Illinois Central Railroad v. Comfort
Illinois Central Railroad v. Comfort
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by the Illinois Central Railroad Company from the circuit court of Attala county, from a judgment of $5,000' rendered against it, in favor of appellee, Cbmfort, for personal injury suffered by him in the crashing of his foot by defendant railroad company. The only assignment
From the record it apears that plaintiff was a- young man. about twenty-two years old, and had had some railroad experience. He had been employed by the railroad company as fireman, and he quit this position and sought the one of flagman. On November 4, 1909, he was employed as a flagman on a gravel train of defendant, and on this very day this deplorable accident occurred. This gravel train on that day was unloading gravel at a point three miles south of West, Miss., and about a half mile north of a flag station, known as Hoffman. The unloading was-done by means of a drop- door from the bottom of the car, the-gravel falling 'out upon the ends of the cross-ties, and it appears-that it was then leveled off by means of a common cross-tie being-placed in front of the rear wheels and then pulled over the gravel.. By this means the gravel was practically leveled, but at each end of this tie, on either side of the roadbed, much of the gravel was-forced in such manner as to leave a continuous row of gravel at the ends of the ties. This was the condition of the roadbed at the point where the tragedy occurred. At this point the roadbed was on an embankment about fifteen feet high, sloping-on either side down fo the level ground. Where this occurred was on a part of an embankment extending across a bottom for a distance of about two miles.
The conductor of the gravel train ordered the plaintiff to go-north and flag down a south-bound train then due. After going north about one-half mile, he saw the freight train approaching from the north, and when it was. in about one-quarter of a mile of him he signaled it to- stop. The engineer blew two blasts upon his whistle, indicating to the flagman that he saw the signal' and would stop, in obedience to and in conformity to a rule of the company, which says: “Enginemen must respond promptly
Counsel in his brief says: “We wish to call the attention of the court to the fact that we base the negligence of the engineer in charge of the approaching freight train upon two theories: Pirst, that he was negligent in disregarding the rule; second, that the appellee’s position of peril was well known to him, and, not being a fellow servant of the appellee, the railroad company is liable for his- negligence in running down upon the appellee in his perilous condition.” Plaintiff takes the ground that the obvious purpose of the rule, above quoted, was to require the engineer to stop his engine before he reached the flagman, in order that he might ascertain the purpose of being stopped. He seeks to excuse and justify his conduct, and to fix liability upon the defendant, on the ground that from this rule he had a right to assume, and did assume, that the train would stop before it got to him. Therefore, in the absence of any knowledge to- the contrary, it was an assurance, on which he was justified in relying that -it would stop before it reached him, and that he had a right to stand where he did.
We will first inquire: Did the engineer disregard the rule? ■On this point the engineer says: “Q. Well, then, your train was running from its own momentum ? A. Yes, sir; it was slightly
We will next inquire: Was the plaintiff guilty, under the circumstances which the evidence discloses, of contributory negligence? The plaintiff contends “that his position of peril was well known to the engineer of the freight train, and, not being
Assuming that the plaintiff did believe that, under the rules •of the company, the freight train Avas going to' stop before it reached him, that did not absolve him from the duty of exercising prudence, care, and common sense. The train Avas running at the rate of twelve miles an hour, so he says. By the use of his faculties, he ought to' have knoAvn from the speed of the train that it could not stop before it reached the place where he
We cannot resist the conclusion that the deplorable, accident which befell the plaintiff was attributable to his own lack of caution, and was not due to the negligence of the defendant.
For the reasons set forth in the above opinion by the commissioner, the judgment is reversed and cause re-, manded. •
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Aaron G. Comfort
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Railroads. Master and Servant. Rules of company. Construction. A rule of a railroad company requiring enginemen to respond promptly to signals of flagmen, and providing that they must not pass the flagmen until they ascertain the reason for being flagged, is complied with, where a freight train of thirty-two cars, with good appliances and operated by a competent engineer, stopped when the engine, tender, and three cars had passed the place where the flagman stood; and the rule does not justify a ' flagman in assuming that a train flagged will stop before it reaches him. 2. Same. Same. Contributory negligence. A flagman, flagging a train, must exercise prudence for his own safety, though he may rely on the rule requiring enginemen to respond to signals of flagmen, and not to pass a flagman until the reason for being flagged has been ascertained; and where a flagman knew, from the .speed of the train, that it could not stop before it reached the place where he stood, he must step back from the path of the train. 3. Same. Same. Flagman on track. Presumption. An engineer, seeing a flagman near the track engaged in flagging his train, may assume that he will move out of the path of the approaching train, where he is in such a position that he may do so.