The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Galloway

137 Ill. App. 296, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 786
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 2, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,529
StatusPublished

This text of 137 Ill. App. 296 (The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Galloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Galloway, 137 Ill. App. 296, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 786 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The width of the turn-table was twelve feet; it had one track, of standard gauge, with a plank platform forty-two to forty-eight inches wide outside of each rail. The ties between the rails were not covered over, nor were the spaces between them filled in. The ties were eight-inch square timbers, with flat sides, and were set from three to four inches apart.

The turn-table turned about a center pivot, and the weight of the table rested upon the center. Beneath each end of the turn-table were four small wheels running upon a circular rail at the edge of the pit, the table being so designed that when the load was balanced upon the center these wheels would clear the circular rail by one inch.

The table was operated by a Fairbanks-Morse turntable outfit, consisting of a six-horse-power gasoline engine and certain levers and clutches. This machinery was at one end of the table at the right hand side as you walked upon the table, and was covered with a frame shanty. The door of the shanty was about three feet from the end of the table.

Plaintiff was employed about November 14, 1904, as night turn-table operator. His hours were from six at night until six in the morning. His duties were to set or “spot” the table when an engine approached, turn the table when the engine was upon it, and set the table again for the next engine. He also had to blow out the headlights as the engines came in from the road, and fill oil cans. After the table was spotted for a locomotive to come upon it, plaintiff would signal to the hostler or man in charge of the locomotive, that the table was ready, giving this signal with a hand lantern which he always carried. When the engine approached the table in forward motion, plaintiff could stand at the door of the shanty above referred to, and give the signal; but when an engine was to be backed on the table, plaintiff, in order to signal the hostler, had to stand on the opposite side of the table from the shanty, because the hostler was on that side. About twenty-five or thirty engines crossed the table every night.

Jim Coffman, plaintiff’s predecessor as night turntable operator, remained with him the first three nights he was at work, instructing him in his duties.

Plaintiff was twenty years, four months, and twenty days of age at the time of the accident.

About nine o’clock in the evening of November 24, 1904, which was the tenth evening of plaintiff’s employment, engine 101, a small switch engine, with hostler Harry Kline at the throttle, backed up to within forty or fifty feet of the table, preparatory to crossing, and stopped. Galloway gave Kline a signal to come on; Kline started the locomotive, and Galloway attempted to cross the track in order, as he testified, to reach a certain lever in the table-house. His foot slipped in between the ties, and before he could extricate it the engine ran over his right leg and so mangled and lacerated it that it had to be amputated about seven inches below the hip.

.The defendant’s counsel contend that the verdict is contrary do the weight of the evidence and that the danger, if any, incident to the operation of the turntable was obvious and the plaintiff assumed the risk. The plaintiff, prior to the time of his employment by the defendant, had never been employed in railroad work, and had no experience in operating a turn-table. A young man, one James Coffman, was the turn-table operator at the time plaintiff was.employed. Coffman applied to Mr. State, the superintendent of Ihe roundhouse, for another job, who told him to wait until he, Coffman, could get another man to operate the turntable, and break him in. Coffman then procured the plaintiff, who was employed by the defendant, and Coffman set him to work and remained with him three nights instructing him how to operate the turn-table. The plaintiff testified, in substance, as follows: Coffman told him what to do, bnt neither he nor any one spoke to him of any danger incident to his work. He says that during the time he operated the turn-table, the tongue or dog of the brake lever, which lever was used for spotting the tracks and holding the table, was so worn that it would not hold in the notches, and he went to Mr. Hays, the night foreman, about it, who told him to be there and hold it down, before any engine came on the table, and that if he did not hold it down before an engine came onto it, the engine would climb a rail and get into the ditch. Coffman also instructed him in regard to holding the lever when trains were passing upon the turn-table. He testified: “He told me to do the same way he did, to cross over when I was on the opposite side of the track, to cross over. before the engine, and the jar would be so great I would have to hold on to the brake. That was the way I did it.” Coffman also testified to the defective condition of the- brake lever, and that he instructed the plaintiff to be at the lever and hold it down when an engine came onto the turn-table, and defendant’s counsel, in their argument, say that plaintiff’s duties required bim to cross the turn-table 'fifty to one hundred times each night. Plaintiff also testified that he had to be on the right side of the engine as it faced forward, which would be the side opposite to the lever, when an engine was backing in.

The evidence is that plaintiff’s duty when an engine was approaching the turn-table, was to set the table, that is, to bring it to a position in which the rails on the table would be in line with the rails on which the engine was, and when this was done, to signal the hostler in charge of the engine. To do this he was, as he testified, directed to be on the right side of the engine, as the engine faced forward, because the hostler was on that side of the engine. The engine which struck plaintiff was approaching the turn-table, rear end forward, on its way to the roundhouse, and plaintiff’s place in setting the turn-table was in the shanty, where the operating machinery of the tnrn-table was, so that to signal the hostler of the engine, he had to cross to the side of the tnrn-table opposite to the shanty with his signal lantern. He testified, in respect to the accident: The engine was forty or fifty feet away, and he was on the side opposite to the shanty, with a lantern, and gave the signal, and then started to cross to the shanty, and as he was crossing his right foot slipped in between two of the ties and was caught fast, so that he could not extricate it. He testified that the night was dark and misty, that there was no light on the rear end of the engine, that two arc lights at the end of the roundhouse, which were usually lit, were out, and there were, two red lights, one on each side of the center of the turn-table. At the time he had on a pair of heavy soled shoes a little over three inches wide.

Coffman testified that before plaintiff was employed he had been operating the turn-table at night for three weeks steadily. His testimony corroborates that of the plaintiff. He testified that he remained with the plaintiff three nights and showed him how to put the engines in and take them out, and how to hold the lever, and where to go to signal engines, to go to the right side of the engine.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Ill. App. 296, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-v-galloway-illappct-1907.