Southern Ry. Co. v. Roberts

206 F.2d 508, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2778
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1953
Docket14136_1
StatusPublished

This text of 206 F.2d 508 (Southern Ry. Co. v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Ry. Co. v. Roberts, 206 F.2d 508, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2778 (5th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

RUSSELL, Circuit Judge.

This action, originally filed in the state court and removed to the federal court, was brought by the widow of Joseph L. Roberts against Southern Railway Company and J. P. Cawley to recover damages for Roberts’ death. For reasons not necessary to he discussed here, Cawley was dismissed as a party defendant and the suit, tried by the Court without a jury, proceeded to judgment against the Railway Company. Although neither the complaint nor the answer specifically indicates that the suit was filed pursuant to the Georgia Employers’ Liability Act of 1909, 1 the parties concede that it was, and the case was apparently so tried.

Roberts, a machinist, and Cawley a boilermaker had both been employed by the Railroad Company at its Inman Yards in Atlanta, Georgia, for a number of years prior to August 4, 1945. On that date, between 8 and 9 o’clock in the morning, Cawley went to the office of the general foreman, J. M. Jones, and asked him if he would discharge a man for fighting. Jones, who was talking over the telephone at the time, without interrupting his telephone conversation, replied that it would depend upon what the fight was about. A few moments later Cawley was seen standing over the body of Roberts, whom he had apparently struck with his fist. Cawley muttered something and walked off in the direction of the washhouse. Roberts was taken to the hospital where he died the following day. The record does not disclose any further details of this tragic occurrence.

The complaint alleged as grounds for recovery that Cawley “was a man of violent and ungovernable temper and disposition, having a propensity to bully and assault and injure others without cause”; that this was known to the defendant and it nevertheless continued to retain him in its employ in close proximity to complainant’s deceased husband; furthermore, that the foreman, Jones, took no steps at the time of the inquiry just related to avoid or prevent any fighting on the part of Cawley, and that the death of her husband was caused by the unprovoked assault, of Cawley jointly with the wrongful acts of the defendant in continuing to employ Cawley, and by the failure of the defendant to investigate what Cawley meant or intended by his question, and in failing to take steps to prevent injury or damage to any of its employees. Defendant denied that Cawley was of dangerous and violent character and asserted that under the circumstances its foreman had no opportunity to make any *510 inquiry and, further, that there was nothing in the conversation to put him on notice that Cawley intended to assault anyone, or engage in any fighting at that time.

Cawley had been employed by the Railway Company at Inman Yards since 1937, and possibly prior thereto. During the period of 1937 to 1939, he had assigned to him as a helper one Samuels. Samuels testified that during that period Cawley used “bad words” all of the time. It was because of this that he asked to be transferred to another job in 1939. He also testified that Cawley .once threatened him., When asked to relate the details of this incident, Samuels “couldn’t just exactly say”, but stated that “he just threatened me once and got down off the engine and went on about his business.” Samuels made no report to his supervisors concerning Cawley’s conduct, nor did he tell them why he desired to be transferred to another job.

A former employee of Southern Railway Company, George W. Simmons, testified that Cawley had a reputation of being hot tempered, dangerous, a troublemaker, and for drinking on the job. He said that about six weeks before Roberts’ death Cawley had made an assault upon him and had threatened to, and indicated that he was going to, drag Simmons to the foreman to report what Cawley thought was improper conduct on Simmons’ part. Thereafter, Cawley reported the incident to foreman Jones and the latter talked to Simmons about it. Simmons related his version of the altercation to Jones and told him that Cawley was a dangerous man.

Another former employee, Claud E. Jones, testified that Cawley had a reputation of being overbearing and that he was a “bad sort of fellow to play pranks on people, then you could take it or leave it, you could either fight with him or let it go.” He further testified that Cawley was not a dangerous person, but that he tried to start a fight with nearly everyone in the shop, explaining that he would provoke people by playing pranks on them, rather than being the aggressor in fights. In 1942, Cawley played a very offensive prank on the witness. As a result, Jones attacked Cawley and tried to kill him. From the testimony; the fighting was all by Jones, though Cawley undoubtedly provoked it by his offensiveness. This fight was called to the attention of both the general foreman and the roundhouse foreman. Jones stated that he had seen Cawley drink on the j°b and had taken drinks with him.

On behalf of the defendant it was testified by foreman Jones, its master mechanic, who was immediately over him, the assistant roundhouse foreman, the boiler foreman, and a former boilermaker in the roundhouse that Cawley was not of a dangerous character and that while he engaged in “pranks” they were no more numerous than those customarily played by others in and around the roundhouse. Foreman Jones had been transferred to the Inman Yards roundhouse after the occasion when employee Claud Jones, in 1942, attacked Cawley and tried to kill him. He was unable to recall the complaint against Cawley which former employee Simmons related in his testimony. According to Jones’ estimate of Simmons, he was an aged man continually making complaints about mat-tens of such moment as the employees smoking cigarettes and failing to put waste PaPer in its proper place. With reference to the question put to him by Cawley at the time of the telephone conversation, he testitied that Cawley showed no evidence of being upset or angry and merely made the inquiry and left before he completed his telephone • conversation. He had no time within which to make further inquiry,

The court found that prior to August, 1945, Cawley “had been engaged in at least two quarrels or ' altercations with fellow employees”, one of these being the fight in 1942, with Claud E. Jones, and the other a “difficulty” in 1937, with employee Samuels. That “it was customary for the employees to play practical jokes on each other, sometimes of a rather crude nature, of which fact, the circumstances show, the defendant company, its agents, foreman and superintendent had knowledge.” The court further found that it was probable that the deceased Roberts had knowledge of Cawley’s disposition and reputation, and made no complaint and continued to work in the roundhouse with Cawley. The court *511 thought, however, that it did not appear that the deceased knowingly assumed the risk of death at Cawley’s hands. With reference to the conduct of the foreman Jones at the time Cawley made the inquiry to him about the consequences to an employee who engaged in a fight, the court found that under the circumstances it was the foreman’s duty to intervene and prevent injury by Cawley upon any employee. This finding is set forth in the margin. 2

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Bluebook (online)
206 F.2d 508, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ry-co-v-roberts-ca5-1953.