Tatro v. Maine Central Railroad

81 A. 216, 108 Me. 390, 1911 Me. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 9, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 81 A. 216 (Tatro v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tatro v. Maine Central Railroad, 81 A. 216, 108 Me. 390, 1911 Me. LEXIS 105 (Me. 1911).

Opinion

Savage, J.

This is an action on the case for personal injuries. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the presiding Justice ordered a nonsuit, to which order exceptions were taken and allowed. Thereupon by agreement of the parties the case was reported to the Law Court for decision upon the evidence. We are therefore to inquire, not whether there was sufficient evidence to require the case to be submitted to a jury, as we should have to do if the case were heard upon the exceptions, but whether, upon all the evidence, giving it the weight and effect that a jury ought to give it, the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict.

The plaintiff’s intestate, Alfred Tatro, was in the employment of the defendant, and at the time he received his injuries was working in the defendant’s freight yard at the Northern Maine Junction. He was assisting in shifting cars. A locomotive was attached to a train of six or seven cars. It was desired to take out the first one back of the locomotive. It was undertaken to do this by "kicking” back all the cars in the rear of the first car onto one track, and then switching the first car onto another track. By this process, after the locomotive had set the train in motion backwards, and while it was in motion, it was the duty of Tatro to uncouple the first from the second car by lifting or operating a lever rod on the second car. If everything worked as it should, this would pull the pin in the draw bar between the cars, the cars would thereby become uncoupled, and the cars behind the first one, (or in front of it as they were going), would proceed along the track by their acquired momentum. Thus they would be "kicked back.”

This accident occurred in the night. It was very dark. Tatro was on the ground and had a lantern. He gave the signal to the [392]*392engineer to back the train. That was the last seen of him until after he was hurt. It is probable that he undertook to uncouple the cars, and in some way slipped or fell under them. No part of the accident was seen by anybody, and no one knows what Tatro was doing when he got hurt. But when the locomotive got back to where he was, it was found that he had been run over, and his left thigh crushed, but not entirely cut off. Examination showed that the coupling pin which Tatro is supposed to have been trying to lift by means of the lever stuck fast so that the lever could not lift it. It was found in that condition after the accident.

In the first count in his writ, the plaintiff alleges that the coupling was defective, that the defendant negligently allowed it to be so, and that Tatro was injured by reason of the defect, so negligently allowed to exist. In the second count, it is alleged that Tatro was young and inexperienced, and that it was the duty of the defendant, not only to furnish him with reasonably safe appliances with which to work, but also to warn and instruct him with regard to the perils of the work, which it negligently failed to do. In argument, the plaintiff does not rely strongly upon either of these counts. It is not necessary to consider now whether the defendant was negligent as charged in these counts. For in any event, so far as they are concerned, the plaintiff must fail upon another ground. The rule is well settled in this State, that when a plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries caused by the defendant’s negligence, the burden is on him to show affirmatively that no want of due care on his own part contributed to the injuries. McLane v. Perkins, 92 Maine, 39; Day v. Boston & Maine R. R., 96 Maine, 207. If there is no proof either way, the plaintiff cannot recover. It is incumbent on the plaintiff in this case to show that Tatro’s own negligence did not contribute to his injury. That he has not done, and unfortunate as it may be, cannot do. No one saw the accident, and there is nothing in the case which indicates in any way, in what manner, or by what cause, Tatro got under the car wheels. And that being so, it is useless to speculate as to how it might have happened. Therefore the suit is not maintainable under either of the first two count's.

[393]*393But in a third count, the plaintiff alleges that Tatro at the time of the accident was far from medical aid, and that by reason of the accident he was in imminent danger of bleeding to death ; "that the exigency made immediate action imperiously necessary; that it thereby became the obvious and imperative duty of the defendant to procure medical aid for him at the earliest possible moment; that the defendant assumed said duty and undertook its fulfilment; but having undertaken it, that it failed to use due care and diligence in the discharge of the duty which it owed, and which humanity dictated ; but so negligently and wantonly performed said duty that Tatro lost his life thereby, and suffered great anguish of body and mind.”

Under these allegations, and upon the proof, the plaintiff contends, first, that "the strict necessity and urgent exigency of this case placed upon the defendant the duty of caring for Tatro after his injury with a proper regard for his safety and the laws of humanity,” and, secondly, that "whether or not the law imposed upon the defendant the duty of so caring for him, the duty was assumed by the defendant, and having been assumed and its performance actually entered upon, the defendant was obliged to discharge the duty "with reasonable care;” that it performed the duty negligently to the injury of Tatro, and hence is liable in this action.

We do not find it necessary to consider or determine the correctness of the plaintiff’s propositions of law. For, assuming, but not deciding, that the law is as claimed by him, we think the action cannot be sustained upon the facts.

The facts bearing upon this branch of the case, as we gather them from the evidence, are these. The accident occurred at about 11:25 o’clock at night, and at a place in the yard nearly half a mile from the defendant’s station at Northern Maine Junction. The engineer of the shifting locomotive at once sent his fireman and a brakeman on the locomotive to the station. They reached the station and notified the yard master at about 11:28 o’clock that Tatro had had his leg cut off. The yard master notified the train dispatcher at Waterville, who had charge of the running of trains upon that division, and asked for orders to take Tatro from Northern Maine [394]*394Junction to Bangor, a distance of about five miles. Instead of ordering the yard master to take him in, the train-dispatcher ordered him to send Tatro in to Bangor on a freight train which was just then arriving at Northern Maine Junction from the west, and which had the right of way as far as the Bangor yard. This freight train took Tatro in the caboose, and left the Northern Maine Junction yard for Bangor at 11:45 o’clock, or about twenty minutes after the accident. A brakeman was sent with Tatro. The train was running extra from Northern' Maine Junction, and consequently had to flag through the Bangor yard. This meant, of course, that it had to go slowly through the yard. How long it took to make the run to the Bangor yard, and how long to run through the yard to the station, is not clearly shown. The brakeman estimates that it took ten minutes to run to the yard, and that they were delayed at the semaphore about twenty minutes, before proceeding through the yard. At the same time he testified that they reached the Bangor station about twelve o’clock. We think it was probably as late as 12=05 or 12:10. We think so because Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 216, 108 Me. 390, 1911 Me. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tatro-v-maine-central-railroad-me-1911.