Wheelock v. Freiwald

66 F.2d 694, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2753
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 1933
Docket9660
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 694 (Wheelock v. Freiwald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheelock v. Freiwald, 66 F.2d 694, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2753 (8th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

GARDNER, Circuit Judge.

This is an action brought by appellee as administratrix of the estate of M. J. Freiwald, deceased, against appellants, as receivers of the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, to recover damages on account of the death of M. J. Freiwald. The action is bottomed on the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 U. S. C. §§ 51-59 [45 USCA §§ 51-59]).

The parties will be referred to as they were designated in the lower court.

At the time of the accident resulting in the death of Freiwald, be was in the employ of the defendants as a switchman, and was working as a member of a switching crew in the Kansas City, Mo., yards of defendants, engaged with other members of the crew in shifting ears from and onto various tracks in the yards. Besides himself the crew consisted o£ another switchman, an engineer, a fireman, and a foreman. Freiwald had had many years’ experience as a switchman.

The switeh tracks involved in this action run north and south and slope slightly to the north. They were numbered 1 to 18, inclusive, and were cut or traversed by two lead tracks, from which each of the switch tracks might be entered. The particular lead track here involved crossed all the switch tracks in the yard at the south end of the yard. Just prior to the movement of the cars in which Freiwald was fatally injured, he had assisted in placing a box car loaded with lumber on switch track No. 11. Following this movement the crew picked up one refrigerator car and four loaded oil tank cars. They were on track 3 or 4 and were moved to the lead track so that the tank cars might be shunted onto switch track No. 11. The refrigerator car was next to the engine, which was pushing the cars in a northerly direction. The kicking or shunting operation is described as follows: The foreman gives a signal indicating the ears which he desires kicked onto the switch track. Thereupon the switchman following the ears operates the pin lifter, detaching or uncoupling tho designated number of cars. The foreman then signals the engineer to shove or move the cars ahead. *696 When the engineer has attained a sufficient speed so that in the opinion of the foreman the ears desired to be cut off will roll to the place desired on their own momentum, he gives the engineer a signal to stop, and in compliance with this order the engineer stops the engine, and the cars which have been cut off roll onto the proper track.

In the switching movement here involved the foreman gave a signal to the engineer to stop, but the engineer did not see it. Two signals were given before the engineer stopped the engine. The foreman testified that the ears were moving about five miles an hour when he gave the first signal to stop and gained speed between the first and second signals, and gained very little speed between the second and third signals. He estimated that four to five seconds elapsed between the first and third signals. As the cars passed north, Freiwald was standing close to the switch from the lead track onto switch track No. 11. He threw that switch, and as the tank cars were passing the foreman directed him to “look out for the carload of lumber.” This was understood to be an order for Freiwald to mount the tank cars and set the brake. The foreman, called as a witness for plaintiff, testified that he gave this order because the oil was heavy, and if the four tank cars should hit the one ear of lumber, even though «they were not going fast, the impact was liable to shift the lumber. He testified that, if the engineer had stopped on his first signal, the tank cars would have gone down there to contact the lumber ear.

Freiwald, in response to the foreman’s order, mounted the north end of the north tank ear as it was passing him, in order to set the brake. The point at which he mounted the moving tank car was about 300 feet from the box ear of lumber which had already been switched onto track No. 11. This was the last seen of Freiwald alive. His body was later found lying on track 11, midwa3'' under the fourth or south tank ear.

The accident occurred about 6:40 a. m., March 17, 1929. It was daylight, but there was some smoke in the yards coming from the engines in use. It was a damp morning described by one witness as “not exactly foggy, but kind of misty.” The dampness and dust had accumulated on the running boards of the tank ear on which deceased stood in setting the brake, and this running board carried imprints of his heels. A witness, in describing these marks, said: “In examining this ear we could see heel — his heel prints ■where they had slipped out like that (indicating) off of the running board, these heel prints being right near the ratchet of the brake on the inside of the ear just about over the drawbar, or as close to the ratchet as he could put them. They were * *' * just about half way between the brake ratchet and the drawbar, right where he would be standing to have hold of the brake, and you could see that both heel prints slanted out right off of the running board here.”

At the time the foreman directed Freiwald to board the tank car Freiwald was walking from north to south, so that the tank ears were moving toward him. After the tank ears came to rest, the north end of the north tank ear was south of the south end of the car of lumber, the distance intervening being variously estimated at from three to forty feet.

A Mr. Nuzum, ealled as a witness for plaintiff, was the only witness testifying that the tank cars hit the lumber car. He testified that he saw a movement of tank cars, which he assumes were the cars in question, moving along between ten and fifteen miles an hour before they hit the box ear. While not an employee, he was passing through the yards, and had been a railroad man of some experience. His observation of the moving cars was at an angle as they approached him. He testified that he saw a man on the tank ear, apparently setting the brake, or working with the brake. At that time he was about one hundred yards from the ears. He could not see the man on the tank ear at the time of the collision. The box ear with lumber in it obstructed his vision so that he could not see the north end of the tank car before the collision. The testimony is somewhat obscure as to when his vision was obstructed, but we construe his testimony to mean that in his judgment he saw the north end of the tank car up to a point where it was about two ear lengths from the south end of the box ear of lumber. He did not see the man on the tank ear at the time of the collision.

An examination after the accident disclosed that the brake on the north end of the tank car was set. An assistant yardmaster in the employ of defendants, called as an expert witness, testified that, after Freiwald had set the brake, the next thing, in the proper and ordinary discharge of his duty, was to have gotten off the ear, or, if the car was moving too fast, he should, in the usual course of his work, have gone to set another brake. This testimony is not disputed.

*697 After the accident, an examination disclosed that there was nothing wrong with the box ear containing the lumber on track No. 11. The lumber had not been shifted, and there was testimony to the effect that ordinarily, if the impact had been of sufficient force to cause the lumber to shift in the box ear, the end of the car would have broken out.

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Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 694, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheelock-v-freiwald-ca8-1933.