Riggie v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.

107 A. 126, 93 Vt. 282, 1919 Vt. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 8, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 107 A. 126 (Riggie v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riggie v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 107 A. 126, 93 Vt. 282, 1919 Vt. LEXIS 162 (Vt. 1919).

Opinion

Miles, J.

The main question to be considered here is whether the defendant furnished the plaintiff, its servant, with a reasonably safe instrumentality, called a jack, with which to perform his duties. The jack was used by the plaintiff in lining up the defendant’s railroad tracks, and consisted of an upright rack or standard with cbgs or teeth on one side and a projection at right angles to the standard on the other side. To this standard, on the side having the teeth or cogs, an arrangement was attached, to which one end of a socket, several inches in length, was fastened in a manner allowing the other end to be moved up and down in line with the standard. To this socket was attached a dog so arranged that it could be inserted between the cogs or teeth of the standard, and when so inserted, by moving the end of the socket, furthest from the standard, downward, the standard was raised with whatever object was on the projection of the standard at its base. Whenever it was desired to raise and move an object at the same time, the jack was inclined in the direction in which the object was to be moved. A lever several feet in length was inserted in the socket. In operating the jack the lever was raised, the dog inserted between the teeth or cogs of the standard, and the operator then threw the weight of his body upon the lever, thereby pressing it down, and, if the dog was properly inserted between the cogs or teeth of the standard, it would be raised with the object upon it. To successfully and safely operate the jack it was necessary for the operator to make this connection between the dog and the standard, and to see that such connection was made before pressing the lever downward.

The negligence alleged by the plaintiff in his complaint is that the jack was “an improper, inefficient, and unsuitable instrument with which to perform the said work” required of the plaintiff. His claim on the trial was that the jack was improper, inefficient, and unsuitable, not because of its construction, but because its dog and the cogs on the standard were so worn that it was not safe to be used, and in consequence thereof the dog slipped, precipitating him upon one of the rails, inflicting the injury which he received.

There was no evidence in the case tending to show that the jack was an improper, inefficient, and unsuitable instrument with which to perform the services required of the plaintiff, unless the testimony of the plaintiff and one of his witnesses that the [284]*284dog and the cogs on the standard were so worn as to be unsafe was evidence tending to prove one or more of those facts. The plaintiff claimed on the trial below that it had such tendency, while the defendant claimed otherwise; but the same was received without objection or exception. Whether it had such tendency is not necessary to determine, in view of the treatment of questions hereinafter made, and we take no further time in considering that matter.

The plaintiff was a section man working on the line of defendant’s railroad, and at the time of the accident was engaged with two other section men in lining the track in Island Pond railroad yard. In the performance of that duty the plaintiff was using the jack in question, which was produced on the trial of the case as a piece of evidence tending to show that it was not “an improper, inefficient, and unsuitable instrument,” with which the plaintiff was required to perform his duties. The evidence was undisputed that the jack was a standard jack in common use by railroads generally, and the question raised here, under the plaintiff’s claim, is whether it was out of repair in the respect claimed by the plaintiff, and whether there was any evidence tending to show that fact.

The evidence of the plaintiff fairly tended to show that at the time of the accident he was engaged in moving a rail on the line of defendant’s road. He had placed the projection attached to the standard under the rail to be moved, and had inclined the jack in the direction in which it was to be moved at an angle of about forty-five degrees, when, throwing the weight of his body upon the lever, it gave way resulting in the accident and injury of which the plaintiff complains. With the jack inclined as it was, the iron dog would have a tendency to fall of its own weight between the cogs or teeth of the standard. If the dog had been placed carefully, as the plaintiff was instructed to do by his foreman, only a few minutes before the accident, the possibility of the dog’s slipping, even if the dog and cogs were worn to the extent claimed by the plaintiff, is highly improbable; but in the condition in which we find the jack to be upon inspection, it was impossible for 'the dog to slip if so placed. The jack was a piece of real evidence, and of all proof was the most satisfactory and convincing. Of such evidence it can be said: ‘ ‘ Cum adsunt testimonia rerum, quid opus est verbis.” Best on Ev. Vol. 1, * 277; 10 R. C. L. 991, par. 176; Jones Com. on Ev. by Horwitz, [285]*285Vol. 3, par. 393. Such evidence is addressed to the senses of the tribunal for inspection (Jones Com. on Ev. by Horwitz, Vol. 1, par. 8a), and is sometimes referred to as physical facts, though the more generally accepted classification is that of real evidence; but, however classified, it means a fact the existence of which is perceptible to the senses. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, Vol. 3, 2586; Knock v. Tonopah, 38 Nev. 143, 145 Pac. Rep. 939, L. R. A. 1915 F, 3. The highest proof of which any fact is susceptible is that which presents itself to the senses of the court or jury. 10 R. C. L. 991, and see 17 Cyc. 290. So sensible is the law of the transcendent value of this class of evidence that in some cases the production of certain species of real evidence is peremptorily exacted to the exclusion of all substitutes. Thus a coroner’s inquest to ascertain the cause of the death of a person who has died suddenly must be held upon view of the body; Best on Ev. Vol. 1, * 274; Rapalje & Lawrence’s Law Dic., Vol. 2, 1067; 1 Bl. Com. * 348; 4 Bl. Com. * 274. Such evidence speaks for itself conclusively where the evidence thus produced is a mere matter of observation, requiring no explanation or scientific knowledge to understand it. No amount of personal testimony that a person was alive could overcome the real testimony of the dead body produced before the trier. When, as here, an object shows conclusively that it could not have operated as a witness testifies, the question should not be submitted to the jury, for the simple reason that in such circumstances the minds of reasonable men could not draw conflicting inferences. Such holding is not in conflict with State v. Manning, 75 Vt. 185, 54 Atl. 181. In that cáse there was no such evidence as real evidence, and the court in its charge was not referring to that class, and the papers in that case show that the reference by the court to real evidence was called forth by remarks of counsel for the State, respecting certain evidence, that such evidence was real evidence, and was also called forth upon the request of respondent’s counsel for instruction to the jury, with which the court complied, and told the jury, as requested, that there was no such classification as real and unreal evidence, referring to the evidence in that case, and using the language of counsel who had characterized some of the evidence in the case as such. The Supreme Court properly held that the instruction was without error.

The plaintiff produced only one witness, besides himself, who testified that the jack was out of repair in the respect [286]*286claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
107 A. 126, 93 Vt. 282, 1919 Vt. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riggie-v-grand-trunk-railway-co-vt-1919.