Williams v. Schaff

222 S.W. 412, 282 Mo. 497, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 412 (Williams v. Schaff) 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
Williams v. Schaff, 222 S.W. 412, 282 Mo. 497, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 131 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

GOODE, J.

This plaintiff, in an attempt to get on a freight train of the defendant company, fell under the wheels, and his left arm and left leg were so badly mangled it was necessary to amputate them. The accident oc *504 cured Feb. 19,. 1917, at tbe station of McAlester in tbe State of Oklahoma. Only six days before, plaintiff had taken employment from the company as a common laborer in the bridge construction and repair department; but he had been in the service of the company previously for three or four months in the same department. The local headquarters of the department were at Muskogee, Oklahoma, a town and station on defendant’s railway fifty miles north of McAlester, and where the foreman of the bridge department hired plaintiff. Eight or ten miles south of McAlester is the station of Savánnah, and to this station plaintiff, on February, 18, 1917, was ordered by the general foreman of the department to go, with a carpenter by the name of Hughes, to help Hughes in the construction of a semaphore; a device used by the railway company to signal trains. The general foreman said to plaintiff in Hughes’ presence, “You will go with Mr. Hughes to Savannah to work on the semaphore signal.” The company furnished Hughes a pass for the transportation of himself and plaintiff to Savannah. The pass was for “one carpenter and one employee, when presented with form 214,' — between stations on McAlester Dist.” Said form notified “passenger conductors and train auditors that the form identified Hughes and one man” as entitled to use the pass from Muskogee to Savannah. The printed rules of the company regarding the use of passes were put in evidence, and one of them provided that no pass would be honored on a freight train not scheduled to carry passengers, unless it bore on its back this endorsement: “Good on freight trains.” Further, that passes must not be used for travel on personal business. Defendant was building a new depot at Savannah and a new semaphore to take the place of old ones still in use. The old semaphore was used for signalling both intrastate and interstate trains of the defendant company, as the railway lines of the company extend throueh several states and it operates trains through them. At the time of the accident the new semaphore had not been put into use for any purpose.; but when completed it would be one *505 of a succession of semaphores along the interstate lines of the defendant company, just as the old one was and had been. Plaintiff and the carpenter Hughes, who is spoken of by plaintiff as a “straw boss,” worked on the semaphore during the day of the eighteenth, and not having finished it at the hour for quitting work, intended to contin ne their task the next day. Hughes said to plaintiff there “wasn’t any place to stay in Savannah;” so they would run up to McAlester for the night and return to Savannah in the morning. Accordingly they took passage on a freight train and were carried to McAlester, the conductor treating the pass, when presented by Hughes, as authority to carry them. Plaintiff said he personally knew nothing of whether or not there was a hotel or other place to stop in Savannah and didn’t look for one. They spent the night at a hotel or boarding house selected by Hughes, ate breakfast at a restaurant he selected and went to the depot to take a train back to Savannah. A freight train had been made up at North McAlester, two miles away, and it came along past the depot at McAlester at eight o’clock, but' did not stop. Hughes spoke to the engineer or some one in the engine as it passéd, and then told plaintiff they (Hughes and plaintiff) would get on that train. Hughes caught .the train near the front end; then said to plaintiff; “Come on; it is safe. ’ ’ Plaintiff attempted to get on; but when he caught, or caught at, a grab-iron on the side of a car, the rocking of the train, which was naming from five to ten miles an hour, according to diverse testimony, threw plaintiff off his balance, caused him to lose his hold of the grab-iron, and he fell under the train and received the injuries we have stated. Plaintiff testified the train seemed to be going pretty slow, and he thought he could catch it; that he asked Hughes if it was safe before trying to get on, because he (plaintiff) did not know at what speed j;he train was running, or whether it would be safe to attempt to catch it. He and Hughes had been waiting at the station since seven o’clock, and the defendant company afterward paid plaintiff *506 for that hour,- which was the one when his day’s work began. There was testimony that passes and orders like those Hughes was given for himself and plaintiff, were honored on freight trains as well as on passenger trains . Hughes so testified — said ' he had used such free passes for from three to five years on all kinds of' trains; had never been given a book containing rules about the use of passes; had used them “on everything that came along’’-going to and coming from work, and was never instructed not to ride freight trains with such a pass. It should be stated that in an accident which occurred during plaintiff’s first employment by defendant, his right arm was broken at the elbow and he was left crippled in that arm, so his use of it was not “very good.” In his effort to clutch the grab-iron, he caught hold with his right hand, but failed to catch with his left; failed also to place his foot in the stirrup, and his hold by his right hand was jerked loose.

For convenience we have spoken of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company as the defendant company; but the actual defendant is Charles E. Schaff, who was receiver of the company and operating, its lines.-

The petition was in two paragraphs, of which the first was, drawn on the ■ supposition that the plaintiff was hurt while he was assisting defendant as a carrier engaged in interstate commerce, and hence the case was controlled by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. The second paragraph stated a cause of action based on the theory that plaintiff’s work when he met with the injury, was in connection with defendant’s intrastate business. The court instructed there could be no recovery on the second cause of action.

The only finding of negligence upon which the jury were authorized to return a verdict for plaintiff was that Hughes gave him a negligent order to get on the moving freight train; In addition to finding that averment had been proved, the jury were required to find the following facts: plaintiff at the time of the *507 injury was engaged in defendant’s service, under the direction and control of Hughes; that Hughes was foreman over him at the time and had authority to direct the movements of plaintiff in going about his work and to and from it; Hughes was furnished with a nass for himself and one employee ;• plaintiff and defendant were, at the time, engaged in interstate commerce; in obedience to the order of Hughes, and in the scope of plaintiff’s employment, he undertook to get on the train and was jerked loose from the grab-iron, caused to fall under the train and injured; that the order of Hughes, if given, constituted negligence; plaintiff’s injuries were the direct result of such negligent order, and that plaintiff did not assume the risk of the hazard to which he was exposed.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 412, 282 Mo. 497, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-schaff-mo-1920.