Watts v. Pere Marquette Railroad Co.

203 N.W. 859, 231 Mich. 40, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 581
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1925
DocketDocket No. 134.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 859 (Watts v. Pere Marquette Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watts v. Pere Marquette Railroad Co., 203 N.W. 859, 231 Mich. 40, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 581 (Mich. 1925).

Opinions

Wiest, J.

This suit was brought under the Federal employers’ liability act (35 U. S. Stat. p. 65), for a dependent, to recover damages occasioned by the death of George A. Wilson, a section hand in the employ of defendant company. Mr. Wilson was a section workman of long experience and, the morning of January 12, 1921, was engaged with two other section men in distributing tie plates from a hand-car in a curve cut, when a special freight train came into the cut and struck the hand-car just as the workmen had partly removed it from the track and as they jumped *42 away, and Mr. Wilson who ran in the direction the train was going was struck by flying pieces of the smashed hand-car and injured and died March 27, 1921. At the close of plaintiff’s proofs the trial judge held no negligence had been shown and directed a verdict for defendant.

The case is here by writ of error, and in a broad way presents the question of whether defendant owed these section men the duty of giving warning by whistle of the approach of the train to the curve cut. There is no evidence the train crew had knowledge that the section crew were in the cut. The section men had no knowledge the train was due at that time as it was a special freight. Section men perform their work in places requiring constant watchfulness on their part; they know special trains, are operated; they are aware of the schedule time of regular trains but have no means of knowing when special trains may appear beyond that of sight and hearing and a system of signals. The company maintains a system of signals, a view of which was available from the bank of the cut and actually taken by Mr. Wilson who reported the block clear about three minutes before the accident. The block signal would disclose a train within about two andi a half miles of the place oí accident.

The accident happened about 8:30 o’clock of a “sharp, cold, clear, crisp morning” with some wind, and no snow on the ground. At the trial plaintiff was permitted to plead the following rule of defendant company:

“Extra and delayed regular trains must sound the whistle as per rule 14-L when approaching curves and obscure places, and frequently during fogs and heavy snow storms, to warn section men, bridge men, and others operating motor cars.”

This requires us to turn to Eule 14-L, which provided :

*43 “Two long and two short blasts approaching public crossings at grade and approaching curves, as a warning to section men and others operating motor cars.”

Does this apply only to section men and others operating motor cars or is it inclusive of section men working with hand-cars?

Plaintiff’s counsel insist it is a rule of good railroading and, while the doctrine of ejusdem generis may apply to the last half of the rule, when there are fogs and heavy snow storms, requiring frequent whistling, “the first part of the rule requires whistling when approaching curves and obscure places, without regard to the class of the workman.” We do not think the rule was drawn to be so split; it provides for a warning under designated circumstances for the protection of a specified class.

Defendant’s counsel say:

“As to the language, it is so plain that no argument is attempted to give meaning to the clause specifying the class of persons for whose protection the whistle is to be blown. It is an arbitrary, strained and unnatural construction which attempts to disconnect the first part of the rule from the last — to apply the rule to ‘curves and obscure places’ and not to fogs and heavy snow storms.”

Is there any incoherence in the language of the rule? We think not. The question is not whether the rule should grant the same measure of protection by warning to all section men, operating motor cars or handcars, but whether it in terms limits its application to employees operating motor cars. We may not be able to grasp the full sense of such a limitation, but if it is so limited we cannot extend its scope. At first the writer was inclined to think the rule was inclusive of section men operating a hand-car, but, sensing the basis for this thought to be a humanitarian impulse rather than consideration of the restrictive terms of the rule, was led, upon reflection, to the opposite con- *44 elusion, and fortified therein by remembrance of the well established rule that section men are required to take care of themselves and can readily do so except when operating a motor car. There exists a reason for giving this protection to employees while operating a motor car which does not carry to slow moving, comparatively noiseless and easily removable instru-mentalities. Motor cars are capable of high speed, bring employees quickly into danger zones, make considerable noise and are not easily removed from the track. If the rule had merely designated the class to be given notice by whistle, as employees operating motor cars, there would be no thought of its being inclusive of section men operating hand-cars. The designation in the rule of the class as section men and bridge men did not require the warning as to even them except in the operation of motor cars. It must be held that the rule relates to section men and others operating motor cars. This, of course, has nothing to do with discovery of peril of section men in time to adopt measures and adapt means to avoid injury to them.

This eliminates the company rule and brings us to the question of whether the evidence, considered in its most favorable aspect, shows negligence on the part of defendant. The Federal act leaves the question of negligence of defendant to be determined in accordance with common-law rules. It, therefore, must appear there was a duty owed the injured person and a violation of such duty resulting in the injury complained of. What duty did defendant owe section men engaged in work requiring use of the railroad track out in the country? Plaintiff insists on the right to notice of an approaching train when view thereof is cut off by reason of a curve in a deep cut. Defendant contends there exists no such duty; that section men, working on a railroad track over which trains are expected to pass with speed between *45 stations, owe it to themselves and to the company to watch out for trains and not to rely at all upon the; giving of signals. The question so presented is not new. There runs through plaintiff’s claim and argument the vein of the humanitarian doctrine, and while this is quite appealing in a broad sense, it overlooks the fact that this doctrine avails little unless it appears the peril of the section hand was discovered in season to have averted injury to him. Such does not appear to be this case. The train was discovered by th& section men when about 600 feet away, and seeing it they tried to remove the hand-car. Certainly the engineer was in no better position to determine that this could not be done than the men who were trying to do it, and besides, there is no evidence the train could have been stopped in time after peril of the section men was discovered.

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Related

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240 N.W. 60 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1932)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 859, 231 Mich. 40, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watts-v-pere-marquette-railroad-co-mich-1925.