Pennsylvania Co. v. Backes

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The first error complained of is, that the Appellate Court failed to consider disputed questions of fact. The law requires the Appellate Court to pass upon questions of fact as well as questions of law, but this record fails to show that the Appellate Court disregarded its duty in this regard. The Appellate Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court, and we must presume, in the absence of anything appearing to the contrary, that the facts were all duly considered, passed upon, and found sufficient to support the judgment.

The next error complained of is, that the plaintiff’s first and third instructions allowed a recovery under any one of the four counts of the declaration, three of which are believed to be inapplicable to the case as made by the evidence. The first count of the declaration charged the defendant with running the car which resulted in the injury, at a high and unlawful rate of speed, and with negligently driving the same against the plaintiff. The second charged the defendant with a violation of a section of our statute which requires the blowing of a whistle or ringing of a bell at a distance of eighty rods from highway crossings. The third charged a violation of the city ordinance in failing to ring a bell or blow the whistle. The fourth charged that the coal car was running at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour, contrary to the ordinances of the city.

The substance of the charge complained of is, that if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff, without fault or negligence on his part, was injured by the wrongful acts of the defendant .company, as alleged by the plaintiff in his declaration, then they should find the defendant guilty. We shall not stop to inquire whether the second, third and four.th counts were sustained by the evidence introduced under them. Even if they were not, a recovery might be had under the first count. The instruction complained of could not mislead the jury.

In Hannibal and St. Joe Railroad Co. v. Martin, 111 Ill. 219, where an instruction directed the jury, that if the plaintiff was injured in manner and form as alleged in the declaration, or a some count thereof, the jury should, find the defendant guilty, it was there, as here, urged that the instruction was erroneous, because the court should not have submitted the question of plaintiff’s right to recover under the third and fourth counts of the declaration, to the jury, because there was no evidence that the accident happened in the manner therein stated. The court held the instruction good, and said: “It was the privilege of appellant to call the attention of the jury to the different allegations of the several counts, if it chose to do so; but it is sufficient if the law, as laid down at the instance of appellee, is correct, and applicable to the ease under either count.”

It is not claimed that plaintiff could not recover under the first count of the declaration, if the jury found, from the evidence, the facts as stated in the charge. Nor is it claimed that the instruction is erroneous as to that count of the declaration, and under the ruling in the case cited, the instruction can not be held to be erroneous. See, also, Pennsylvania Co. v. Frana, 112 Ill. 403.

It is next claimed that plaintiff’s second instruction is “one-sided” and misleading, and therefore erroneous. It is as follows:

“The court instructs you, that if you find, from the evidence, that the Pennsylvania Company, by its employes, propelled a freight car, or car loaded with coal, in and along West Water street, in Chicago, on or about December 17, 1887, by giving • it a considerable rate of speed and momentum, and then detaching or cutting it off from the locomotive without any employe on board thereof, and that the Pennsylvania Company, by its employes, so propelled the car in a negligent and reckless manner, and if you, from the evidence, find that the moving and propelling of said coal ear in the way and manner you find, from the evidence, it was moved and propelled at the time and place and under the circumstances shown in the evidence, was an act of negligence on the part of the defendant, the Pennsylvania Company, and further find, from the evidence, that the said plaintiff, Peter Backes, was, while in said West Water street, without fault or negligence on his part, injured through and by means of the negligence of the defendant in the moving or propelling of said coal car, (if you, from the evidence, and under the instructions from the court, find the defendant guilty of neglignce in moving or propelling said car,) then you should find the defendant guilty.”

The instrudtion might, perhaps, have been drawn in fewer words or in better form, but it is not liable to the objection that it “sums up” all of the facts which the evidence tends to prove on the part of plaintiff, and omits the facts on the other side, as claimed. There is nothing in the instruction calculated to prejudice or mislead the jury, and from an inspection of the evidence we think it was warranted by the facts proven on the trial. The instruction embodied merely the theory upon which the plaintiff claimed a right of recovery, and, as held in Chamberlain v. Chamberlain, 116 Ill. 487, it is not error for the court, at the request of the party, to state to the jury the theory upon which a case is being tried, and then announce the law applicable to such theory. See, also, Hannibal and St. Joe Railroad Co. v. Martin, 111 Ill. 219, and Chicago and Northwestern Ry. Co. et al. v. Snyder, 117 id. 376.

