Weaver v. Mobile Ohio Railroad Co.

120 S.W.2d 1105, 343 Mo. 223, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 534
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 16, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 1105 (Weaver v. Mobile Ohio Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weaver v. Mobile Ohio Railroad Co., 120 S.W.2d 1105, 343 Mo. 223, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 534 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

*229 TIPTON, C. J.

'This is an action for- personal injuries under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, in which the respondent obtained a judgment in the sum of $17,000 in the Circuit Court of the City -of St. Louis. The appellant has duly appealed. In Division One of this Court an'opinion was prepared by Sturgis, C., who.reversed the judgment. On account of á dissenting opinion of the late lamented Frank, J., the cause was' transferred to the Court en Bane and it was assigned for an opinion. Recently, it was reassigned to the writer, who is substantially adopting the facts from the opinion prepared by Frank, J.

We think' a resume of the facts developed by the evidence will facilitate our statement' and discussion of the' several assignments made by appellant. The applicability of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act has not at any time been challenged. On May 20, 1929, the roadmaster, B. C. Hanna, traveling by a railroad motorcar, which we shall hereafter describe, went from Murphysbóro, Illinois, to Cairo. It was his purpose to make the semi-annual inspection • oil the following' day of all. the bridges and trestles on appellant’s main line tracks north for some distance from Cairo. Hanna took a negro employee, Essiek, with him to Cairo to assist in the work and Upon arriving at Cairo in the’ late afternoon Hanna sought out Weaver, the respondent, notified him that an inspection trip' was to be made *230 the following' day, and ordered respondent to meet him (Hanna) at a designated point at seven o’clock a. m. on the following day to accompany and assist Essick and him in the inspection work. At the same time Hanna told respondent to provide himself with the necessary “punch bar” customarily used in making these inspections. Respondent thereupon went to appellant’s blacksmith shop and made a ‘ punch bar, ” or “ inspection bar, ’ ’ for his own use and one of the employees in the blacksmith shop made a similar bar for Essick. These bars were “made of steel” and were “about seven-eighths of an inch in diameter, pointed at one end and blunt at the other. ’ ’ Respondent’s bar was 4% feet in length and Essick’s bar 4 feet in length. In making the inspection these steel bars were used in testing the timbers in the wooden portions of the bridge structure as by striking with the blunt end or thrusting the sharpened end of the bar into the wood the inspector could detect unsound or decayed timbers. The railroad motorcar upon which Hanna and Essick made the trip to Cairo, and which was assigned to transport the inspection party on the following day, was driven by a two cylinder gasoline engine.. The frame, made of wood, reinforced with, steel, was 4% feet in length and 4 feet 4 inches in width; an elevated seat, 18 inches in width, ran lengthwise, in the center, and apparently the full length, of the car. The floor was made of “slats or boards,” with an open space between, three “slats” on each side of the seat. The width of the space between the ‘“outside slat and the next one was about an inch;” the other spaces “were about one-half inch.” The control, levers were located in and about the center of the seat with the brake lever near- the left side of the seat. . There were three cross pieces or “cross timbers” in the frame; the front cross piece, one “a little back of the center of the car,” and the “back cross piece .of thg frame work,” and the top or upper side of the cross pieces ■was about two inches above or “from the floor or slats.” There was no tool receptacle on the car or place provided for storage of tools. ■ The appellant’s evidence was that the car “could not be started with its own motive power but had to be shoved off;” that ..it was necessary for someone to “shove it for a distance until it-got started” and fhat this was one of ..the duties assigned to the negro Essick who would: “push the, car” along .the track “until it got started and then jump on the back end.” .Having attempted to describe the tools and motorcar provided for. the inspection trip, we come to, a/ statement of the testimony concerning the derailment and the cause, thereof. , ....

. - The inspection crew proper, was composed of Hanna, who was in charge, respondent, and the negro helper,. Essick. A Mr. Austill, ■appellant’s bridge engineer, accompanied them: He stated that he had “general-charge of bridge work, construction and maintenance,’’ .and that he sometimes went “on-inspection trips” in order to observe *231 repairs that had been made or which might be necessary. They traveled north from Cairo on appellant’s main line, stopping the motorcar at each bridge or trestle and making an inspection. Having inspected a bridge or trestle, they would board the motorcar and ride to the next. The two “punch bars” were the only tools carried. Bespondent testified: ‘ ‘ Before we started out Mr. Hanna told Essick it was going to be his job to look after the tools and see that they were always placed back in the car and from that time when it came to putting the tools back in the car Essick did it. No one else ever did it. . . . When we came to a bridge I would take the bar off that I was going to use and the negro would take the one off he intended to use. In making the inspections the negro stayed right along with me. I would watch his inspections and determine what they revealed. After each inspection the assistant roadmaster (Hanna) and the bridge engineer (Austill) and myself would usually stop at the end of the bridge and discuss what repairs, if any, were to be made. In the meantime Essick would take the steel bars and place them back on the car. That was the course followed” after the last inspection before the derailment. After the/inspection “immer diately before I got hurt Essick placed the punch bar back in the car, parallel with the car; that is north and south” and “on top of the cross pieces . . . or cross timbers” (of the frame) so that lying on these cross pieces the bars were about two inches above the floor or slats. ’ ’ The inference from, respondents ’ testimony is that both bars were placed and carried in the manner he describes on the west or left side of the car and to the west or left of the seat. Bespondent stated that in traveling between bridges he and Essick sat on the west side of the seat with Essick at the front or north end and Austill and Hanna sat on the east side with Austill at the front or north end; or, as respondent puts it, “I rode at the southwest corner as we were proceeding north; the negro, Essick,. rode at the' northwest corner immediately in front of me'; Mr. Hanna rode at the southeast corner and Mr. Aus.till at the northeast corner. ... ¡ Mr. Austill and. Hanna, as they were seated on the car, were facing northeasterly, and Essick and I were facing northwesterly.” Bespondent then testified that having inspected “twenty or thirty bridges that morning” they were traveling north, the four of them riding in the manner described- with the punch bars in the position on the ear above stated, when “the negro in shifting his position kicked the steel bar off the front end of the car and caused it to. derail. There was a sudden jerk when the car hit the bar and the derailment. was .immediate. I was thrown off the car on the west side.” The injuries sustained will be hereafter set .out. There was' no other or further testimony, on behalf of respondent as .to the cause of the, derailment; the testimony of respondent’s other witnesses relating solely to the nature and extent of his injuries. As against and contradictory of respond

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 1105, 343 Mo. 223, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-mobile-ohio-railroad-co-mo-1938.