St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Fitzmartin

1913 OK 670, 136 P. 764, 39 Okla. 654, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 566
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1913
Docket2765
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1913 OK 670 (St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Fitzmartin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis S. F. R. Co. v. Fitzmartin, 1913 OK 670, 136 P. 764, 39 Okla. 654, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 566 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

THACKER, C.

Plaintiff in error will be designated as defendant, and defendant in error will be designated as plaintiff, in accord with their respective titles in the trial court.

Plaintiff, upon the verdict of a jury, recovered judgment in tlie trial court for the sum of $10,000 as damages for the alleged unlawful, wrongful, willful, and malicious failure and *656 refusal of the defendant, after demand by him made upon it, to give him what is known as a service letter, stating the cause for which it had discharged him from its service as its freight train conductor, and otherwise complying with the requirements of the Act of April 24, 1908 (Laws 1907-08, c. 53, art. 3), which is section 4056, Comp. Laws 1909 (Rev. Laws 1910, sec. 3775).

Plaintiff was such conductor 'on defendant’s railroad from April 30, 1907, to October 27, 1908, inclusive.

During about 90 days prior to September 22, 1908, burglary (referred to as “robbery” throughout the record) of unwatched freight cars in transit dn its road between Sherman, Tex., and Sapulpa, Okla., was of frequent occurrence; and on said date a bulletin was issued by M. A. Gossette, its trainmaster, notifying its conductors, including the plaintiff, that they, and their brakemen, would be held responsible and dismissed for any such burglaries thereafter occurring, the notice reciting, as reason therefor, that no reasonable excuse could be seen for such burglaries if trains were properly watched.

On October 19, 1908, defendant’s car No. 120,927, in its train No. 529, in charge'of plaintiff as conductor, was burglarized while in transit and not watched between the stations mentioned, and on October 27, 1908, the aforesaid trainmaster, by letter of that date, informed plaintiff that he was “taken out of service” for “allowing” said car No. 120,927 to be burglarized.

It appears from the evidence that “negligently failing to prevent” is meant by the woi'd “allowing” as used in the last aforesaid letter, and that there was no^ intent to charge plaintiff with more than this.

A few days later plaintiff received, and thenceforth retained (without objection until July 10, 1909), a service letter in words and figures as follows:

“St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company. Certificate No. 362. Impression copy to be taken in book kept for that purpose. Francis, Okla., Nov. 2, 1908. This is to certify: That Thomas Fitzmartin has been employed in the capacity of brakeman and conductor at Francis, Okla., on the Red River Division from April 10, 1907, to October 27, 1908. Reasons for leav *657 ing service, discharged. Promoted to freight conductor April 30th, 1907. Age 41; weight 160; height 5 ft. 5 in.; complexion light; hair auburn; eyes blue. George Geiger, Superintendent.
“No letters will be issued to employes leaving the service except on this form. They must be signed by head of department personally. W. C. Nixon, Vice Pres, and Gen’l. Mgr.”

Plaintiff had misrepresented his age in his applications to defendant for employment; and the foregoing letter, following his own statement, stated the same about five years younger than he was. At the time of his discharge plaintiff was a member of O. R. C. (Order of Railway Conductors), with immediate membership in local order No. 53 at Denison, Tex., where he resided; and he was in the service of defendant under the conductors’ and brakemen’s schedule of June 1, 1907, the same being a contract (known generally as “Trainmen’s Schedule”) between conductors and brakemen, entered into by them through their respective orders, and the defendant, which contain the provisions following:

“Article 24. Any trainman leaving (the service of this company after employment of thirty days or more, will, at his request, be given a letter by his superintendent, stating his term of service, capacity in which employed, and whether he is leaving the seiwice of his own accord or has been discharged.”
“Article 26. Conductors and brakemen' will not be discharged, suspended or given demerit marks without just and sufficient cause. Before inflicting punishment in form of dismissal or suspension, trainmaster or superintendent will hold investigation if requested by employee involved, except in cases of head-end collision or drunkenness. If investigation-is deemed necessary they may be present, together with a disinterested employee of their choice. All decisions will be rendered within fifteen days when practicable. In case of dismissal, suspension or demerit marks, if any conductor or brakeman thinks sentence unjust, he shall have the right within ten days to refer his case by written statement to his superintendent. Within ten days of receipt of this notice the case shall have a thorough investigation by proper officers of the company, at which investigation he may be present if he so desires, and also be represented by any disinterested employees of his choice. In case he Is dissatisfied with result of investigation, he shall have the *658 right of appeal to the general officers. In case punishment is inflicted and subsequently found to be unjust, he shall be reinstated and paid at regular rates for all time lost.”

Soon after being discharged plaintiff, through his said local order No. 53, procured E. L. Hill, who was chairman of the grievance committee of- the Sapulpa Division of the Orde'r of Railway Conductors,, to apply to defendant’s division superintendent, Geo-. Geiger, for reinstatement and pay at regular rates for all lost time; and Superintendent Geiger, within three weeks after plaintiff was discharged, proposed to reinstate him without pay for lost time, but plaintiff declined that proposition. About and not later than January 18, 1909, C. IT. ITasel, chairman of the general grievance committee of the Order of Railway Conductors, with Local Chairman Hill and plaintiff both present, took this matter of reinstatement with pay for all time lost, up in conference with J. E. Hutchinson, defendant’s general superintendent, at Springfield, Mo.; but, after conference, this official declined to do more, and formally offered to reinstate plaintiff without pay for time lost. During the conference in this regard with Superintendent Hutchinson, plaintiff made a statement, as to- the burglary .mentioned and as to a prior burglary of a car in a train in his charge between the aforesaid stations, which convinced Chairman Hill that he had been wrong in his former view that plaintiff was entitled to pay for lost time; and, at the time of that conference, both Chairman ITasel and Chairman Hill thought plaintiff guilty of negligence in failing to prevent the burglary for which he was discharged; and thenceforth recommended his acceptance of the proposition of reinstatement without pay for lost time. Plaintiff appealed from this action o.f Chairman ITasel to the full general grievance committee of the Order of Railway Conductors, but subsequently dismissed the appeal, and this committee approved Mr. Hasel’s report of his action.

On July 10, 1909, plaintiff, for the first time, made demand of defendant for a service letter as follows:

“Denison, Texas., July 10, 1909. Mr. J. F. Hickey, Ass’t. Sup’t. St. L. & S. F. R. R.

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Related

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181 P. 504 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1919)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 670, 136 P. 764, 39 Okla. 654, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-s-f-r-co-v-fitzmartin-okla-1913.