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

1924 OK 347, 232 P. 414, 107 Okla. 240, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 18, 1924
Docket14715
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1924 OK 347 (St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Tyler) 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-San Francisco Railway Co. v. Tyler, 1924 OK 347, 232 P. 414, 107 Okla. 240, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 678 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.

The plaintiff was an employe of the defendant at its coal chute, and was struck and injured by one of the passenger trains of the company while engaged in this service. The coal chute is located about 200 feet south of the street crossing by the main tracks which are up grade and on a straight line from the crossing to the coal chute. The first main line track is known as the southbound track and is about six or eight feet distant from and east of the coal chute. The second track is the main line northbound track and is situated a few feet east and parallel to the first track. The coal chute is of concrete construction and is about 80 feet in diameter. Two water cranes are situated about even with the north and south ends of the coal chute and between the two main line tracks. Engineers on defendant’s trains requiring coal and water stop their engine by the water crane and signal to the employes who are working in the coal chute, who go to the crane and unlock the same that water may be supplied to the engine, and assist in coaling the engine, if required. On the date of the injury, an engineer in charge of a northbound freight train stopped his engine by the south water crane and signaled his need for coal and water to the employes in the coal chute. In response to the signal, the plaintiff passed out of the coal chute, in an easterly direction to a point about 3 or 4 feet distant from the west rail of the southbound track, and then traveled south and parallel to the west rail for a distance of, about 15 or 20 steps to a point opposite the south water crane located between the two main line tracks. As the plaintiff was in the act of turning and moving east across the southbound tracks to the water crane, a southbound passenger train collided with the plaintiff and inflicted severe personal injuries. The train started on its southbound trip from the street crossing just north of the coal chute, where the engine of the train had been changed, and had traveled about 200 feet and was running 15 or 20 miles per hour at the time of the accident. The train was about 30 feet north of the plaintiff when the latter turned east to pass over the southbound track to the water crane. It was the duty of the plaintiff and the other employes of the company to pass continually over and about the tracks in the *241 vicinity of the water crane to supply the engines with coal and water. From ten to twenty-five engines were served each day. The petition filed by the plaintiff alleged two grounds upon which he sought to recover from the defendant for the injuries which he sustained: (1) That the defendant owed the plaintiff the duty to exercise ordinary care in keeping a lookout to discover the presence of its employes at or about where the injury occurred, and to exercise ordinary care in giving signals of the approach of its trains to such employes, and that the defendant negligently failed to discharge such duty; (2)' that a custom and habit prevailed on the part of the defendant to give warning signals as engines approached the coal chute in question, and that the plaintiff had a right to rely upon a signal being given by the engine as the train approached the coal chute at the time of the injury; that the defendant negligently failed to give such warning signal. The case was tried to the jury on these two questions and was submitted to the jury on instructions which, the trial court considered, covered the law applicable to the two questions presented. It is conceded in the briefs of both parties that the doctrine of “last clear chance” was not involved in the case, and with this we agree.

On the first question the court instructed the jury as follows:

“You are instructed that if you find from the evidence in this case that at the time the plaintiff was injured and at the place where he was -injured, the defendant might reasonably expect or anticipate that the plaintiff or other of its employes would be on or near its tracks in the performance-of their duties, then it was the defendants duty: (1) To exercise ordinary care in keeping a lookout to discover the presence of its employes at such point; and (2) to exercise ordinary care in giving signals and warnings of the approach of its train to such employes.
“And in this connection you are further instructed that if you find in this case that the defendant owed the above duties to the plaintiff, or either of them, and failed to discharge said duties, or either of them, then the defendant wa§ guilty of negligence toward the plaintiff.”

The defendant excepted to the giving of this instruction, and insists that the giving of the same was prejudicial error. The plaintiff concedes that, as a general rule, a railway company owes no duty to its employes working on and about the tracks to maintain a lookout or to warn such employes of any ordinary incident to the service, but the plaintiff insists that the instant case presents an exception to the general rule. He states the exception as follows:

“At times and places where the presence of an employe of the company might reasonably be expected to be on the tracks of the railroad, it is the duty of the operator of a locomotive to keep a lookout for the presence of such employe and give notice of the approach of the train.”

It is contended that, because of the knowledge of the defendant and its engineers that the plaintiff and other employes of the company in the discharge of their duties were called upon to be on or about the track at the particular point between the coal chute and the water crane, it was the duty of the defendant to maintain an adequate lookout and to give warning to the plaintiff and the other employes of the approach of the train. Numerous authorities are cited by the plaintiff in this connection. We shall not undertake an examination or discussion of these authorities, as the question here involved has been so definitely determined by this court that it is unnecessary to look to the decisions of other states to ascertain the duty imposed upon the respective parties to this suit. Counsel for the plaintiff contend that none of these cases by this court have application to the instant case, because in each of those cases the duties of the employe were such that they might be at various places along the right of way or track of the railway, but, in the instant case, the duties of the plaintiff were such that the defendant knew that he was expected to be on or near the railway track at the particular place where the injury occurred. We are unable to agree with this contention of the plaintiff. The underlying principles in each instance are the same. The rule adopted in this state rests upon the principles that the very object of the employment is the performance of a service which places the employe in a place of danger, and the ordinary danger attendant on the employment is a risk incident to the business as carefully conducted, and a peril of the employment. This applies with equal force, whether the duty of the employe is such that his services are performed at a particular place on the right of way, which is known to the engineers operating the trains, or whether the employment is such that it requires the employe to perform services which place him in a dangerous position at points on the track or about the track which are not known to the engineer. If the exception contended for by the plaintiff should be allowed, the rule announced in the numerous cases by this court would necessarily *242

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 347, 232 P. 414, 107 Okla. 240, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-v-tyler-okla-1924.