Howell v. Southern Railway Co.
Howell v. Southern Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was.delivered by
The plaintiff, who is called a yard conductor, sued the railway company and one of its employees, who is called yardmaster, for a tort to the person.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff against the railway company, and the company has appealed upon 22 exceptions.
*26 The event transpired at night, betwixt Royster and Columbia, and Royster is a “yard” some three miles out of Columbia.
The plaintiff on that night had charge of a train of cars made up of engine and tender, a flat car loaded with .lumber, and a “tool car;” and the engine was “pushing” these two cars from Royster towards the city.
The tool car is described as “part a flat car and part a box car;” the box car part of it as the train was then made up constituted the tail end of the train; and the plaintiff was mounted upon the top of that end, and upon the top edge of the box part which faced towards the engine, and he was facing the engine.
Along the length of the tool car there were laid two rails for a track, upon which to run on and off that car certain trucks which that car carried in .emergency, to put efficient trucks under such bad order cars as should need them along the line.
These trucks, and tools beside, were on the rail track within the box car section of the tool car; and a trapdoor hung betwixt the box car section and the flat car section of the tool car.
The controversy hangs about these trucks situate in the box car end of the tool car. The testimony of the plaintiff tended to show that the train had proceeded but a short distance from Royster towards Columbia when from some unexplained cause there was an impact of the cars; the plaintiff fell from the top of the box car section of the tool car, down onto the flat car section of it; the trucks rolled out of the box car section, broke through the trapdoor, ran along the rail track upon the flat car section on and over the prostrated body of the plaintiff.
The particular delict charged against the railway company was its neglect to have these trucks made so secure that they would not run away on the track provided for them.
*27
Beginning first here at the appellant’s first of the nine argued “points,” the testimony of the trainmaster makes inconsequential the competency of the testimony of Reynolds and Burt, witnesses for the plaintiff, who testified under objection about the insecureness of the trucks.
The complaint, however, did allege that there were loaded on the tool car “heavy trucks and wheels not properly or safely braced .or fastened,” and to that, the trainmáster, Burt, and Reynolds all testified with perfect competence.
When the railway company put up its witnesses Sharpe was not sworn to contradict Reynolds.
*28 The plaintiff in reply testified that Sharpe was at the instant in Court. The Court ruled that so much was competent, and we are of the same opinion. More than that, Gaffney, the trainmaster and a witness for the defendant, testified that Sharpe was “right here in Court.”
Appellant’s counsel said in oral argument at the bar that the remarks arraigned the railway company for putting a negro flagman to serve Howell on the night in question, when before that he had been served by a white flagman.
The case, however, does not show that Mr. Spigner made such remarks, and it does not show that the Court’s attention was called to such remarks; it shows only that Mr. Tompkins made objection to Mr. Spigner’s argument in these words: “Mr. Tompkins: I object to that line of argument. They tried to prove, when the man was on the stand, that we had taken away a flagman from him and given him another man, and he said he wasn’t a competent man, but I drew your Honor’s attentioii to the fact that there was no allegation of incompetent help, and you ruled that testimony out.”
And the case further shows that Mr. Tompkins not only did not object to the testimony about the change of - flagman, but that circumstance was adduced by him on the cross-examination of the plaintiff.
The Court’s action is always referable to the testimony. Under the testimony there was no risk in sight to be assumed. The car was not a “bad order” one. Gaffney, *29 the trainmaster, so testified. He said: “There was no defect in that car; therefore, it would not be under the head of a car defect.”
The car had been in the shops at Columbia, and, as before stated, Reynolds was there “blocking the trucks” in it on Saturday. Before that job was completed, one Parker by wire from Spartanburg on May 6 ordered the car from Columbia to Union to put a pair of wheels under another disabled car at that place. On May 7 Parker advised Gaffney at Columbia by wire that he had been informed that the car “was not loaded,” and he returned it from up the road to Columbia on that day, to have necessary material placed on the car and to be forwarded to Union the next day to place trucks under the disabled car.
The car was so returned to Columbia, and to Royster, and Howell was carrying it from Royster into the city to have material placed on it, pursuant to Parker’s direction, when the accident occurred.
Howell was, therefore, pushing a tool car which had in the box end of it, concealed from his view by a trapdoor, unblocked trucks on rails. Gaffney, the trainmaster, testified that “It was not the duty of the conductor to inspect the wheels of that car whether they were braced or not.”
Under this state of facts the law of’the assumption of extraordinary risks was irrelevant, and the Court so distinctly held.
The Court charged correctly the law of the assumption of ordinary risks, and in conformity with Horton’s case, 233 U. S. 492, 34 Sup. Ct. 635, 58 U. Ed. 1062, L. R. A. 1915c, 1, Ann. Cas. 1915b, 475.
That which the Court said about the assumption of extraordinary risks and now excepted to need not have been said, for the testimony did not show any such risk. We shall, therefore, not pursue that inquiry further.
*30 Upon no view of the testimony could the Court have directed a verdict upon the ground that the plaintiff had lost his right by an assumption of the risk.
But Mr. Gaffney, an unusually open-minded witness, testified thereabout thus: “If it was safe (to ride on the tool car) so far as he (Howell) knew, he should be there.”
