Wabash Railroad v. Heeter

14 Ohio C.C. 257
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. 257 (Wabash Railroad v. Heeter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Railroad v. Heeter, 14 Ohio C.C. 257 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

King, J.

■ This is a proceeding in error. The action was begun in the common pleas by the defendant in error, Terry E. Heeter, to recover damages of the "Wabash Railroad Company, for the consequences of an injury which he alleges he received while in their employ, about the 8th of September, 1893, which injury resulted to him in severe pain and suffer[258]*258ing,and the bad bruising of his leg,requiring it to be amputated, and afterwards requiring him to submit to a second operation and course of treatment in the hospital, covering a period of more than a year before there was a healing of the amputated limb. He claims damages to a considerable amount — named in the petition- — and on the trial in the court of common pleas, he recovered a verdict upon which a judgment was rendered for $8,900. The Wabash Railroad Company seek to have the judgment set aside, for a number of reasons. These are, however, mainly confined to alleged errors in the charge of the court, excepted to at the time of its delivery, and to the refusal of the court to give requests made by its counsel at the trial, and upon the ground that the judgment was contrary to law and against the weight of the evidence. That is the real controversy submitted to us, and it resolves itself, perhaps, into three questions arising in this case, and which I will notice later.

The petition alleged as a ground of negligence, that it was the duty of the defendant company to provide a safe and proper engine, and also the duty of the company to have two persons upon its engine, while in motion, for the purpose of properly operating the same, one of them to act as fireman, and the other as engineer. That at the time he was injured, the defendant did not have a fireman ■and engineer upon its said engine, “but, on the contrary, carelessly and wrongfully allowed and permitted the fireman; without the knowledge of plaintiff, to leave the cab of said engine to go to his dinner, and negligently, carelessly and wrongfully allowed and permitted the engineer to remain alone upon said engine to perform all the duties in the operation thereof. And so it was, that when the plaintiff fell from the pilot of said engine, the engineer not being in his place upon the said engine, ready and able to perform the duties incumbent upon him .under such circumstances, but being otherwise occupied [259]*259in the cab thereof, was not looking ahead upon said track, or keeping a look thereon, as it was his duty to do, so as to see the dangerous position of the plaintiff, or to hear his loud cries for help.” By reason of which the plaintiff was dragged for a great distance along said track in front of the locomotive, and received these injuries to his leg of which I have spoken.

There was another ground of negligence mentioned in the petition, and that was, that this engine was not properly equipped or constructed, in that it had no step upon the pilot thereof, as was customary and usual and necessary; but, upon the trial of the case, the plaintiff disclaimed that as a ground of negligence; I presume finding that it would be impossible to show that that was the usual, customary, and proper method of construction of a locomotive — ■ but at any rate, he abandoned that as a ground of negligence. Some complaint was made here, in argument, by counsel for the plaintiff in error because this was allowed to be done; but that certainly by no amount of reasoning could be resolved into anything prejudicial to the plaintiff in error.

The ground of negligence then, upon which the plaintiff sought to recover was, that the defendant, had insufficiently equipped this engine with hands to work the engine, and had sent it to work short-handed, in consequence of which he had been injured. The particular facts of his injury were substantially these: This was a regular freight train, starting from Ft. Wayne, and coming in an easterly direction down to Defiance, Ohio. It left Ft. Wayne at 6 A. M., and reached Defiance — its schedule time being 9:45; but it was usually behind time, and arrived there on the day in question about 11 o’clock. It did some work around the depot; and then the fireman left the engine and went to a lunch-counter, or restaurant, to get some dinner.

He was accustomed to do that at that point, provided the [260]*260train arrived there in the neighborhood of noon, and it happened on the day in question that he did go to his dinner, and that the conductor, having been informed that .there was a car west of the depot about half a mile, which .it was necessary to secure, directed the engineer to go and .get it. The list of cars was furnished by the agent of the company at that point, to the bead brakeman, a man by the name of Day, and he, thereupon, told the plaintiff — ■ ,\vho was a brakeman — to accompany the engineer to the point mentioned and get this car. Day and another person .also, got upon the engine. It was customary and usual, when going a short distance in the yard, at Defiance and at other points, for the purpose of pulling out cars from a string, for the brakemen, who were to make the coupling, to climb upon the pilot of the engine and ride back. They did this upon this occasion, at least two of them did. They .rode back to a point in Defiance which is the crossing o,f the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and the Wabash, located about a half mile west of the Wabash city-depot. Before they reached the crossing, Day and the other man who was on the engine got off the engine, about four to six hundred feet east of the crossing, and Day went and looked up the car that was to be pulled out of the string of cars standing on the side track, and the other man went to hunt up a pin for the purpose of making the same coupling, and the engine, with the engineer on only, and the plaintiff on the pilot, went back to the crossing. The engine stood upon the crossing, with its pilot projecting a little bit east of the crossing of the tracks — not more, I take it, than two or .three feet — and the plaintiff got off from the pilot on the right hand side of the engine, which was headed east, and on the right hand side of the track. He then crossed the track in front of the pilot to the switch-stand, which stood on the north side of the Wabash track, and threw the switch,, ',so that the engine might go over from the main track to [261]*261the side track on which the train of cars was located. He threw the switch, and he testifies, that he then stepped to the right and side of the track — or to the south side of the track — and then gave a signal to the engineer, who was in his^place on the right hand side of the engine looking easterly,to come ahead,giving the usual and ordinary signal.

If the plats and evidence are to be relied on in the case, he stood then within twenty feet of the pilot of the engine —mot exceeding that distance — easterly of it. The engine moved up from a standstill, to the point where he stood, about twenty feet from it,and he then attempted to board the pilot of the engine, by stepping upon the lower rail of the pilot-beam which runs around the pilot, and taking hold, with his left hand, probably — of the short staff that is fastened into the pilot-beam, and to thus assist himself up on the beam for the purpose of riding back to where the cars were which it would be necessary for him to couple.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hunn v. Michigan Central Railroad
7 L.R.A. 500 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1889)
O'Mellia v. Kansas City
21 S.W. 503 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-railroad-v-heeter-ohiocirct-1897.