Raymond N. Heiselmoyer v. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company

243 F.2d 773, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1957
Docket12045_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 243 F.2d 773 (Raymond N. Heiselmoyer v. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond N. Heiselmoyer v. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 243 F.2d 773, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989 (3d Cir. 1957).

Opinion

McLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant claimed that while employed as an engineer by appellee railroad he sustained two separate accidents. In his complaint based on the first of these he stated that the action arose under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act 1 and under the Safety Appliance Acts. 2 Later he said, “The accident hereinafter mentioned was caused by the defendant’s violation of the Boiler Inspection Act.” He went on to say that the accident occurred September 19, 1952, near Norristown, Pennsylvania, while he was working for the defendant as an engineer and that he “ * * * suffered severe and permanent injuries by reason of a defect in the improperly constructed seat and seating arrangement on the locomotive of the defendant.” The second suit is under the Employers’ Liability Act. In it appellant asserted that on July 9, 1954 at appellee’s Sunnyside (Long Island, N. Y.) Yards he “ * * * suffered severe and permanent injuries by reason of a yard mechanic negligently opening a door inward on the engine and striking plaintiff while he was working.” The injury urged was aggravation of the back condition allegedly resulting from the Norristown accident. The two causes were consolidated for trial on plaintiff’s motion.

According to plaintiff’s first action the' engine seat interfered with the safe operation of the locomotive because it interfered with the independent brake valve. He therefore tried to remove the back-rest and while tugging and yanking at it he fell backward and was hurt. At the pretrial conference plaintiff’s theory of liability was clearly stated as arising from the dangerous condition of the seat. *775 His trial memorandum repeated this as did his opening address to the jury. The trial followed the same pattern and summation for appellant gave the jury the trouble with the seat as the sole issue. On the fourth trial day and after plaintiff had rested, his attorney, giving an opinion citation to the court, said “ * * may I just give you one thought in connection with this case * * * Now so that among other things Your Honor will understand our position in this case on the liability, as far as the Boiler Inspection Act is concerned and in so far as the brakes are concerned, safety appliances, it is covered by Section 11, 35 [45] U.S.C.A.” This and requests to charge with exception to their denial are the only references prior to verdict of a contention of a defective brake as such. In the course of plaintiff’s motion for a new trial there was a closely argued question of whether the independent brake was a Safety Appliance under the Safety Appliance Acts covering brakes, 45 U.S.C.A. § 1. It appeared highly questionable that the auxiliary independent brake, which was not known when this particular part of the law was adopted, was a safety appliance within the section. 3 Then plaintiff went to his present position here argued that the independent brake was a defective appurtenance under the Boiler Inspection Act because of the contact between it and the seat-rest when the latter was so turned that it and whoever might be occupying it faced the rear of the locomotive.

Though the shift of position came too late and irrespective of its tenuous foundation and no covering request to charge, examination of the record reveals the court squarely placed before the jury plaintiff’s proposition that his injury proceeded from the fundamental fact, as the court said, that “ * * * the seat would not turn 360 degrees; that is turn completely around, that when it was turned it hit the brake valve lever * * The court continued, telling the jury that “ * * * it is your duty to determine from the testimony on this phase of the matter whether or not the seat was defective or not in good condition.” Then the court said “If in your considered judgment, and yours alone, based upon your understanding of the evidence, the seat was defective and the defective seat was a contributing cause of the plaintiff’s injury, your verdict should be for the plaintiff.” True the judge did not repeat this in terms of it being a jury question whether the brake was a defective appliance under the Boiler Inspection Act if there was such contact but he had given the jury a practical formula for its guidance on this branch of the problem. It could not be misunderstood. If the jury had concluded that contact between the seat and the brake lever had created a defective condition, irrespective of whether it was attributed to the seat or to the brake, if that condition was a proximate cause of the accident, the jury was bound to render a verdict in plaintiff’s favor. The actual verdict must be accepted as a finding to the contrary.

Appellant complains about the refusal to charge his request with reference to no necessity of proving the precise defect that caused the back-rest to snag. There is no substance to the objection. The court established the widest possible latitude for plaintiff’s evidence in this connection saying:

“On the other hand, if you find by the preponderance of the evidence the seat was defective or in bad condition, then you must next consider whether the defective seat was a contributing cause of the plaintiff’s injury.
“If, in your considered judgment, and yours alone, based upon your understanding of the evidence, the seat was defective and the defective seat was a contributing cause of the *776 plaintiff’s injury, your verdict should be for the plaintiff.”

In the circumstances of the case we find no error in the court’s instruction regarding unnecessary peril. After reading the pertinent part of the Boiler Inspection Act the court said:

“I charge you, Members of the Jury, that the defendant railroad, Pennsylvania Railroad in this case, was under a duty to see that the locomotive, to which the plaintiff in this case was assigned, and its appurtenances, one of which was the seat in question, was maintained in good condition so that it could be employed in the active service of the carrier without unnecessary peril to the life and limb of the plaintiff.
“In other words, the defendant, the Pennsylvania Railroad, has an absolute and continuing duty to provide and maintain its locomotive and the attached apparatus and appurtenances so as to provide a safe place to work for its employees.
“When you say ‘safe,’ however, you must consider ‘safe’ in the context here and remember what sort of places and equipment the railroad has to do with. When you say ‘safe’ in connection with a locomotive, you don’t mean the same thing as you would if you used the word ‘safe’ in connection with the parlor floor, or the front or back door of your home.
“A locomotive cannot be made ‘safe’ in that sense. It is a piece of equipment that necessarily can injure people. So that when you talk about ‘safe’ it is being used in connection with a locomotive and is qualified here by the statement in the section of the Boiler Inspection Act, ‘that the same may be employed in the active service of such carrier without unnecessary peril to life and limb * * * ’ It does not say ‘any peril to life or limb’; it says, ‘without unnecessary peril to life or limb * * * >»

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243 F.2d 773, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-n-heiselmoyer-v-the-pennsylvania-railroad-company-ca3-1957.