Howell testified that he rode on the only place allowable. Hardin, the engineer, testified to the contrary; that made an issue of fact for the jury, and the law followed hard on the fact.
When Reynolds, the car repairer, was testifying that the blocking of the trucks was unfinished on Saturday, and that the car was sent out on the line in that condition, Mr. Tompkins made the objection now insisted upon; and the Court ruled thus: “If this was work being done on the car before the accident, it would tend to show the condition at the time of the accident, unless a change is shown.”
“Mr. Tompkins: If it was the final condition it was in when this thing happened, but here is a car in the shop being worked on, which afterwards went to Union and came back before the accident, and— The Court: Yes; but he can show the condition from dáy to day, coming up to the time of the accident. If he shows it was in a certain condition on Saturday, the presumption is it continued that way, unless some change is shown.”
The time which elapsed betwixt the first of the above stated events and the second of the above stated events was *31 at most only 48 hours; the car went out on the line after Saturday night, it was back at Royster on Monday night, and the accident happened then. A condition such as that in the instant case proven to exist on Saturday night will be presumed to persist, without any intervening cause, until Monday night unless the contrary be shown. 1 Greenleaf, section 41.
But the acquittal of Williams will not effect the acquittal of the railroad, unless Williams was the only agency byy which the event could have been compassed; and the testimony shows abundantly that he was not.
The exception is that the Court ought to have answeréd, “Yes;” but, if the fact found is admittedly true, how matters it who found the fact?
8. The exception argued under point 8 is not well taken. The jury could not have understood the Court to hold that the railway company was liable to the plaintiff for the negligence of another of its servants about a matter unrelated to the railway company’s duty to the plaintiff.
The inquiry was about a particular act of negligence, and the Court was charging the jury about that act.
The Court charged the jury that the mere violation of a rule did not necessarily constitute negligence. That is true. Rules are made to insure safety, and it might be that under some circumstances the following of a rule might accomplish disaster; so that the jury ought in each case to apply *32 the rule to the circumstances of the case, except that, if the violation shall be in the opinion of the jury the proximate cause of the injury, then its violation shall operate to defeat the servant’s right.
But the rules involved in the instant case have little or no relevancy to the facts of the case. The rules which the appellant proved, and upon which it relies, are those with reference to “inspection” of trains.
As we before stated, Mr. Gaffney distinctly testified that it was not Howell’s duty to inspect the particular agency which caused the event, to wit, the bracing of the trucks. There was nothing else to inspect, for so far as the testimony shows there was no other disorder in the car.
The testimony also tended to show that there were two inspectors on each yard, and four inspectors at Royster.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Howell v. Southern Railway Company Et Al.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1.Master and Servant — -That Trucks on Tool. Car Were Insecure Admissible Under Pleading.. — In an action by conductor injured when trucks on a tool car rolled along the rail track on the car and struck him, evidence as to the proper method of loading and as to the insecureness of the trucks held admissible under an allegation that the wheels were not properly fastened. 2. Appeal and Error. — Evidence to Same Effect as Evidence Already Received Harmless. — In an action against a railroad company where its own yardmaster testified that trucks on a tool car were insecure, the admission of plaintiff’s evidence to that effect was inconsequential if erroneous. 3. Evidence — That Witness’ Superior Was in Court, But Not Called, Held Admissible. — Where plaintiff’s witness who testified that he did not put braces on tool car to keep trucks from rolling and that he was so directed by his superior, testimony that his superior was in Court, but was not called, admissible. 4. Appeal and Error — Argument Not in Case and Without Objection Made Cannot Be Questioned. — Where the reference to flagman was brought out by the defendant railroad company on cross-examination, an objection that plaintiff’s attorney stated that the company gave plaintiff yard conductor a negro flagman cannot be considered on appeal, where the objection to the argument did not raise that point and the case showed no such argument. 5. Master and Sergant — Conductor Held Not to Have Assumed Risk op Insecure Trucks on Tool Car. — A yard conductor held not to have j assumed the risk of injury from unfastened trucks breaking out of J the inclosed portion of a tool car on which-he was riding, where he > was under no obligation to examine that portion of the car. 6. Master and Servant — Negligence in Riding on Tool Car Held por Jury. — In an action by a conductor injured by insecure trucks while riding on a tool car, where the evidence was conflicting as to whether he should have ridden on the car or engine, motion for directed verdict on the ground he should have ridden on the engine was properly refused 7. Master and ' Servant — Evidence op Work Done on Car Before Injury Admissible. — In an action by a conductor hurt when insecure trucks broke out of box car portion of tool car on which he was riding, evidence as to work done on the car 48 hours previous showing that the trucks were not firmly fastened is admissible; the presumption being that the condition continued to exist. 8. Master and Servant — Acquittal op Vice Principal Held Not to Exonerate Master. — Where injured employee sued master and vice principal, the exoneration of the vice principal will not free the master unless the vice principal was the only agency by which the injury could have been caused. 9. Appeal and Error — Where Jury Correctly Answered Question, That Court Should Have Determined Question Was Harmless.— Where the jury correctly answered a special issue, the fact that the Court should have determined the question is no ground for complaint. • JO. Master and Servant — Violation op Rules Not Necessarily Negligence. — The violation by railroad employee of the company’s rules is not necessarily negligence, and the employee is justified in violating the rule where to follow it would accomplish disaster.