The defendant asked the court to give the following instruction :

“7. The jury are instructed, that the plaintiff, in undertaking to work for the Star and Crescent Mills Company, and therein to work on the side-track of said company, assumed himself all the risk of injury, whilst working in that capacity, which existed when the business was carried on in the usual and ordinary way.”

The court, modified this instruction by adding the words, “and with reasonable care.” The modification is relied upon as error.

If a servant, knowing the hazards of his employment as the business is conducted, is injured while engaged therein, he can not maintain an action against the master for the injury, merely on the ground that there was a safer mode in which the business might have been conducted, the adoption of which would have prevented the injury. (Simmons v. Chicago and Tomah Railroad Co. 110 Ill. 347. See, also, Stafford v. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. 114 id. 247, and United States Rolling Stock Co. v. Wilder, 116 id. 100.) The instruction, as prepared, was no doubt intended to be predicated on this principle of law existing between master and servant. But in this ease the relation of master and servant did not exist between the plaintiff and the railroad company. The former was a stranger to the latter. He was not employed by the company, and had nothing to do with it or its employes. Appellee was a laborer in the employ of the Star and Crescent Flour Mills Company. His business was to assist in moving cars on the scale platform and shovel wheat from them into the shed of the mill company, and we are inclined to hold that the exemption of the master, growing out of the relation of master and servant, and -the servant’s contract to assume ordinary risks incident to the business, does not apply.

But even if the relation of master and servant existed between appellee and appellant, the appellant was required, in switching its cars, to do so, not in a reckless manner, but with due regard to the safety of those who might be engaged in unloading cars on the switch or side-track. Rolling Mill Co. v. Johnson, 114 Ill. 59, is a case in point. There the plaintiff was employed by the company as a laborer, to unload brick ¡from cars, the tracks and cars being under the management and control of the mill company, and while engaged in unloading a car, a train of cars was backed down the track on •which the' car he was unloading was standing, and against the ■car, with such violence as to suddenly put it in motion, whereby the plaintiff was thrown down and his leg broken. The mill •company undertook to prove, by the engineer in charge of the 'train, that the train causing the injury was managed in the •usual and ordinary way; but the court ruled that the evidence was incompetent, and this court, in passing upon the question, ■and others of a similar character, said: “In our opinion, it was wholly unimportant whose duty it was to inspect the couplings •of the cars, brakes, etc., and how, on that occasion, the engineer managed his train. * * * No matter whose individual duty it was to inspect the company’s brakes, etc., the •obligation was upon appellant not to bring upon appellee and 'the other laborers, without previous timely notice, in the helpless condition they were, this danger, and to do so was, unquestionably, in fact, gross negligence, to which there was no contributive negligence on the part of appellee.” The ruling in this case was approved in Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Co. v. Goebel, 119 Ill. 516. Under the rule as established in these cases the appellant was required to use reasonable care, .as declared in the modification of the instruction, to avoid injury.

It is also claimed that the court erred in refusing appellant’s •eighth instruction, which, in substance, directed the jury that plaintiff was not in the situation of a passenger on a highway, "but was that of a person working upon a private railroad track, assisting in the moving of railroad ears thereon. But little need be said in regard to this instruction. If the railroad «company was bound to exercise no care to avoid injuring the plaintiff, in the movement of its trains, while he was engaged at- labor on its tracks, then the instruction might have been* proper; but, as has been heretofore said, such is not the case..

Finally, it is claimed that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. An instruction of this character should not be given, unless,., admitting all that the evidence tends to prove, it is insufficient,, in law, to sustain the action. (Doane v. Lockwood, 115 Ill. 490.) Such is not the case here. The evidence tended to establish a right of action, and it was properly submitted to the jury for-their consideration.

The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.