Rice v. Wabash Railroad

92 Mo. App. 35, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 433
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 Mo. App. 35 (Rice v. Wabash Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Wabash Railroad, 92 Mo. App. 35, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 433 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiff was hurt by being knocked off a handcar running on the track of the defendant company as he claims, or by slipping off, as the defendant claims. Two handcars started out from the station of New Elorenee in the afternoon of a summer day with a number of section hands on each car going to their work on the line from which they had been driven to shelter by a passing shower. Plaintiff was on the front car and so was the section foreman, Taylor. The two cars were run close together by direction of said foreman, or, as he testified, touching each other.

There is a strong conflict of testimony as to whether plaintiff was standing on an insecure position near the edge of the front car, and slipped therefrom on account of having on a new pair of shoes whose soles were slick, or whether he was knocked off by the rear car running against the front one and the body of one of the men who was working a lever of the rear car striking against him.

Appellant contends a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence should have been sustained; but this view is entirely inadmissible, as the evidence clearly made a ease for the jury as to [37]*37whether the plaintiff was injured without his fault by the negligence of the men on the rear car, or whether his own carelessness caused or contributed to the accident. Without setting out excerpts from the testimony of the witnesses bearing on this' issue, we may say the record teems with statements tending to prove the plaintiff was hurt in the manner he claims and without any fault of his own.

The disposition of the appeal, therefore, depends on the rulings of the trial court on the instructions presented by the respective parties.

One point relied on by the appellant is that if the accident was not due to the respondent’s carelessness, it was due to that of his fellow-servants, who were on the rear car, and that respondent is not within the scope or entitled to the benefit of the act making a railroad company responsible for an injury sustained by a servant through the negligence of a co-servant, because neither he nor the other employees who were running the handcars were engaged in the work of operating the railroad.

The statute in question is as follows:

“That every railroad corporation owning or operating a railroad in this State shall be liable for all damages sustained by any agent or servant thereof while engaged in the work of operating such railroad by reason of the negligence of any other agent or servant thereof; Provided, that it may be shown in defense that the person injured was guilty of negligence contributing as a proximate cause to produce the injury.” R. S. 1899, sec. 2873.

So far as the point under consideration is concerned, that statute does not differ materially from the Iowa law on the same subject, and was likely modeled after the latter; so, cases construing the Iowa statute are persuasive authority as to, what should be the construction of our own. The point raised by the appellant has been passed on many times by the Supreme Court of Iowa and once by the Supreme Court of the [38]*38United States in treating the statute of that State, and the decisions of both courts were against the appellant’s contention.

Laws of this hind are of a remedial nature and such an interpretation is and ought to be given to them as will best realize the purpose of the Legislature to afford employees of railroad companies, who work in dangerous positions and are exposed to the unusual hazards incident to a service in which their personal safety is jeopardized by the carelessness of numerous other employees over whom they have no control and whose habits of work, in respect to being careful or careless, they have but slight chance to observe, redress for injuries sustained by the default of such other employees, unrestricted by the common-law doctrine in regard .to injuries caused by the acts of fellow-servants. Hence, attention is paid rather to the humane spirit of the law than to its exact words; and a construction is put on it which brings within its remedial efficacy all employees whose duties require them to travel on cars along the tracks of the railroad, whether those duties pertain to the actual business of transporting persons and property or only to keeping the tracks, rolling stock and other appliances in good condition so that the company’s transportation business can be safely and efficiently conducted.

In one opinion, where the plaintiff was'injured through the carelessness of a co-employee while he was shoveling gravel from a construction train, the Supreme Court of Iowa said:

“The defendant was not operating the railroad in the sense of doing the business for which it was designed, the carrying of passengers and freight. It was merely running trains over it as a part of the means employed in building it. That there is a marked difference between the general management of the business and finances of a railroad and the running of a special train over it in repairing or constructing it by a company which does, not control it, but is an employee or contractor under the company which controls it, can not of course

[39]*39be denied. If we were to throw out of consideration the spirit and object of tbe statute, and look only to a critical construction of its language, we might concede that it would bear the meaning which the appellant would put upon it. The legislature, however,- has seen fit, in consideration of the exceptional hazards of the business of operating a railroad, to abrogate in respect to that, business the common-law rule that an employee can not recover against his employer for an injury received through the negligence of a co-employee. The running of a special train over a railroad is operating it in some restricted sense. Eor such purpose, as well as in the general business of the road, a number of persons must be employed, each dependent for his safety upon the skill and fidelity of the others. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the running of special trains over a railroad by a construction company in constructing it, is operating the railroad within the meaning of section 1301 of the Code.” McKnight v. Railroad Co., 43 Iowa 406. That excerpt suffices to illustrate the view taken of such legislation by a court which has been often called on to construe it.

Without referring to all the cases in that jurisdiction bearing on the subject, we cite the following as directly in point: Deppe v. Railroad Co., 36 Iowa 52; McKnight v. Id., supra; Nelson v. Id., 73 Iowa 576; Rayburn v. Id., 74 Id., 637; Larson v. Id., 91 Id. 81; Haden v. Id., 92 Id. 226; Railway Co. v. Artery, 137 U. S. 507.

The case last cited an'd that of Larson v. Railroad Co., supra, are practically identical in their material facts with the present controversy. In' each of them the employee seeking relief against the company had been hurt by' being caused to fall from a handcar by the negligent act of a co-employee, and in each the company was held responsible to him in damages.

We rule, therefore, that it constitutes no defense to the plaintiff’s action that he was injured by the negligence of his fellow-servants.

[40]*40This instruction was given at tbe instance of plaintiff against defendant’s objection and tbat ruling is assigned as error:

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Bluebook (online)
92 Mo. App. 35, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-wabash-railroad-moctapp-1902.