Hall v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

Henry, J.

This action was instituted by plaintiff for damages for an injury received by him while in the servies of defendant as a switchman, in consequence, he alleges, of the negligence and carelessness of defendant in permitting a loose iron rail to lie upon the path plaintiff had to pursue in the discharge of his duty as switchman, and by reason of which, while so employed, he was thrown down an embankment and injured. The accident occurred at Chamois at night. At that station there are six or seven tracks, and in switching cars from one track to another the switchman has to get off and adjust the switch. On this occasion when he stepped from the caboose to signal the engineer, his foot was caught under the iron rail lying loose in his path near the track, and he was thrown down the embankment and seriously injured. It was the duty of the section foreman, as testified by the foreman, to keep the tracks in repair and to remove rails and other obstructions which might be on or so near the track as to be dangerous. On the day of the night in question, the section foreman had taken up some rails in the yard, and the reasonable deduction from the evidence is, that the rail which caused the injury was one of those rails.

After the plaintiff closed his evidence, which substantially established the foregoing facts, the defendant asked the court to declare that, on the pleadings and evidence, the plaintiff could not recover, which the court refused; and for plaintiff instructed the jury as follows:

1. If the jury are satisfied from the evidence m this case, that the plaintiff was, at the time hereinafter mentioned, switchman on the railroad of defendant, and in its employ as such; that he was in the discharge of his duty *301as such switchman, and was on a caboose cutting or separating same from another caboose; that it became necessary for him to get off the caboose; that in doing so he exercised care, and without negligence on his part, his foot caught on a loose railroad rail, which caused him to fall, and he was thereby injured; that said rail was on the path where the plaintiff in the discharge of his duty would get off' the caboose, and that increased the risk of injury to plaintiff; and that said rail was put on the track by the section foreman, or those employed under him, or was allowed to remain there, and that the defendant knew of its existence or might by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence have known thereof; and they further find that the plaintiff' received injuries in consequence of such loose rail lying and remaining on said path, put there as aforesaid, or defendant knew or might have known of its existence; and the plaintiff, at the time he received such injury, was exercising ordinary care and prudence, and did not know that the rail was on said path, then the defendant is liable for such injury.

3. In this case the section foreman’s duty was to keep the track in repair and see that the track was not obstructed, and in this he represented the company.

l. master and servant : vioe-principai: railroad, The principle ground relied upon for a reversal of the judgment which plaintiff' recovered, is, that a switchman and section foreman are fellow-servants. Adjudications of the courts of other states of the Union sustaining the appellant’s position are cited by counsel, and, whatever our opinion might be, if it were a question of the first impression in this court, the contrary was held in Lewis v. R. R. Co., 59 Mo. 495, and the doctrine of that case has ever since been adhered to by this court, and we are not inclined to depart from what must, therefore, be now accepted, as the rule settled on that subject in this State. The declaration in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, was, therefore, properly overruled.

*3022 keslismob: amS^uryfraiu roa<L. *301The instruction number one, given by the court, is a *302correct declaration of law; and we presume that, if appellant’s counsel had conceded that plaintiff and the section foreman were not fellow-servants, and the petition had alleged that the defendant had knowledge, or by ordinary attention to its duties would have known, that the loose rail lay upon the roadbed near the track, they would not have complained of the instruction. The proposition that the petition is defective because it is not therein alleged that defendant had knowledge that the iron rail was lying on or so near the track as to be dangerous, is untenable. It is alleged that defendant negligently and carelessly permitted it to remain there, and this was not true, if defendant did not know, or by the due and proper discharge of its duty to keep the track clear of obstructions, would not have ascertained that the rail was there. In the cases of Serrot v. Omaha, 1 Dill. Cir. Ct. Rep. 312, and Bowie v. Kansas City, 51 Mo. 456, it was decided that petitions, substantially the same as this with respect to the omission of the allegation of knowledge on the part of defendant, were good. Nor is there anything in Price v. R’y Co., 72 Mo. 414, in conflict with those cases. In that case an instruction was objectionable which permitted a recovery on a cause of action not stated in the petition. No objections were made to the petition. The allegation which it is contended should have been made in the petition in the case at bar, is substantially embraced in the averment that defendant carelessly and negligently permitted the loose rail to lie on or near the track; and proof that the defendant did not know, and, in the proper discharge of its duty, would not have learned that the rail was in that condition, would have repelled the imputation ef negligence and carelessness. The instruction did not, therefore, authorize a recovery on a cause of action not stated in the petition.

*3033. master andsebV A N t : instruc«oaa. *302Instruction number three is objected to because it declares what the duties of the section foreman were, with *303respect to keeping the track clear of obstruetions. It there had been any conflict of evidence, or.no evidence, on that subject, it would have been manifestly improper; but the only testimony on that subject was that of the section foreman himself, who testified: “ That it was his duty to keep the track in repair and see that it was not obstructed,” and the court was warranted under the circumstances in so declaring The carelessness of the section foreman, and his knowledge of the obstruction in plaintiff’s path, are imputable to defendant. Long v. Pacific R. R. Co., 65 Mo. 225; Porter v. H. & St. Jo. R. R. Co., 71 Mo. 77; Harper v. Ind. & St. L. R. R. Co., 47 Mo. 567; Lewis v. St. L. & I. M. R. R. Co., 59 Mo. 506.

All concurring,

the judgment is affirmed.