Sambos v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad

114 S.W. 567, 134 Mo. App. 460, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 662
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 567 (Sambos v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis 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
Sambos v. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad, 114 S.W. 567, 134 Mo. App. 460, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 662 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiff’s right arm was broken in an accident which occurred December 26, 1906, near Flat Rock, a station oh defendant’s railway in the State of Illinois. Plaintiff was in the service of defendant, and, with some thirty laborers, was engaged on said date*in stacking ties on defendant’s right of way. Two tracks ran parallel at the point where the work was in progress — one the main line, which ran through a cut twelve feet deep, and the other a siding, or as the witnesses said, a new track, which was on the' top of the embankment. The ties were in the -ditch by the main track, and were carried by the men to the top of the bank and piled there. Water commonly stood in the [464]*464ditch, but it had frozen and the ties were covered with ice, which the men who lifted them from the ditch, did not entirely clean off before throwing them on the stacks, and hence they were left slick and inclined to slip on each other. Steps had been made in the side of the embankment, up which the men climbed, several of them carrying a single tie. The evidence tends to show these facts: the ties were ponderous and about a foot in width; they were piled in stacks from eight to nine feet high, about six feet either way at the base, narrowing toward a top about two feet wide, on which two ties rested. Plaintiff’s particular task was to arrange the ties when placed by other laborers on the stack so they would lie straight. He was not performing this task when hurt, but, by direction of the foreman of the gang who watched the work and controlled the manner in which it was done, was adjusting a tie that lay on the ground and probably some two or three feet from the stack the men were working on, so as to start a new stack. That is to say, plaintiff was in the act of placing a single tie where a new pile was to be raised. He was doing this by order of the foreman, as said; but the order was not given by word of mouth, but by pointing, because plaintiff was a Greek who did not understand English. To carry out the order plaintiff stooped over to move the tie into the right place, and while he was doing this, some of the gang tossed another tie toward or on the top of the pile which struck either on the top or about a foot and a half below; whereupon the pile toppled and the ties in it scattered, one of them falling on and breaking plaintiff’s arm. When plaintiff stooped over he supposed no more ties would be thrown on the pile from which he turned, because, as he swore, he considered it finished, inasmuch as the foreman had ordered him to start a new stack. The last tie, which caused the stack to tumble, was thrown on it in obedience to a special order of the foreman, who, with an oath, told the men who were carrying this tie, to hurry up and [465]*465throw it on the pile. The foreman had been in charge all along of the work of getting the ties out of the ditch and stacking them on the hank, and his orders were obeyed by the men. The witnesses were examined minutely as to the circumstances of the accident, and though there are some discrepancies in their testimony, considered in its best phase for the plaintiff, it would prove the facts as we have narrated them. The petition, after giving substantially the same narrative regarding the particulars of the event, proceeds as follows :

“Plaintiff further states that he and the other employees of defendant who were then and there engaged in the work of handling and piling said ties, were subject to and were required to and did obey the orders of defendant/s said foreman, and said foreman had authority from defendant to direct each and every one of said employees in and about the said work and at all said times did so direct them; that said foreman had authority to point out the place where said ties were to be piled and to determine how many ties should be placed in the pile and the width and height of the piles of ties, and that said foreman did direct plaintiff and the other employees in and about the said work and had so directed them as to the building of the pile where plaintiff was at work when he sustained injuries as hereinafter mentioned.
“Plaintiff further states that by reason of the great height and the sloping condition of the sides of the said pile of ties and the fact that they were covered with ice and sleet and were slick and slippery, and the position where plaintiff was required to be and continue at work by defendant’s said foreman, as aforesaid, and the further fact that said ties were by the direction of defendant’s said foreman, being thrown and tossed upon the top of said pile, plaintiff was, by direction of defendant’s said foreman, placed and required to be and [466]*466work in a situation that was not reasonably safe and where plaintiff was liable to be struck by said ties and injured, and that defendant and its said foreman, then and there knew that plaintiff was not in a reasonably safe place to work, or would haye known thereof by the exercise of reasonable care for the plaintiff’s safety.
“Plaintiff further ayers that while he was so employed- and at work as aforesaid, and in the exercise of reasonable care for his own safety, other employees of defendant who were then and there at work, by direction of defendant’s said foreman, carried one of said ties to and threw and tossed the same upon the top of the said pile or stack of ties where plaintiff was at work, and that said tie, by reason of the condition aforesaid, did not remain in place but slipped and thereby caused other ties in said pile to slip, and that several of the said ties were thereby caused to and did slide, roll and fall down to and upon plaintiff and upon plaintiff’s right arm with such force and violence as to break and crush the bones thereof.”

The defenses were, a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence and of assumption of the risk by plaintiff. The law of Illinois was pleaded in the answer for the purpose of showing to what extent the two latter defenses Avere available in the jurisdiction where' the accident occurred. When the testimony for plaintiff was in, the court directed a verdict for defendant, plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside, and his motion having been denied, he prosecuted this appeal.

1. In our opinion the facts in proof would support an inference of negligence on the part of defendant’s foreman and therefore presented a case for the jury, unless plaintiff was shown to have contributed to his injury by his own fault or to have assumed the risk of such an accident. For the foreman- to direct plaintiff to commence a new stack of ties in the immediate vicinity of a stack eight or nine feet high, two feet wide at [467]*467the top and composed of slippery ties, and gire a hurry command to other members of the gang, emphasized by an oath, to throw a slippery tie on top of what was likely an unstable stack, while plaintiff was stooping to obey his order, might induce reasonable men to find the duty of observing due care for plaintiff’s safety, was violated. Aside from the intrinsic danger of throwing a tie on top of the slippery pile when plaintiff was stooping on the opposite side, it is to be remarked that an order given in that style, was adapted to 'disconcert the men who were carrying the tie and make them more precipitate in tossing it than they otherwise would .have been, when more care than usual was required because of plaintiff’s exposed position.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 567, 134 Mo. App. 460, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sambos-v-cleveland-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-railroad-moctapp-1908.