McGillivray v. Great Northern Railway Co.

Dibell, J.

Action for personal injuries. There was a verdict for the plaintiil against the defendant Great Northern Eailway Company and in favor of the individual defendants. The Great Northern appeals from the order denying its alternative motion for judgment or a new trial. Its motion for a new trial or judgment and its notice of appeal were served upon the individual defendants and they appeared.

Prior to this action the plaintiff sued the defendant railway company *53for the injury of which he complains, alleging its negligence in allowing an accumulation of sand and gravel on the Alice crossing in Hibbing. At the close of the testimony the court dismissed the action. The plaintiff appealed and there was an affirmance. McGillivray v. Great Northern Ry. Co. 138 Minn. 278, 164 N. W. 922.

Afterwards this action was brought against the railway company and the individual defendants. The complaint alleges that the negligence of the engineer in failing to keep a lookout and stop his train and the negligence of the individual defendants in putting sand and gravel on the Alice crossing caused the derailment of the engine and the plaintiff’s ■ injury.

1. The plaintiff was the fireman on -a passenger train bound from Grand Eapids to Virginia. ■ It reached the Alice crossing going easterly between 11 and 12 in the forenoon. The automobile club of Hibbing had arranged for automobile races on July 4, 1916. The races took the automobiles across the Alice crossing. The defendants obtained permission from the railroad company to cover the rails at the crossing with sand and gravel, but were not to do so before the passing of the train. Sand and gravel were placed on the. crossing before the train came. The crossing was a flag station for passengers. Easterly of it was a cinder platform. Before the train reached the crossing it was warned by the poundmaster of Hibbing, one Walsh, who ran down the middle of the track and gave appropriate stop signals. The engineer did not obey them". The train ran into the sanded track and the engine was derailed easterly of the crossing and the plaintiff was injured. Theré is a conflict in the evidence as to the details of the occurrence, but it is sufficient to sup- ✓ port a finding 'of the jury that the engineer saw the signals and negligently failed to give heed to them and that his negligence was a proximate cause of the accident. •

2, The defendant claims error in the refusal of the court to give its requested instruction “that the railway company owed no duty to plaintiff to stop at the platform near this crossing merely because it was a flag stop; and if you find that the engineer honestly and reasonably believed, in the exercise of ordinary care, that Walsh was merely flagging the train for an ordinary flag stop, and had no other notice of a dangerous condition, then the fact that the engineer disregarded the signal *54would not be negligence in this ease, and your verdict in such event will be for defendant.”

The engineer .was not a witness. There is evidence that the plaintiff thought Walsh was flagging the train for people to get on, but that he was not in the proper place for flagging. It seems clear that he was not.

The failure of the engineer to respond to a flag stop would not charge the defendant with liability to the plaintiff, though because of such failure it so happened that he ran his train into an unknown danger. Neither he nor the company owed a duty to the fireman to obey a flag stop. The general principle is well enough settled. Akers v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry. Co. 58 Minn. 540, 544, 60 N. W. 669. It may be conceded that the requested instruction, though the engineer did not testify, might have been given. It accentuated the effect of a situation which the jury might have found from the evidence. The court upon the general question charged this:

“The engineer is not bound under all circumstances to observe warnings of danger which may be given to him by strangers who are in no way associated with the railway company, yet there are circumstances under which the exercise of ordinary care would require that those signals be obeyed, and it is for you to say in this case whether from all the circumstances and conditions shown by the evidence here, the requirements of ordinary care required that the engineer in this instance obey the signals and warnings given him by Walsh in reducing the speed of this train or stopping the train if he had time to do so. If it was his duty in the exercise of ordinary care to observe those signals given to him by Walsh and if he failed to do so then he would' be negligent, and if that negligence contributed to the injury to the plaintiff the defendant railway company would be liable therefor.”

We are of the view that the instruction sufficiently presented to the jury the law upon this phase of the controversy.

3. The defendant railway company claims that the court committed error in submitting the case as against the individual defendants in that its charge was too favorable to them. Upon this it cannot predicate error. The error if any was against the plaintiff. If it was itself negligent and its negligence was a proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff, it is not entitled to a reversal because the case was presented to the *55jury too favorably to the individual defendants. Tbe plaintiff alone can complain. He cannot be required to relitigate with the railway company because there was error against him and in favor of the other defendants, and if the railway company has ground for relief against them it is not here. 'See Bakula v. Schwab, 167 Wis. 546, 168 N. W. 378.

4. It is claimed that the damages are excessive. , The verdict was for $6,500. The question of damages was fairly presented under appropriate instructions. The trial court does not disapprove the amount of the award. Some of the injuries are definite and undisputed. Others are evidenced by subjective symptoms and involve uncertainty. There is much in the record suggestive of a very considerable exaggeration of his injuries by the plaintiff, but upon a careful consideration we do not find a justification for interference.

Order affirmed.