Clyde v. Richmond & D. R.
Clyde v. Richmond & D. R.
Opinion of the Court
(after stating the case). Eo question has been made, and, indeed, none could have been made, as to the right of the court ordering, the issue to disregard the verdicts of the jury. “A verdict upon an issue ordered by a court of equity is in no just sense final upon the facts it finds, or binding upon the judgment of the court. The court may, at its pleasure, set it aside, and grant a new trial; or, disregarding it, may proceed to hear the cause, and decide in contradiction of the verdict; or' it may adopt the verdict
This leads to an examination of the evidence. The testimony of the witnesses taken at both trials is in the record. The uncontra-dicted facts are these: The intestate,.C. C. Patterson, a young man, 21 years of age and able-bodied, sought employment with the receivers on 18th May, 1892. In answer to a series of printed questions. he wrote, among other things, that he had had experience in railroad service on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company for 3 years, and that he knew that it was dangerous to climb up the side of a box car, by the regular ladder or otherwise, while the train is moving. He was accepted, and put on duty as a train-hand, and was so engaged on the 21st June, 1892. The train upon which he was employed was what is known as a “ragged train,” consisting of box cars and flat cars. There were two other brakemen on the train besides Patterson. One of them had charge of the forward part of the train, another of the rear of the train, and Patterson was in the middle of the train. Each had special duties assigned to him. It was a part of the duty of Patterson to inspect the tops of the trains, in order to see if any of the cars were out of order, in any respect, as to their top hamper, and also to assist in coaling when they reached a coaling station. One of the box cars, No. 1,510, was in the forward part of the train, — not in that part of it where Patterson was stationed, but between him and the locomotive. It had a ladder on the side, but the grab iron at the top of the ladder was not in order. The grab iron, as described by a witness, and its "uses, are these:
“On this car (1,510), and on other cars with a tin roof, we have a footboard at the end of the car; and the grab iron is a piece ol iron about that long [witness indicates], I suppose as large as your thumb, a foot on each side of It, and fastened on with a flat, just the same rod as used on a ladder. On some cars that is fastened to a board, and this board is screwed to the top of the car, and, with a grab iron, is used, in going up and down the lad der, to pull yourself up. It is on the top of the car, about a foot or 18 inches from the level of the car.”
When the train was about two miles from Barksdale, a coaling station, Patterson ran on the flat cars and up the ladder on 1,510. He fell, the train passed over him, and he died from the effects of the wound he received. There was found on the ground the grab iron, adhering to the plank, which had the screws in it, and also showed that nails had been driven in it. This, evidently, was the grab iron on that car. Patterson had advised other men on the train to be careful of this car, as the grab iron was loose, and one
It is evident, from this testimony, that the deceased, there being no urgent necessity for his act, climbed up a ladder whose grab iron was dangerous, within his own knowledge, and whose condition it was a part of his special duties to examine; that he knew that it was dangerous, under any circumstances, to climb a ladder on a car while the train was moving. It is impossible to escape the conclusion that he, without necessity, took a known risk, and that he contributed to the accident by his own act. Railroad Co. v. Herbert, 116 U. S., at page 655, 6 Sup. Ct. 590. Under any circumstances, and in a doubtful case, the concurrent opinion of two judges, who heard and examined this case, would be entitled to great weight. A review of the testimony induces us to concur with them.
Decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CLYDE v. RICHMOND & D. R. CO. at al. (PATTERSON, Intervener)
- Status
- Published