Victor American Fuel Co. v. Tomljanovich

232 F. 662, 146 C.C.A. 588, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1865
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 19, 1916
DocketNo. 1189
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 232 F. 662 (Victor American Fuel Co. v. Tomljanovich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victor American Fuel Co. v. Tomljanovich, 232 F. 662, 146 C.C.A. 588, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1865 (1st Cir. 1916).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

In this opinion the word "plaintiff” means the plaintiff in the District Court, and the word “defendant” means the defendant in that court.

[ 1 ] This is a suit for an injury caused to the plaintiff by the slipping away of a loaded car of coal in one of the chambers of a mine in New Mexico, with the result that the car was derailed, and, as the consequence of derailing, it broke loose and fell on the plaintiff, who was working as a miner at a point below the place where the car broke loose. There is no doubt that the statutory law of New Mexico, where the mine is located, required that one or more drags should have been attached to the car, which one or more drags would undoubtedly have derailed it, and prevented a collision with the plaintiff. It is not necessary to state the legislation of New Mexico at length, because, independently of any legislation, the common law obliged the defendant to provide a suitable drag or drags, which were the customary and simple preventive of such an accident, which was liable to occur at any time; and, if they had been provided, this accident would not have occurred. Under the circumstances, the furnishing of a suitable drag or drags was such an obvious and common incident, and so simple and essential a matter, that the lack of such furnishing, either under the statute or aside from the statute, rested on the defendant as a part of its obligation to furnish a suitable and reasonably safe place for the employment of the plaintiff, from which the defendant could not have relieved itself, all as shown by the settled rules of law.

There is also no question that if the defendant had furnished suitable drags at the hand of- its servants, who were the coemployes of the plaintiff, so that any failure to use the drags was merely a failure on the part of his coservants, this fact would have been a defense to the defendant, whether the cause of action was based on the statutes of New Mexico or rested on the common law. The plaintiff testified that no such drags were furnished by the defendant, and he had never seen one in the mine; and one question is whether or not the testimony of the plaintiff, whose testimony was wholly unsupported, should have been accepted by the jury or should be set aside by this court. That proposition we will take up in its proper order.

The amount involved was a very large one; the injuries to the plaintiff having been very substantial, and the judgment rendered in his favor having been for $15,325. While the injuries occurred in New Mexico, the trial was at Portland, Me., and occupied several days, with many controversies and numerous exceptions, which, however, so far as we are concerned, on sifting out come down to few propositions.

The first question arises out of the fact that there were originally two counts in the plaintiff’s declaration, one apparently based on the local statute, which required a drag, and the other based on the common law, which made the defendant responsible on the proposition substantially to the effect that the absence of a drag was, under the circumstances we have referred to, a failure to provide suitable equipment. There seems to have been some uncertainty as to the steps [665]*665taken by the various parties in this respect as to what they sought to accomplish; but the effect was that, before the verdict was rendered, and within the time within which, in accordance with the practice in the federal courts, such an amendment might have been allowed, the •plaintiff waived his second count, and amended his first count by carrying to the latter so much of the second count as left it a count alleging lack of a drag in the manner required by the statutes of New Mexico, and also coupled with it an allegation that the drag was not furnished, and that, in the absence of the drag, there was at common law a failure to furnish proper appliances, or a proper place for labor, in accordance with the well-known rules of the common law.

[2] It is possible that, under the rules prohibiting duplicity in pleading, such a form of pleading would have been subject to a special demurrer, or an objection might have been made to thus amending the first count on the ground that it was duplicating the pleadings, and therefore offering a form of pleading which was subject to a special demurrer; but, while there were other pro and con objections and discussions about this and about proceeding on the consolidated cause of action, we are unable to find that there was any objection or excep - tion taken of the class which was suitable for the condition in which the amendments left the pleadings, or that there was any action in these respects by the trial court which was substantially injurious to the defendant, or as to which it could have taken any exceptions except in the special manner to which we have referred, and which it did not lake. Therefore we pass by that whole topic as of no consequence in the appellate tribunal, and without any further explanation in reference thereto.

The propositions raised by the assignment of errors in reference to this matter of amendments are entirely of a general character. The bulk of them relate to the matter of proof with reference to the count as amended, which does not touch any of the questions now raised to which we have referred. Among other things, the assignment says that there is no testimony that the place where the plaintiff was engaged in mining of coal was unsafe. This does not relate to the matter of making the amendments, but to the propositions which came in issue after the amendments were made, and which were met by the fact that the matters covered by the amendments were matters of the kind to which we have already referred as being what is imposed by law on employers with reference to what are usual, customary, and simple methods of avoiding dangers.

[3] It is also assigned as error that the court erred in suggesting to the plaintiff that he might elect on which count to proceed; but in this respect the entire conduct of the trial was fully in harmony with the practice in the federal courts, whatever it may be elsewhere.

[4] In the same way, the objection made by the assignment of errors that the court erred in suggesting to the plaintiff that he might amend by inserting the word ‘'willful,” which was required to conform to the exact language of the statute, was in fact an immaterial matter as the case terminated, because the verdict rested, not only on the statute, but also on the common law.

[666]*666[5] Neither was it true, as assigned by the assignment of errors,, that the amendments introduced a new and vital issue; and, in conclusion, everything further raised by the assignment of errors with reference to these amendments and the proceedings under them, will be disposed of by what we have to say with regard to the demand that the verdict be set aside with relation to anything which appertains to the merits of the case, particularly to the testimony of the plaintiff.

[8] The burden of the case depends on the motions to direct a verdict, which were refused, and are brought here by exceptions. The federal courts adhere closely to the English practice, by which, in ordinary cases, the question of setting aside a verdict as against evidence is for the trial judge. The practical rule is stated, though perhaps too strongly, in The Connemara, 108 U. S. 352, 360, 2 Sup. Ct. 754, 758 (27 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
232 F. 662, 146 C.C.A. 588, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victor-american-fuel-co-v-tomljanovich-ca1-1916.