VanCamp v. Wabash Railroad
VanCamp v. Wabash Railroad
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff is the widow of Samuel VanCamp, who was one of defendant’s employees and was killed by being thrown from a standing car which
The principal difference between the parties to this controversy relates to conclusions drawn from facts either concealed, or shown by indisputable evidence. The deceased had been in defendant’s service for several years. He was a car repairer, at Brunswick, Missouri. He got upon a car which was standing on a side track of defendant’s railway, for the purpose of repairing some part of it. It became necessary to remove some of the coal out of the way and this he proceeded to do. While he was thus engaged he must have known that cars were being switched from one track to another. He knew that the rules of the defendant required that when a person was working upon a standing car like the one in controversy, he should first put up a warning, which consisted of a blue flag about eighteen inches square, attached to a stick or pole about three feet long and set out on the car. He failed to put out such warning. Those of defendant’s employees engaged in switching had a car which they washed to put in on the track upon which was the standing car. The switch was thrown and the car was “kicked” onto that track and it ran on down to the standing car and struck it with such-force as to cause deceased to fall off, when he was run over and killed. The point where the car was thus switched or “kicked” onto the track was about five hundred feet from the standing car.
The -evidence establishes beyond any doubt the negligence of the deceased in getting upon the car and proceeding with his labor without putting out signal or warning. This is practically conceded, as well it may be, for the rules of the defendant cannot be violated with impunity by one of its servants. The Supreme Court of this State has well said: “It would be most unreasonable and unjust, after imposing upon the master the duty of promulgating a rule for securing the
A text writer says on this subject: “Where an employee of a railroad company receives an injury wbicb is caused by bis action in direct violation of a reasonable rule, made by tbe company for tbe safety of its employees, of which rule be has notice and has promised to obey, be must be deemed guilty of contributory negligence and cannot recover damages from tbe company for sucb injury.” [1 White’s Personal Injuries on Railroads, sec. 437.]
But plaintiff advances a theory in avoidance of sucb negligence by contending that tbe case, as made by her, shows that tbe car would have been run into tbe standing car even though deceased bad obeyed tbe rules and put out tbe blue flag. That is, she says tbe deceased’s negligence was not tbe proximate cause, as tbe collision would certainly have occurred even though tbe warning bad been up. Tbe effect of plaintiff’s theory is to throw tbe case under tbe humanitarian rule and that rule, for all practical purposes, was in reality called to plaintiff’s aid by her instruction No. 4. But by whatever name plaintiff’s theory may be designated, it will be covered by what we shall here say in disposing of tbe case. We will give to plaintiff tbe benefit of her statement of tbe situation. It is substantially this: That deceased was engaged on tbe standing car, getting ready to repair it by moving material out of bis way. That bis back was to tbe point, five hundred feet away, where tbe other car was being switched onto bis track. That tbe switchmen could not have looked for a
But there is ample ground for reversing the judgment aside from the foregoing. Let it be assumed, as stated by plaintiff, that the switchman saw deceased standing on the car five hundred feet away, with his
The judgment is reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.