Smiley v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

222 S.W.2d 481, 359 Mo. 474, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 639
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1949
DocketNo. 40988.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 481 (Smiley v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smiley v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 222 S.W.2d 481, 359 Mo. 474, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 639 (Mo. 1949).

Opinion

*477 CONKLING, J.

Clifford J. Smiley, plaintiff-respondent, a switchman, recovered a judgment of $50,000 for personal injuries against his employer, St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company, appellant. This appeal presents two main questions, (1) was there shown a violation of the automatic coupler statute (45 IJ. S. C. A. § 2) which proximately caused plaintiff’s injury, and (2) was this verdict excessive ?

Plaintiff was one of defendant’s switching crew operating in its yards in Springfield, Missouri, about' 10:45 A. M., bn September 21, 1946. The facts relied on and which the jury could and did reasonably find, stated most favorably to plaintiff, are as follows: Plaintiff, and other members of the George Kirkham switching crew, were moving freight cars between defendant’s “old yard” and its “Kansas yard”, about 2 miles west. This accident occurred in the old yard, which extended east and west and had 9 parallel switch tracks, all connected by lead tracks at the west and east limits of the yard. The west lead track ran southwest and northeast. Along the south edge of the old yard was track number 1, the west bound main line track. The switch tracks of the old yard numbered 2 to 10, north from track 1. The old yard was on a slight down gradé to the west toward the west lead track.

At that time another switch crew, of which John Banks was foreman (hereinafter called the “Banks’ crew”) was also worídng on and off of the west lead of the old yard placing freight cars bn various tracks, including track 3.

Foreman Kirkham and his' crew were ordered by Yardmaster LaVelle to move certain ears from track 6 of the old yard over to the Kansas yard; to return certain cars from the Kansas yard to track 2 of the old yard; and then to shove the cars on track 3 of the old yard over to the Kansas yard. The yardmaster told them that ‘ ‘ track number 3 is loaded”, which meant that the cars on it were “ready to be moved out”. Shortly before Kirkham’s crew reached the old yard with the cars directed by LaVelle to be brought from the Kansas yard, Banks’ crew had kicked some cars in on track 3. Seeing Kirkham’s crew approaching, and in order not to interfere with Kirkham’s operations, Banks had his engine and the cars it was switching moved in onto track 1 east of the west lead. Kirkham’s crew pulled the cars they brought from the Kansas yard in on track 2. Most of those cars were then cut loose from Kirkham’s engine and left on track 2. *478 Plaintiff ay as on top of those cars. After setting the brakes on the three west cars left standing on track 2, plaintiff got doAvn near the Avest lead, between tracks 2 and 3, and walked east to prepare the cars on track 3. to be shoved to the Kansas yard. 'Kirkham’s engine Avas then Avorking from the east lead track at the east end of the old yard setting some of the cars it had 'brought from the Kansas yard onto other tracks.

After Kirkham’s crew' had pulled in on track 2, Banks’ crew pulled back off of track 1 and from the Ávest lead, resumed kicking the cars they Avere switching in onto the various tracks of the old yard. Banks’ crew Avere merely kicking the various cars in their drag in onto the Amrious tracks to classify or sort them. It Avas not the duty of Banks’ creAv to couple together the various cars kicked in on those tracks (including track 3) and no effort Avas made by them to couple those cars. Other employees testified it was plaintiff’s duty, as field man, to couple the cars on track 3. George D. Laker, a switchman in Banks’ crew testified that the Avest end of the west car on track 3 Avas 400 to 500 feet east of the Avest lead; that Avhen Pennsylvania coal car 863,205 was kicked into track 3 a box car, then coupled to the west end of that Pennsylvania coal car, was kicked in at the same time; that when those two cars were kicked in onto track 3 no effort was made to couple those cars to the cars already standing on track 3; that when the Pennsylvania coal car Avas kicked in on track 3, “. . . it was kicked in there, kicked against the other car. . . . Q. Do you remember about the impact of this Pennsylvania car against the other car? A. Well, it wasn’t hard. Q. It was the usual impact? A. Yes. Q. One that Avould make a coupling if it would couple? A. Yes, I guess they went together. Q. Sir?, A. I say they could have coupled, yes.”

Plaintiff testified, “it Avas my duty (as field man) to see that they (the cars on track 3) Avere all coupled up, all the brakes were let off, and that they were all together ... I started in at the end, the west end of these cars (on track 3) and I went along inspecting to see that there Avere no brakes on them, to see that they were all coupled up; of course I found this particular car (Pennsylvania coal car 863,205) that Avas not coupled, the coupling Avas not completed.” The knuckles of the couplers Avere “closed absolutely tight” but the coupling pin on the east end of the Pennsylvania coal car had not dropped. When the knuckles are together and the couplers closed the'pin should drop. Under those conditions the pin “aaúII drop if it is not in bad order”. If the tAvd couplers AA¡ere completely closed together “it doesn’t haAre to be any jar or impact for the pin to drop”. But defendant’s Foreman of Inspectors, a man of 44 years experience, testified, “Q. You do have trouble AAÚth'pins sticking up and couplers Avon’t make? A. That is true. Q. But when the couplers are pressed together that pin is supposed to drop down? A. Th^t is *479 right, when they are thoroughly closed”. To complete the coupling it was necessary to drop the pin. If it was not dropped that particular coupling would not hold.

When asked as to the condition of that coupler he was seeking to couple, plaintiff testified, “The knuckles were together and closed absolutely tight, there was no slack in them at all. Q. What did that indicate to you as an experienced man? A. That indicated there had been sufficient impact to couple it up had the pin dropped.”

He further testified, “Lots of times you can take hold of this (pin lift levbr) and jiggle it up and down and the pin will fall in place. . . . I just stood there (at the side of the car) and jiggled it (the pin lift lever) up and lifted it as high as it could go and I would release this lever and that would give it a chance to drop down in place like it should, raising it up and down that way, if the pin was going to fall it would have fell in place.”

It was plaintiff’s duty to complete the coupling and necessary that he do so. If he had waited for ICirkham’s switch engine to shove through track 3 from the east shoving the cars on track 3 ahead of it, “it would have been too late then . . . because you (the Pennsylvania coal car and those west of it) would have started rolling ... to the west then . . . there would have been nothing to stop them, they wouldn’t have any brakes on them at all”, and those cars would have rolled uncontrolled down the grade into the west lead.

After the pin did not drop by manipulation of the lift lever from the side of the coal car, after looking to see that nothing was coming, and to complete the coupling plaintiff “went in between the cars to drop it (the pin) with my hand”. It appears that the method was to “go in from the bottom of the .drawbar and try to work it down with your fingers. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 481, 359 Mo. 474, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smiley-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1949.