Sikora v. Great Northern Railway Co.

282 N.W. 588, 230 Wis. 283, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 70
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 282 N.W. 588 (Sikora v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sikora v. Great Northern Railway Co., 282 N.W. 588, 230 Wis. 283, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 70 (Wis. 1939).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed December 6, 1938:

Martin, J.

The appellant makes the following assignment of errors:

1. The court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.

2. The court erred in denying defendant’s alternative motions after verdict:

a. To change the answers of the jury to certain questions in the special verdict, and for judgment upon such verdict as so amended.

b. To set aside the verdict and for a new trial:

(1) Because the verdict is contrary to law and to the evidence.

(2) Because the percentages of negligence attributed to the respective parties are grossly disproportionate.

(3) Because plaintiff’s counsel, in his argument to the jury, made improper and prejudicial remarks.

(4) Because the damages are excessive.

3. The court erred in granting plaintiff’s motion for judgment.

It appears that plaintiff was employed by the Carnegie Dock & Fuel Company in the capacity of a car cooper. His work in this connection consisted of preparing empty cars for loading. At times he did other work about the dock. On the day in question the defendant’s engine and train crew [287]*287were at work on the dock, engaged in switching operations from 8 a. m. until the accident occurred, with the exception of a twenty-minute lunch period at noon. They had lunch at a switch shanty located about a mile south of the dock. The engine and crew returned to the dock at about 2 p. m. When they returned to the dock, a stop was made at the dock foreman’s office to get orders as to the work the dock foreman wanted done. It appears that there was a string of twenty-six empty cars and three loaded cars on the loading track at the south end of the dock. The dock foreman, Gorm-ley, directed the switch foreman, De Shane, to pull the twenty-six empty cars and the three loaded cars northward on the loading track. The three loaded cars were to be cut off and the empties pulled far enough north from the loaded cars so that there would be space to unload each of the three cars at the same place. The three loaded cars were to be unloaded one at a time, and as each car was unloaded, it was to be moved northward and the next car to the south was then to be brought to the same spot and unloaded and then moved northward. When this operation was completed, the instructions to the train crew, given .by Mr. Gormley, were to- take out of the dock thirteen loaded cars which at the time were on the north end of the dock. The engine and crew came onto the dock in the afternoon, on the “main” track and proceeded thereon to a point in the vicinity of the dock foreman’s office where they received the orders above mentioned. While coming onto the dock at about 2, the switch foreman, De Shane, saw the plaintiff. He was walking at that time in a northerly direction on the track next to the one the engine was on. This was about twenty minutes before the accident occurred. The day was clear and the visibility good.

It appears that when the engine pulling the twenty-six empty cars came in contact with the thirteen loaded cars on the north end of the dock, the engine could not push the [288]*288loaded cars to the north and pull the empties at the same time. The wheels of the locomotive slipped, and it was necessary to cut off the empties and shove the loaded cars northward alone. Following this movement of the thirteen loaded cars, the dock foreman observed that the string of empty cars should be moved farther north on the loading track. De-Shane thereupon signaled for the engine tO' return to the string of empty cars. When the engine came back, De Shane coupled it on the north end of the string of empty cars, and they were then pulled fifty or sixty feet farther north. It was on this movement of the string of empty cars that plaintiff was injured. It further appears that when De Shane got orders from the dock foreman for the work for the afternoon, he and Switchman Novak went to the south end of the dock to operate the northward movement of the twenty-six empties and the three loaded cars to which reference has been made, and Switchman Harrington went to the north end of the dock to see that the couplers on the thirteen loaded cars were in proper position and that the pressure on the brakes was off so that the engine could couple up these cars when the engine backed down on the loading track. The engine crossed over on the southerly crossover from the “main” track to the “loading” track and coupled on the twenty-six empties and the three loaded cars, pulling them north on the “loading” track as above indicated. Switchman Novak did not participate in and was not present during the movement of the cars when plaintiff was injured. None of the engine crew saw the plaintiff immediately before the movement in which he was injured. They did not see him at any time engaged in any work on the east side of the string of empty cars nor did the dock foreman know that plaintiff was around the empty cars.

Plaintiff testified that about ten or fifteen minutes before the accident, he was talking to one of his fellow dock work[289]*289men who was on the west side of the string of , empty cars. Plaintiff was then on the east side of said cars. There is some conflict in the evidence as to what was said. The plaintiff testified that his fellow workman “asked me to come over and help him take care of some screens on the rig.” This is denied by his fellow workman who testified:

“Just before this accident happened I was over at the rig, with the screen. I was there all the time. I had some talk with Mr. Sikora that day. That must have been about five or ten minutes before the accident. We were working near where he was working. We took down the screen. The screen was west of him on the other side of the rig. We were about twenty-five feet or so west from where Martin was. We took down the screen. We were working on the part of the dock where the coal is piled. When I saw Martin there I told him we were through with the loading, that we were going to the little dock and unload some cars there. I told him to go. We unloaded retail cars there. That means we would get in some overtime.”

The plaintiff was injured while attempting to climb over the coupler between two cars. Plaintiff’s height was five feet one inch. Plaintiff claims that he was working on the east side of the string of empties before he attempted to cross over to the west side. He admits that before he went between the cars, he looked and saw the locomotive. Pie further testified :

“Pie wasn’t sure whether the locomotive was coupled to the string of cars but he didn’t want to go around the cars because it would take too long.”

He was standing on the coupling when the engine started. In this connection, he testified:

“I went through the cars and then the engine began immediately and jarred me down to the ground and as I fell I caught onto some brakes attached to the wheels but my foot got under the wheel.”

[290]*290Plaintiff was found under the seventeenth car from the engine. Gormley, the dock foreman, testified that when the engine is on the “loading” track, there is always danger of the cars being moved.

“My men understand that they are to watch out for that when the engine is on the loading track.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

DeWitz v. Northern States Power Co.
69 N.W.2d 431 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1955)
Quady v. Sickl
51 N.W.2d 3 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1952)
Foulkes v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway Co.
40 N.W.2d 507 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1949)
Gvora v. Carlson
37 N.W.2d 848 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1949)
Post v. Thomas
3 N.W.2d 344 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 N.W. 588, 230 Wis. 283, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sikora-v-great-northern-railway-co-wis-1939.