Reed v. Director-General of Railroads

113 A. 146, 95 N.J.L. 525, 1921 N.J. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 28, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 113 A. 146 (Reed v. Director-General of Railroads) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Director-General of Railroads, 113 A. 146, 95 N.J.L. 525, 1921 N.J. LEXIS 141 (N.J. 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ackerson, J.

Plaintiffs testate was employed as conductor of defendant’s freight train making a night run from Trenton to Sea Girt by way of Farmingdale and Manasquan, both the deceased and the defendant being engaged .at the [527]*527time ill interstate commerce. The track was single from Monmouth Junction through Farmingdale until Manasquan was reached, and from there eastwardly to Sea Girt the railroad was double-tracked, with an eastbound and westbound track, and with a switch at the junction of the two tracks at Manasquan protected by a target carrying red and green lights. When a train was moving eastward towards Sea Girt and was to continue on the eastbound track, the switch light at Manasquan showed green; when it was to move from the eastbound to the westbound track, the light showed red. There was also a block signal station at Farmingdale, which was at the westerly end of the block in which the Manasquan station is located, with Sea Girt at the easterly end, and if the track was clear for an eastbound movement, green lights were set at this block signal station at Farmingdale, but if the train was to take the westbound track at the switch at Manasquan, or if, for any reason, the eastbound track was not clear, special orders were given at .Farmingdale.

On the night in question it was very dark, with a heavy ground fog, making it difficult to see ahead, and when the train on which plaintiff’s testate was riding reached Farm-ingdale, a green light ivas displayed, indicating that the eastbound track was clear for an eastward movement as far as Sea Girt, and no other orders whatever were given. The train proceeded on towards Manasquan, where it was to make a stop> at the freight station to discharge freight, and while running at a speed of from twenty-five to thirty miles an hour, the engineer suddenly saw through the fog the red light of the switch at Manasquan only three car lengths ahead, and too late to stop or slow down the train before taking the switch, which it did with a violent lurch, running the full length of the train of seventeen cars past the switch before it could be stopped, and in fact running one hundred feet or more beyond the freight station where it was scheduled to make a stop. Plaintiff’s testate was riding in one of the cars in which there was freight to be discharged at Mana-squan, and had just gone to the side door of the car, which was open, evidently for the purpose of observing the location [528]*528of the train with reference to the depot, and when the train struck the open switch, the lurch threw him out of the door to the track and he was killed. This action was brought by his executrix in the Supreme Court under the Federal Employers’ Liability act (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1916, §§ 8657, 8665), and the acts of negligence with which the defendant was charged in the complaint were that “the defendant carelessly and negligently maintained a certain switch without proper safeguards and unattended. * * * That no lights or other warning was given of the condition of said switch; that a reasonably safe place to work was not provided * * *; that the roadbed and appliances at the place complained of * * * were not kept in a reasonably safe condition.” At the trial, at the Burlington Circuit, plaintiff .was permitted, over-objection, to amend her complaint, alleging as a further ground of negligence the following: “As ah act of negligence on the part of the railroad company, through its servants and agents, that the engineer in charge of this train ran into the open switch with the red lights against him.” The above facts are undisputed, for the defendant rested without offering any evidence. At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant moved for a nonsuit, and then for the direction of a verdict in defendant’s favor, both of which motions were denied, and the case was thereupon submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict for plaintiff, and from the judgment entered thereon defendant appeals.

The first point advanced for a reversal is the refusal of the trial court to grant defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, which was based upon the following grounds, viz., that there was no negligence with which the defendant could be charged, either in the operation of the train or the maintenance of the switch and signal, which contributed to the death of plaintiff’s testate; that the accident which caused his death was one which he was in law charged with having assumed the risk of as being incident to the natural and ordinary operation of railroad trains, and that as a matter of law the negligence of his fellow-servants obviously should have been known to him. From the facts above recited, however, it will ap[529]*529pear that the deceased met liis death either because of the i'ailiue of the defendant to give the engineer oicleis at Farm-ingdale that tiie switch at Manasquan was open, or by reason of the failure of the engineer to have his train under such control that, considering the foggy condition of the night, he could stop it or slow it down before he struck the switch in question. In either aspect of the case there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question of the negligence of the fellow-servant? of the deceased, which was the proximate cause of his death. The defendant, having assumed the duty of indicating to the train crew the condition of the track from Earmingdale to Sea Girt, and having indicated the track to be dear with no open switches, it was a proper question, under the facts above indicated, for the jury to determine whether the defendant had properly guarded the switch in question. This switch was close to the freight station where the train was to make a scheduled stop, and yet the train was traveling on a very dark night in a very thick fog at the rate of twenty-five or thirty miles an hour when the engineer observed the red switch light only three car lengths ahead and threw on. the emergency brakes and put on the reverse, and yet the train ran its full length of seventeen cars into the switch and about one hundred feet beyond the freight station before it could be stopped. Tlic question of the negligence of the engineer, under such circumstances, was clearly for the jury to determine. Nor can it he said that plaintiff’s testate, who was riding inside of one of the cars, where he had a right to be, assumed the risk as incidental to the natural and ordinary operation of railroad trains, that proper orders would not he given at Farming-dale respecting the condition of the switch at Manasquan, nor that the engineer would run the train at such a rate of speed in the fog as not to have it under proper control on approaching the switch in question, and there was no evidence in the case that any negligence of any fellow-servant was obvious, or should have been known to the decedent; and, furthermore, it has been settled in this state that the common law doctrine of assumption of risk, where it arises [530]*530solely and directly out of the negligent acts of fellow-servants, has been abolished by the Federal Employers’ Liability act. Swank v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 94 N. J. L. 546. The motion for a nonsuit was therefore properly refused, and for the same reasons the motion for the direction of a verdict was also properly refused.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 146, 95 N.J.L. 525, 1921 N.J. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-director-general-of-railroads-nj-1921.