St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Duckworth

Hart, J.,

(after stating the facts). It is insisted by counsel for the.defendant that the testimony is not sufficient to support the verdict; that the facts in this case do not bring the plaintiff within the well known rule that it is the master’s duty to use ordinary care to furnish safe appliances and a safe place to work to his servants .and to exercise the same degree of care to keep such appliances .and place in the same condition. They contend that the duty of .an employer to provide a safe place to work is limited to the place where the employee is required to be for the purposes of his employment. They rely upon the theory that the defendant was not bound to anticipate the presence of the plaintiff at the particular place where the accident occurred, on the ground that he woidd not have been there had he gone the usual way provided for him in going to and from the shops. In short, they urge that the duties of the plaintiff in the performance of his work did not require him to 'go along the path where he was injured, that he was there without any invitation or.any inducement therefor by the railroad company; that he was, therefore, at most a mere licensee; that a licensee takes his license subject to all its concomitant perils; and that the licensor owes bim no duty except to refrain from wilfully or wantonly injuring him and to exercise ordinary care after discovering him to be in peril. See Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Payne, 103 Ark. 226, and cases cited; St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Tucka, 95 Ark. 190.

We do not agree with counsel in this contention, :and do not think the facts in this case bring it within the principles of the .eases .above cited, and other cases decided by this court with reference to the duties of a railway company to mere licensees. There is a difference between invitation and license, and an invitation will be more readily implied in some cases than ¡others. To illustrate, the undisputed facts in this case show that the accident .occurred in 1914, and that the residents of the town as well as the employees at work in the shops had been accustomed to use the ¡beaten path along the west side of the railroad track for more than five years and that the officials of the company knew of this fact but made no effort to prevent them from using the path. Under these circumstances a resident of the town would be a mere licensee for the reason that he used the path solely for his own pleasure and convenience.

It is conceded by counsel for the defendant that if the railroad company had provided this path as a means of egress or ingress for its employees to its shops that it would be the duty of the company to use ordinary care to keep it in a .safe condition. But they contend that under the facts in this case the plaintiff had no greater rights there than the residents of the town .and that he should be treated as a licensee merely.

(1-2) An invitation may be inferred where there is a common interest .and mutual advantage while a license is inferred where the object is the mere pleasure or convenience of the person using it. As we have .already .seen, the undisputed facts .show that the servants had been accustomed to walk along this path in going to and from their work in the .shops for a period of more than five years before the accident in question occurred. The evidence also tends: to show that there was no practical way to go from the part of the town where the plaintiff lived to the .shops on the east side of the railroad. The record does .show that there was a street on the west side of the railroad nearly parallel with the tracks- of the railroad company which the plaintiff might have used in going to and from his work. But it appears that much hauling was done over this street and that it was cut up with ruts and very muddy, which made it very difficult for footmen to travel over it. The ¡beaten path used by them enabled the shopmen to reach their homes more quickly and to return to their work more promptly. It was the most direct and practical way to reach the shops from that part of the town where the plaintiff and many other employees of the defendant lived. The railroad officials, including' the superintendent of the road, saw them using this path for that purpose day after day and acquiesced therein. While there was no express designation that this path be used by the servants in going to and from their work at the shops we think the jury might have inferred .an implied invitation to so use it. Such use of the path was for the common interest of both the railroad company and the plaintiff for the reason that the railroad company was interested in its servants getting promptly to the shops where they worked. Under the circumstances, we think it can not be said that the plaintiff was walking along the path where he was injured solely for his own convenience; but we are of the opinion that he was rightfully there upon the implied invitation of the company. See St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Schultz, 115 Ark. 350; St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Wirbel, 104 Ark. 238.

(3) The jury might have inferred that the negligence of the railroad company in regard to the wires was the proximate cause of the injury. In order to warrant a finding that negligence is the proximate cause of an injury, it must appear that the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the negligence, and that it ought to have been foreseen in the light of the attending circumstances, but it is not necessary that the particular injury which did happen should have been actually foreseen. See Pulaski Gas Light Co. v. McClintock, 97 Ark. 576.

In this connection it may be said that the testimony on the part of the plaintiff shows that wires from thirty to one hundred feet long were frequently seen in the yards of the company at McGehee, where the injury in question occurred, and that such wires were frequently seen attached to moving cars going ont from the station at McG-ehee. We call particular attention to the following testimony:

* ‘ Q. What would Ibecome of the wires (referring to wires on flat cars .after logs were unloaded) ? A. -1 have seen them out off; they have stakes on each side of the cars, and they run the wires backwards and forwards, three or four strands to the stakes, ¡and then they take a stake or ,a rod 'and put it in between the wires 'and twist it until it is tight, to hold the logs on there; and when they get ready to unload them they just cut one side of the wire and throw the wire around; the wire hangs to the stakes on the other side, which has not been cut— then they unload the logs. Q. Have you ever seen any of those "wires that were thus used in wiring on logs, lying anywhere about the main track? If so, where? A. Yes, sir; I have seen them practically all over the yard and. ■along the main line, and I have seen flat car after flat car with wires to the stakes, and also lying loose upon the cars. Q. Have you ever seen any lying loose on or about the roadbed or track of the main line? A. I have seen them lying there from the main line about a mile or two north and south of McGehee. Q. All along? A. Yes. sir; all along wherever I have traveled. Q. Do you know anything about the underworks or attachments on passenger oars? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know anything about their catching up wires left on the track? A. All the brace rods under the cars lie very low next to the track; the brace rods, the long rods that go from one end of the car to the other — and they have a plank in between them. I suppose from six to eight inches wide; the rods are very close to- the surface, about a foot and a half, something like that from the ground, or probably two feet.”

Objections are made by counsel for the defendant to certain instructions given by the'court at the instance of the plaintiff and to the refusal of the court to give certain instructions asked for by them. We do not deem it necessary to set out these instructions or to comment upon them for the instructions given were in accord with the principles of law above announced and the questions of fact were submitted to the jury under ¡appropriate instructions.

(4) It is finally insisted 'by counsel for the defendant that the verdict of the jury is excessive. The jury found for the plaintiff in the ¡sum of $7,000 and we do not regard this amount as excessive under the circumstances of the case. 'The plaintiff’s foot was crushed by the cars running over it; his leg was torn open six or eight inches on the calf and about ¡half way from the knee joint. His foot was first removed (by .amputation and .after he had been in the hospital three or four days a second operation was performed and his leg cut off just below the knee. He was compelled to stay in the hospital four months. During all this time and for a considerable time since he has suffered ¡severe and excruciating pain. His physician testified that, though he could not state positively that the pain ¡and suffering of plaintiff would be permanent, he believed it would last during his life. The plaintiff at the time he was injured was earning between six and seven hundred dollars a year. He was a stout, able-bodied man, was sober and industrious and his earning capacity was likely to be increased. When this is considered, in connection with the severe pain which he endured, and is likely to endure, we do not think that a verdict of $7,000 is excessive.

The judgment will be affirmed.

Kieby, J., dissents.