Sabol v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.

238 N.W. 281, 255 Mich. 548, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 679
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1931
DocketDocket No. 1, Calendar No. 35,605.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 281 (Sabol v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabol v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co., 238 N.W. 281, 255 Mich. 548, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 679 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

McDonald, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants, Chicago '& North Western Railway Company and F. W. Loos, train master, from a circuit court judgment in an action to recover damages for personal injuries the plaintiff received while employed in a dining car of a circus train which was being moved at the time on the defendants’ tracks at Iron Mountain, Michigan. The train consisted of 29 cars made up of 11 flat cars, 9 stock cars, and 9 coaches. When it reached Iron Mountain, the train was broken into three sections. The section containing the coaches to which the dining car was attached was left standing on an inclined track. The stock cars were placed on a siding. The flat car section returned to move the coaches. After three or four unsuccessful attempts at -coupling, the movement was abandoned and the engine with the flat cars pulled away. In the meantime, the bumping of the coaches had started them moving slowly down the grade. They gradually increased in momentum, caught up with the flat cars two blocks away, and crashed into them. The shock overturned a large coffee urn, and the plaintiff who was working nearby was drenched with its boiling contents. He was severely scalded and sustained serious injuries. At the time of the accident he was working for the Western Show Company, Inc., a Delaware corporation, under a written employment contract which purported to release his employer and the railway company from liability for injuries caused by their negligence. The circus train was being moved over the defendant railway company’s tracks under a special contract with the “101 Ranch,” whose prop *551 er corporate name was “Miller Brothers 101 Banch Trust,” and whose trade name was “Miller Brothers 101 Banch Beal Wild West Show.” The Western Show Company leased the physical property and trade-name of the Miller Brothers 101 Banch Trust, and was in possession and control at the time of the accident. The transportation contract stipulated that the railway company would furnish locomotive engines, engineers, firemen, and other employees to enable the show company to transport its circus and equipment by special train, and that, while so employed, they should be deemed servants of the show company and that the railway company would not be liable for their negligence. The contract contained a recital that it was not made by the railway company as a common carrier but as a hirer of motive power and men to operate it.

On the trial, both the employment' contract and the special transportation contract were offered by the defendants as a complete bar to the plaintiff’s recovery. They were not so regarded by the court, who permitted the case to go to the jury on the issue of negligence. A verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $18,000 was rendered against the railway company and its trainmaster, F. W. Loos, who was in charge of the movements of the cars at the time of the accident. Liability against the other defendants, who were all members of the train crew, was abandoned at the close of the proofs.

1. The first question to be considered is the effect of the contracts on plaintiff’s right to recover in this action.

The trial court excluded the employment contract as evidence on the ground that the plaintiff’s signature was obtained by fraud; and the plaintiff claims that the other contract is not effective as a *552 defense because Ms employer, the Western Show Company, was not a party to it. We need not discuss these questions, because, though both contracts be considered as valid and binding on the plaintiff, they have no application in a case such as this where the negligence relied on consists of wilful and wanton misconduct, commonly called wilful negligence. The term is self-contradictory, but courts and text-writers have given it a definite meaning in the law of negligence and it is generally understood. Gibbard v. Cursan, 225 Mich. 311.

There is no doubt as to the right of a railway company in a contract not made in its capacity as common carrier to stipulate against liability for injuries caused by the ordinary negligence of its employees. In a few States such contracts are declared to be null and void by statute; in some others courts have held them to be invalid as against public policy; but in the Federal courts and in Michigan where there is no statute on the subject their validity is quite generally upheld. McCree v. Davis, 280 Fed. (C. C. A.) 959; Coup v. Railway Co., 56 Mich. 111 (56 Am. Rep. 374); Mehegan v. Railway Co., 178 Mich. 694 (L. R. A. 1915E, 1170); Weaver v. Railroad Co., 139 Mich. 590, 599 (5 Ann. Cas. 764).

But no court has sustained their validity beyond protection from liability for injuries caused by ordinary negligence. There seems to be no Michigan case directly in point, but McCree v. Davis, a leading Federal authority, states the rule as follows, citing New York Central R. Co. v. Mohney, 252 U. S. 152 (40 Sup. Ct. 287, 9 A. L. R. 496):

“It is a settled rule of law that a contract purporting to release the defendants from all liability for negligence would be ineffective as a defense, where the injury to the plaintiff results from such *553 wilful and wanton negligence on the part of the servants of the defendant.”

In the instant case there is ample evidence that defendant Loos, who was directing the movement of the cars at the time of the accident, was guilty of wilful negligence. In denying a motion to direct a verdict in favor of defendants, the trial court correctly characterized his conduct as follows:

“There was testimony justifying the inference that Loos saw the coaches start to creep and knew they were insecurely fastened but made no effort to stop them and walked away in disregard of the consequences to the occupants of these cars as well as to others down in the yard. His conduct was such as to be put in the class with the wilful doer of wrong. Gibbard v. Cursan, 225 Mich. 311. He caused this string of cars, laden with human beings, to be started down that inclined track towards another string of cars upon and near which many other persons were and then, with supreme indifference of the consequences, walked away and let them roll. He was not only guilty of negligence, but of downright recklessness amounting to wanton and wilful misconduct. ’ ’

In Gibbard v. Cursan, supra, the court, quoting from the text of 20 B. C. L. p. 145, stated the elements necessary to constitute wilful misconduct as follows:

“ (1) Knowledge of a situation requiring the exercise of ordinary care and diligence to avert injury to another; (2) ability to avoid the resulting harm by ordinary care and diligence in the use of the means at hand; (3) the omission to use such care and diligence to avert the threatened danger, when to the ordinary mind it must be apparent that the result is likely to prove disastrous to another,”

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Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 281, 255 Mich. 548, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabol-v-chicago-north-western-railway-co-mich-1931.