Stewart v. Baltimore & OR Co.

137 F.2d 527, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2841
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 1943
Docket291
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 137 F.2d 527 (Stewart v. Baltimore & OR Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Baltimore & OR Co., 137 F.2d 527, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2841 (2d Cir. 1943).

Opinions

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff’s intestate was employed by the defendant, Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, as a hostler helper at East Salamanca, New York. On the evening of October 30, 1941, the decedent suffered a coronary thrombosis which as the plaintiff’s testimony indicates, had resulted from straining himself while attempting to throw a defective switch in the defendant’s railroad yard. He did not recover from the [528]*528thrombosis and died on November 24, 1941. He had been in good health prior to October 30.

The decedent had been in the employment of the defendant for many years and had for some months prior to his attack been working as a hostler helper with another employee named Edman. Edman testified that about 10 o’clock on the night of the accident he was on an engine at the railroad coal chute coaling an engine and that it was decedent’s duty to throw a yard switch so that the engine, after being coaled, might be taken to the place where its crew was to pick it up. This coal chute was about 400 feet from the switch stand. While Edman was in the cab of the engine the decedent came over and told him that he had “tried to throw the switch and couldn’t do it,” that “he had wrenched his side in trying to do it,” and that “he felt a kind of click in his side.” The decedent then climbed into the engine car and Edman ran it to the switch, got off and threw' the switch by using a small iron bar about two feet long as a pry. He had used the bar on other occasions to throw this switch which was “brand new,” and hard to move, but had never used it to throw any other switch. Shortly after leaving the engine the decedent quit work for the day and arrived at his home about 11:15 P. M. About 1 A. M. the next morning he began to suffer an attack of severe pain in his chest and arms and his physician, Dr. Unger, was sent for. Unger testified that in order to make a diagnosis he obtained from him a history as to the circumstances under which his illness began and was told “that his pain began around 11 o’clock P. M. when he was trying to turn one of those big railroad switches. Shortly thereafter he felt a sharp pain in his chest and sick since this minute.” Dr. Unger further testified that his diagnosis of the decedent’s malady was a coronary thrombosis and that the decedent “died of the direct consequences of the injury during his work. * * * This throwing the switch.”

Three days before decedent’s death a member of his family called in Dr. Lee Gunn, the defendant’s railroad doctor, who found him in severe pain and very restless. Dr. Gunn testified that the patient had suffered a coronary thrombosis or embolism and had said that he had sustained “an exertion,” and gave “a history of exertion.” The doctor also testified that the exertion was a “contributory cause” of death but, at another point in his testimony, said that some medical authorities hold that a coronary thrombosis can be brought about by exertion and some that it cannot.

Upon a record of which the foregoing is an outline the trial court directed judgment dismissing the complaint at the close of plaintiff’s case, and the latter has appealed. We think that the judgment must be reversed because there was enough evidence to require submission of the case to the jury and also because there was error in excluding important evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff.

The defendant seeks to justify the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim on the ground that the switch was not really defective but only hard to move because new and stiff. But it should be observed that the decedent threw three other switches without difficulty on the very evening he strained himself with the switch in question and that Edman did not need.to use a bar in order to throw any of the other switches. There is no proof that the defendant had tested the switch after it was installed or had done anything to prevent its being used by an employee without undue exertion. In our opinion it was for the jury to say whether operation of the switch in question was so likely to result in injury from over-exertion that a prudent employer would not have supplied it to his workmen, but would rather have furnished a more easily turned appliance. There have been many decisions which have held that it is negligent to require a workman to move articles that are too heavy for him to lift without help. Albertz v. Bache, G.T., First Dept., 57 Hun 592, 10 N.Y.S. 639; Bowman v. Kansas City Electric Light Co., Mo.App., 213 S.W. 161; Stewart Dry Goods Co. v. Boone, 175 Ky. 271, 194 S.W. 103; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Langan, 116 Ky. 318, 76 S.W. 32; Culver v. Union Pac. R. Co., 112 Neb. 441, 444, 445, 199 N.W. 794; Rice v. Garrett, Tex.Civ.App. 194 S.W. 667; Bonn v. Galveston & S. A. R. Co., Tex.Civ.App., 82 S.W. 808; Boyd v. Great Northern R. Co., 84 Mont. 84, 274 P. 293. It is true that in these cases recovery sometimes failed because of proved knowledge by the employee of the danger and involuntary assumption of the risk but, by the amendment of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act in 1939, as amended by 53 Stat. 1404, Title 45 U.S.C.A. § 54, “the doctrine of assumption of risk was obliterated” as a defense to negligence on the part of the carrier and there was left [529]*529“for practical purposes only the question of whether the carrier was negligent and whether that negligence was the proximate cause of the injury.” Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 318 U.S. 54, 58, 66, 63 S.Ct. 444, 446, 87 L.Ed. —. The decision of the Texas Court of Civil Appeals, in Hines v. Ross, 230 S.W. 1066, relied on by the defendant, really turned on the question of assumption of risk and hence has no pertinency in view of the amendment of 1939. The same thing may be said of the decision in Jirmasek v. Great Northern R. Co., 151 Minn. 421, 186 N.W. 814.

Doubtless an employee cannot recover damages for every harm he may suffer through failure of his employer to provide him with the best sort of appliance unless the situation is such that the chance of injury can be reasonably foreseen. But where, as here, the likelihood of injury from the operation of a switch that was hard to turn cannot be said to have been beyond a reasonable apprehension the question whether the employer maintained a proper standard of care was for the jury. Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 318 U.S. 54, 63 S.Ct. 444, 87 L.Ed.-. Over-exertion resulting in serious casualties is something which can as well be foreseen as many other occurrences and is something which an employer may be thought bound to take all reasonable steps to prevent.

It follows from the foregoing that the plaintiff made a good prima facie case which should have been submitted to the jury unless proof of the accident was lacking because it was based on improper hearsay evidence. There was no eye-witness of the decedent’s exertion in throwing the switch. The only testimony as to the accident was by Edman who narrated the occurrence; by another fellow-employee named Odell, who said that the decedent, looking “tired,” met him just before eleven o’clock on the evening of October 30 and said: “I guess I strained myself on the switch or switches,” and by Dr. Unger and Dr. Gunn to whom the decedent gave a history of his exertion as a basis for the diagnoses they were attempting to make. The court excluded as hearsay the testimony of Odell and certain important items of Dr. Unger’s report of his call on the decedent the night of the, accident.

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Bluebook (online)
137 F.2d 527, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-baltimore-or-co-ca2-1943.