fourth tie in the track was broken and that they had to shift the track back in line about five or six inches, and after raising and gauging the track had to tamp it with mud as they had no ballast to use. He further testified that the track was on a short curve on the side of the bluff and was very rough. He also said that it had been in that condition for two or three months, and in going back and forth over it on a motor or handcar, he found that it rocked back and forth both ways and was hard riding, as joints wrere open and low.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 701, 137 Kan. 150, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pipkin-v-midland-valley-railroad-kan-1933.