Ultima Thule, Arkadelphia & Mississippi Railway Co. v. Calhoun

Hirr, C. J.

This is a suit by Mary E. Calhoun in her own right and as next friend of her minor children against the Ultima Thule, Arkadelphia & Mississippi Railway Company and the Arkadelphia Lumber Company, for the death of her husband, P. J. Calhoun, which was caused, as she alleged, by the negligence of, said companies. She recovered judgment for $5,000, and the companies have appealed.

It appears that these two companies are owned by practically the same individuals. They are separate corporations, however closely connected. Some employees are in the common employ of both, and some are changed from one corporation to the other from time to time. The Lumber Company seems to be the paymaster for both companies. Calhoun had been in the employ of the Lumber Company, and was transferred to the Railway Company, and at the time of his death was working as machinist helper, and was killed by the explosion of a locomotive. There is not sufficient evidence that Calhoun was in the employ of the Lumber Company, and the judgment as 'to the Lumber Compariy is reversed, and this cause considered isolely. between the Railway Company and the appellee.

The engine had been in use by appellant railway company for about ten years, and had been bought as a second-hand engine then. The boilers were of iron — a method of locomotive construction which has not prevailed for the past fifteen years. It had been constantly in use by this road, but had been kept in good condition, and there had been no serious complaints of it. Nearly two years before the accident it had been in the repair shop, and had been thoroughly overhauled, and its boilers tested with the hammer test, and had been placed in as good condition as an engine of its age could be. For about two weeks prior to the accident it had been in the shop for repairs to a swang in one of the back tires. Some other incidental repairs were made at this time; and it had just been run out of the shops when it exploded with terrific force, killing Calhoun who in the discharge of his duties happened to be standing right by it.

The court sent the case to the jury upon this issue, which was presented in the second instruction, as follows:

“If you believe from the evidence that from time and long use the sheet and barrel of the boiler had become crystallized, either wholly or in part, and thereby weakened to the extent that it was unable to carry or resist the full amount of steam pressure it was originally designed to carry and resist, and this fact was known to the defendant or their officers or employees in charge, or could and would have been known to them by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence on their part, and that from and by reason of such crystallized and weakened condition, the boiler exploded and killed deceased, you should find for the plaintiffs.”

The serious question of the case is whether there was evidence sufficient to sustain a verdict under this instruction. There was evidence that the iron of the boiler along the line where the explosion occurred had become crystallized, and that crystallization took the life out of iron and weakened it. The consensus of opinion among the experts seems to be that the hammer test would not disclose weakness from crystallization.

Two of the witnesses on behalf of appellee, who are boiler makers and familiar with tests of boilers, testified as to the pressure test, which is made by filling boilers with water to the full extent of the steam capacity, and if there is weakness in the boiler it will then be developed without injury to any one. They say that 145 pounds of water is equal to 190 pounds of steam pressure. This test had never been made qn this engine during its ten years of use by appellant. And no test of the soundness of the boilers was ever made except they were tested -with the hammer nearly two years prior to the accident.

There was strong evidence adduced on behalf of appellant showing that the tensile strength of specimens taken from along the line of the rupture, notwithstanding its crystallization, was greater than the steam pressure required; and that a rupture, not an explosion, would be the result of weakness from crystallization. This evidence, however, while of strong probative force, does not prove that there were no other portions of the boiler so weakened by the crystallization that they could not stand the required steam pressure and exploded from it. The condition of the engine, as developed by the description of witnesses and the photographs of it, would indicate that the explosion was of terrific force — probably of more force than the utmost steam pressure of this engine could have caused, and it was proved that the steam pressure at the time of the explosion was within the limit. However these were all questions of fact representing the varying views of witnesses qualified to speak. The court is unable to say in this case, as it was in Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Knisel, 79 Ark. 608, that the oral testimony is against the physical facts and scientific demonstration. There is some substantial testimony that the boilers were weakened by crystallization, and that the hydraulic test would have discovered this weakness, and that this explosion could have resulted from such weakness, and that no such tests were ever made on this engine, although it was of antiquated pattern and long in constant service. Therefore the instruction was correct, and there is sufficient evidence to sustain a verdict under it. What was said in St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v. Brown, 67 Ark. 295, is peculiarly applicable here: “But there is a time when it is the duty of a railroad company to inspect its machinery and other appliances for the purpose of discharging its obligation to use due care in keeping the same in good repair. It is bound to take notice of the liability of its tools and machinery to decay from age and to wear out by use, and to protect its servants against such contingencies by inspection at reasonable intervals for the purpose of ascertaining what repairs are needed, and for a failure to discharge this duty is liable to the servants for damages.” An application of this doctrine to the explosion of a boiler was made in Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Barrett, 166 U. S. 617, which is much in point in regard to the facts of this case.

2. The court gave the following instruction: “The jury is instructed that the defendant’s duty to plaintiff’s intestate did not require it to resort to unusual or impractical tests; and if the jury finds from the evidence in this case that the defendant railway company, in the inspections, examinations, etc., used by it to discover defects and weakness in its locomotive boilers, used all the ordinary tests usually applied by prudent. railroad companies, then and -in that event their verdict should be for the defendant.”

This instruction was requested by the defendant, but not in 'the form given by the court. The last clause in the requested instruction read: “Usually applied and observed by similar short-line railroad companies in the operation of such roads,” etc., which the court changed to, “usually applied by prudent railroad companies,” etc.

The Supreme Court of the United States in the Barrett case, 166 U. S. 617, supra, said that the company fulfils its duty in regard to inspection “if it adopts such tests as are ordinarily in use by prudently conducted roads engaged in like business and surrounded by like circumstances.” This statement of the law is approved by Thompson. 4 Thompson on Negligence, 3926. This instruction might well have been qualified by making it read: “usually applied by prudent short-line railroads in like business and surrounded by like circumstances to defendant.” But this latter qualification was not asked, and the instruction is correct as given, and would have been incorrect if given in the form asked, because then the test would ¡have been what was usually applied and observed by similar short-line railroads in the operation of their roads, whether prudent or imprudent. It might be that short-line railroads were all reckless; but that would not excuse any one of them of its duty to its employees. They must be prudent in the management of their affairs; but their prudence may be tested by the business they are engaged in, and the circumstances surrounding it and commensurate to its requirements.

3. Finally, it is argued, that remarks of counsel for appellee were prejudicial, in that he argued that immediately after the explosion the management of the railroad company applied the hydraulic test for the purpose of supplying themselves with evidence. It was developed by the appellant in the examination of Mr. Peters, who was the machinist in charge of the shops, that after the explosion, in his examination of the engine, he applied the water test to the safety valves in order to find if there were any weaknesses in them, and that he found them to be sound. This evidence was brought out by the appellant in showing that the engine was in good condition and under proper management at the time of the explosion. On cross-examination Mr. Peters was asked if he had knowledge of the water test to determine the strength of boilers as well as valves, and he admitted that he did. Counsel for appellee argued that the water test of the bailers should have been resorted to by the railroad company in their examination of the engine while in the shops; and he pointed to this evidence to show that the machinist in charge of the repair-shops had knowledge of the efficiency of the water test in determining weaknesses in boilers and valves. This argument does not offend against the principle announced in Prescott & N. Ry. Co. v. Smith, 70 Ark. 179, and was legitimate.

Judgment is affirmed as to the railway company, and reversed as to the lumber company.