Rutledge v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

Thomas, J.

Plaintiff recovered judgment in. the circuit court of Osage county for $5,000 damages for personal injuries, and defendant appealed.

Plaintiff was a switchman in defendant’s yards .at. Chamois, and defendant’s negligence, which, it is. *317claimed, caused the injury, is specified. by plaintiff in his petition as:

First. That the defendant “did not have made- and published amongst its employes, at said town of Chamois, any system of signals by which the various servants of defendant engaged in working in the yards-aforesaid should be governed, and by the use of which one employe could protect and guard himself against, the action of another.

Second. That at the place where plaintiff was-injured defendant did not have the space between the guardrail and the main rail blocked, by reason whereof his arm was caught between the rail and guardrail and crushed.

Third. That on said twelfth day of August he was. ordered by his proper superior to cut off (uncouple) a certain car; that he started back over the cars to-uncouple said car, and before he reached it some one unknown to him caused the cars to be moved without notice to him, whereby he was thrown from said car, his right arm caught between the unlocked space-, between the rail and guardrail, and he was there held, and thereby suffered the loss of his right arm; that it. is the custom for the person actually engaged in coupling-cars to give all signals for the engine to move the cars-in any direction; this custom is merely in use by employes, and not because of any peremptory orders from defendant; that defendant was negligent in not having proper orders published touching the manner of moving cars whilst in the yards, and governing its-employes in the discharge of their various and ¡varied duties in said yards while making up trains and coupling and uncoupling cars; that this negligence or failure on part of said defendant to have established such proper system and published rules, regarding said matters, was directly the cause of said train of cars being sud*318denly, without notice to plaintiff, moved, whereby the plaintiff was thrown off and injured.

The answer contained a general denial, and a plea ■of contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part.

I. The court erred in overruling defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The allegations are not consistent with each other. It is first averred that plaintiff proceeded, in pursuance of orders given him by the yardmaster, to uncouple the car, and before he reached the proper place to perform that duty 11some one wnlmown to him caused the cars to be moved without notice to him, whereby he was thrown from said car” and injured, and then it is averred that the failure of defendant “to have such proper system and published rules regarding said matters was directly the ■cause of said train of cars being suddenly, without notice to plaintiff, moved,” whereby he was thrown off and injured. We do not see how these two allegations •can stand together. He first alleged that he did not know who caused the train to move, and, of course, he did not know why and how it was moved, and not knowing this he could not affirm that the movement was the result of the failure to establish rules. It is ■evident this is a mere surmise, supposition or guess of the plaintiff. The probata must. correspond with the ■allegata, and the reasons why this petition is defective will more fully appear in the discussion and disposition of the next proposition.

II. Defendant contends that the court erred in overruling its demurrer to the evidence. The evidence •on the part of the plaintiff shows that he had been a switchman in defendant’s yards in the town of Chamois for fourteen months; that about nine o’clock on the morning of August 12, 1887, a freight train of twenty-*319five or six cars going west pulled onto a sidetrack in the said yards, and the yardmaster, Mr. Humphrey, ordered him to cut off (uncouple) the hind car of this train; he went to and climbed onto this car, and after he gave a step or two backwards the car moved suddenly, slacked up, which threw him forward, and he fell between the cars; he caught the brakebeam as he fell, and holding on to it he was dragged about two car-lengths, when his arm got caught between the main rail and a guardrail, and was so badly mashed and injured as to require amputation. The evidence showed further that the defendant had some rules printed on its time cards, but what those rules were is not disclosed by this record. It was well understood, however, by the men engaged in the yards, that the person, coupling or uncoupling cars, should give signals for the movement of trains to enable them to perform this duty.

“The law imposes upon a railroad company the duty to its employes of diligence and care, hot only to furnish proper and reasonably safe appliances, and machinery and skilled and careful co-employes, but also to make and promulgate rules, which, if faithfully observed, will give reasonable protection to the employes.” Abel v. President, etc., 103 N. Y. 581; Reagan v. Railroad, 93 Mo. 348. And it seems to be well settled also that rules adopted by the employes, not regularly prescribed, and obedience to which is not required by the company, will not excuse the company from the performance of this duty. Abel v. President, etc., supra; Ford v. Railroad, 124 N. Y. 493; Abel case (second appeal), 28 N. E. Rep. 663.

Conceding every fact which the evidence tends to prove, and every fair inference that may be deduced from the whole evidence, as we are bound to do in passing upon a demurrer to the evidence, our opinion is that plaintiff wholly failed to prove one fact material to his *320recovery, and that is the causal connection between defendant’s failure to promulgate rules and require obedience to them and the sudden movement of the car, which threw him down, resulting in his injury. The plaintiff was the only witness that testified in regard to the casualty. He could not say and did not say that any signal was given, in pursuance of which the train was-suddenly moved. We are left in the dark as to the rate of speed of the train, and the cause of its sudden movement or how violent this movement was. That the tram was moving at the time he got on the car, and that it continued to move after he fell, he admits. We may infer, thofigh it is not proved, that the engineer knew the hind car was to be cut off, and that he was slowing up his train for that purpose. But whether the movement in question was caused by this slowing-up process, or in pursuance of a signal from some one, we are not informed. It is not probable that the engineer gave the slack, of his own motion, in order to enable plaintiff to uncouple the car, for he must have been seven hundred or eight hundred feet from plaintiff. The night was a dark one, and he could not have known when the car had reached the point where it was to be left, and, hence, in the absence of evidence that any signal to slack up was given, we may very well infer that the sudden movement was the result of the ordinary operation of trains going in on switches. Indeed', the plaintiff testifies that it is not customary to give the slack in a case of this kind to enable a switchman to uncouple cars. The implication from this is, that trains are slackened by their ordinary movements onto a switch, and that no one gave a signal to slack for the purpose of enabling plaintiff to perform his duty.

At all events we think the plaintiff was bound to prove how and why this sudden movement occurred, and this he utterly failed to do. If the sudden move*321ment was caused by the voluntary action of the engineer or in pursuance of a signal given by some one other than plaintiff, and this action of the engineer was caused or the signal was given by the wrong person because defendant had failed to promulgate and enforce proper rules and regulations in regard to the movement of trains in its yards at Chamois, defendant is liable for the injury caused by such movement. We can appreciate how important it is in the management of trains to have a proper system of signals to protect the employes from danger; and the propriety of conferring on the switchman performing the duty of coupling or uncoupling ears the right to give signals to stop or start is apparent, whether on the cars or on the ground.

On the other hand, if the sudden movement was, the result alone of the ordinary operation of the train going onto the switch, plaintiff must be held to have assumed the risk of being thrown off the car by it, and, therefore, cannot recover. This is one of the risks of the employment which the law holds that he assumed when he engaged to perform the work assigned him. He mounted the car while in motion, and he knew it was going in on the switch, and, hence, he should have taken proper precaution against the ordinary movements of the train.

We cannot say, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The record fails to show whether it was customary and prudent for switchmen to mount the cars to uncouple them or not, or whether he should have remained on the ground.

As the case may be retried we will add that the court erred in permitting plaintiff to state to the jury what he would have done if he had known the sudden movement was going to occur. What he could have done is apparent to all, but what he would have done is a matter of mere conjecture.

*322And we also think the failure to block the main ■and guardrails ought not to be submitted to the jury as a ground of recovery. Blocking is intended to prevent feet from being caught and held, and not hands and arms.

If' defendant is liable for the injury at all, it is liable without regard to whether plaintiff’s arm was caught between the rails or not, provided he was not guilty of contributory negligence in the performance of his duty. The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.

All concur.