St. Louis-S. F. Ry. Co. v. Landers

1925 OK 1010, 243 P. 959, 116 Okla. 142, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
Docket15960
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1925 OK 1010 (St. Louis-S. F. Ry. Co. v. Landers) 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. Ry. Co. v. Landers, 1925 OK 1010, 243 P. 959, 116 Okla. 142, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 366 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, C.

The parties to this action will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff, Warren Landers, instituted his action in the district court of Pontotoc county to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while in defendant’s employ as a switchman. After issues had been joined, a trial was had resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $12,500. ■ Defendant’s moton for a new trial was overruled and exception reserved. Judgment was ■rendered in accordance with the verdict, and the cause comes regularly to this court upon defendant’s appeal by petition in error and case-made attached.

Fo,r reversal of the judgment, defendant assigns as error: First, that the trial court erred in his instructions to the jury; second, the court erred in refusing to give to the jury instructions requested by the defendant ; third, the verdict of the jury is not sustained by sufficient evidence; fourth, the evidence of both plaintiff and defendant shows that plaintiff’s injuries were the result of an assumed risk; and fifth, the verdict of the jury is excessive.

The evidence discloses that the plaintiff, a man about 33 years of age, had been engaged in railroading and .railroad work for about 14 years, and as a switchman for some *143 seven years, and had been a switchman in defendant's yard, where the accident occurred, for three years. On the occasion of the accident, he went to work at 4 o’clock in the morning. His duties required him to alight from a moving train at a certain switch stand in the defendant’s yards. In performing this duty, at about 5:30 o’clock, just a® it was growing light, he stepped upon something loose and fell. One of his a,rms fell across the rail and was cut off between the elbow and wrist. The evidence shows, without ^conflict, that for a number of feet about and around the particular switch stand, at which place the plaintiff alighted, in the line of his duty, there was an accumulation of rocks described by all of the witnesses as being from the size of “your fist” to 'smaller sizes. The plaintiff testified that he did not know of the accumulation of rocks about the switch stand and that he did not see them. He stated that he did not know what he stepped on, but presumed it was a rock — something loose —that caused him to he thrown on the t,raek.

It is contended by the defendant that, as the record discloses, both parties were engaged in interstate commerce at the time of plaintiff’s injury, that the case is governed exclusively by the Act of Congress known as the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (April 22, 1908, as amended. April 5, 1910), and that paragraph No. 1 of the court’s instructions to the jury is in conflict with the provisions of the federal act, and the case of Seaboard Air Line Railway v. Horton, 233 U. S. 492, is cited in support of the proposition.

By the first section of said act, a right of action is conferred (under conditions specified) for injury or death of the employe “resulting in whole otr in part from the negligence of any of the officers, agents, or employes of such carrier, or by reason of any defect or insufficiency due to its negligence in its cars, engines, appliances, machinery, track, roadbed, works, boats, wharves, or other equipment.”

It is settled that since Congress, by the Aot of 1908, took possession of the field of the employeir’s liability to employes in interstate transportation by rail, all other laws upon the subject are superseded. Second Employers’ Liability Cases, 223 U. S. 1, 55.

It is said in the Seaboard Case, supra:

“It was the intention of Congress to base the action upon negligence only, and to exclude responsibility of the carrier to its employes for defects and insufficiencies not attributable to negligence.”

It is further said in the opinion:

“The plain effect of these wo,rds ‘due to its negligence’ is to condition the liability upon negligence.”

It appears in the Seaboard Case a locomotive engine was placed in the plaintiff’s charge; that it was equipped with a certain water guage, a device attached to the boiler head, for the purpose of showing the level of the water in the boiler, and consisting of a brass frame, or case, enclosing a thin glass tube which communicated with the boiler above and below, in such manner that the tube received water and steam direct from the boiley and under the full boiler pressure. In order to shield the engineer from injury in ease of the bursting of the tube, a piece of ordinary glass, known as a guard glass, should have been provided, this being a part of the regular equipment of said water gauge. The plaintiff was an experienced locomotive engineer, and according to his own testimony was fully aware of the function of the guatrd glass and of its importance to his safety. He testified that when he took the engine out on his first trip, he observed that the guard glass was missing; that upon his return he reported this to the defendant’s roundhouse foreman and asked him for a guard glass; that the foreman stated there were none in stock at that place and that he would send and get one, and that plaintiff should meanwhile run the engine without one, and that having ineffectually endeavored to get a guard glass from another source, the plaintiff proceeded to run the engine with the use of the unguarded water gauge until a certain time thereafter, when the glass exploded and flying fragments struck him in the face, upon which his claim for damages was based.

Under this state of facts, an instruction given by the trial wurt to the effect tha* the absence of the guard glass was conclusive evidence of defendant’s negligence was held to be error.

However, the principal questions raised in the Seaboard Case, supra, pertain to the issues of assumption of risk and contributory negligence, and the opinion concludes that defendant was entitled to have a requested instruction offered by it given respecting the assumption of risk, and that as the charge actually given did not cover the same grounds, there was error.

The paragraph of the instructions complained of in the instant case is as follows:

“You are instructed that the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff to 'keep its yard in a reasonably ’safe condition, so that *144 switchmen could alight from moving switch trains, with ¡reasonable safety, and that if the defendant failed to perform this duty and such failure resulted in an injury to the plaintiff, which injury caused him damage, then you will find for the plaintiff unless you find for the defendant under other instructions given you.”

The argument, as we understand it, is that the instruction in question ignores the element “due to its negligence” as provided in ithe federal ¡act.

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Related

Kansas, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. Dillon
1942 OK 174 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)
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1931 OK 319 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 1010, 243 P. 959, 116 Okla. 142, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-s-f-ry-co-v-landers-okla-1925.