Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Gower

Snodgrass, J.

Gower was a brakeman on a freight train of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, and while in the discharge of one of his duties as such — that of coupling cars — was severely injured, and brought this action to recover dam*467ages for the injury sustained in the Circuit Court of Davidson County.

The injury occurred at Petersburg, Ky., on the night of April 5th, 1880.

About two miles from this point a car loaded with lumber had been taken into the train, and at Petersburg two flat' cars were taken out of the train and left. These were put on the side track, and this necessitated the coupling of the . lumber car with a box car. In making this coupling the accident to Gower occurred. It was his duty to make the coupling, and ho did it without special order. lie stood at the south end of the -box car, signaled the engineer to back the lumber car to it, which was carefully done. When within a few feet of the box car, the plaintiff observed that the plank projected over the north end of the lumber car — the end to be coupled — and that it was necessary for him to stoop to avoid it in entering between the ears to make the coupling. Ho did enter in this way, and made the coupling. While doing which, having some difficulty in getting the coupling-pin into the draw-head, he raised his head, and was caught between the box car and the projecting lumber, and badly injured.

These are the facts of the case as detailed by plaintiff as a witness on the trial before the jury.

He obtained a verdict and judgment for $9,500, and the railroad company appealed. The Commission of Referees heard the case, and reported in favor of reversal upon several grounds, omit*468ting others supposed by counsel of plaintiff in error to be objectionable, and both parties except to the report, and open the whole case for consideration by this Court.

The first error necessary to be noticed is in the admission of evidence. The bill of exceptions shows that Dr. Hampton was the first witness introduced for plaintiff:'. He was asked if plaintiff had a family, and answered that he had a wife and children. The defendant “objected to the admission of any proof going to show that plaintiff had a family,” stating ground of objection to be that plaintiff recovers, if at all, for the damages he has individually sustained, and not that sustained by his family, and that such evidence was irrelevant.

The Court replied:

“I do not take that view of it, and I will allow the plaintiff:' to prove that he has a wife and- children; but if counsel for defendant desire to argue the question hereafter, I will hear them, and if I conclude I am in error, I can then exclude it from the jury.”

To which action of the Court defendant’s counsel excepted. They did not again call it to the attention of the Court. The Commission of llefei’ees report this to be error, and counsel of Gower except.

It is not seriously insisted, and indeed cannot be, that the evidence was relevant, but they interpose two objections to a reversal in consequence *469of it. Eirst, that it is not material, and could have had no prejudicial effect; and, second, that the same evidence was admitted Avithout objection Avhen given by another Avituess.

In ansAArer to the first objection it is clear that it Avas material Avhen received under the opinion of the Court. The counsel for the railroad company had put their objection upon the ground that the “recovery Avas for the damages sustained by plaintiff individually, and not that sustained by his-' family.” The Court, by his reply that “he did not take that vieAV of it,” and by his action admitting it Avith such statement to the jury, necessarily impressed them Avith the belief that the recovery Avould be affected by that evidence. It Avas equiAmlent to a charge that the loss to the family could be considered by them.

It is Avell settled that no one else can recover in life than the one injured in cases of this character, and he only for the damages Avhicli he, and not others, has sustained.

Under § 3130 of the Code — providing that the right of action Avhicli a .person who dies from injuries received from another, or whose death is caused by the Avrongful act, omission, or killing by another, Avould have had against the wrongdoer in case death had not ensued shall not abate or be extinguished by his death, but shall pass to his AvidoAv, and, in case there is no widoAV, to his children, or to his personal representative for the benefit of Ids AvidoAv or next of kin, free from *470the claims of his creditors — it was at one time held by this Court that the recovery might be in such actions for the damages to the deceased, and the damages resulting from his death to the parties for whose benefit the right of action survives. Railroad Company v. Prince, 2 Heis., 580, and other cases.

Yet this doctrine, not in accord with the earliest construction of the statute on this point (Railroad Company v. Burke, 6 Cold., 46), was rejected, and in the last reported cases (prior to the Act of 1883, Chapter 186) it was uniformly held by this Court that the first construction was the correct one, and that the damages recoverable were such only as the injured party had himself sustained. 9 Lea, 470; 11 Lea, 129. But whatever fluctuation in judicial opinion prevailed as to the recovery which might be had by the widow or the children, or the personal representative, in an action brought after death by either of these representatives for the damages resulting from the death, it was never held that the injured party, while living, could, for an injury to himself, recover any more or other damages than those resulting to him from the injury complained of. The indicated view of the Circuit Judge in the admission of this evidence was erroneous, and it made the error, for the reasons stated, a very material and prejudicial one.

As to the second answer to the objection, that another witness was permitted to give the same *471testimony without exception, it is sufficient to say that defendant having excepted to it when the first witness was examined, and having had his exception overrated, it was neither necessary nor proper for him to repeat the exception. One ruling on one question is enough, and a repetition of similar exceptions is not to be required, if indeed to be tolerated.

The next most material error in the case, and first of two only necessary to be noticed, though there are other errors in the charge, is the instruction to the jury on the question of negligence.

The Circuit Judge charged the jury that — •

“If the lumber car was so loaded that the ends of the lumber projected some eighteen inches over the rear end of the car, and that caused the act of coupling this car to another to be attended with more than ordinary danger, this was negligence in the agents of the company who so loaded it, and if the conductor accepted a car so loaded and attached it to his train, this was an act of negligence; and if an injury grew directly out of this negligence to the plaintiff, and plaintiff did not materially contribute to it, he is entitled to be compensated in damages.”

And again:

“It is admitted that the lumber projected some eighteen inches over the rear end of the lumber car, and that this rendered the act of coupling this car to another car extra - hazardous. I charge *472you that it was an act of negligence on the part of the conductor to have accepted a car so loaded; and if an injury grew out of this negligence to plaintiff', he is entitled to recover, unless he himself was guilty of such negligence that hut therefor the injury would not have happened; bearing in mind that if he was acquainted with the extra hazard in making the coupling, he was required to exercise a degree of care proportioned to the danger of the risk required to be assumed.”

Or, in other words, the Court told the jury that, the reception of a car so loaded that the lumber projected eighteen inches over the end of it was negligence per se, and that this was an extraordinary hazard to which the railroad company must not subject its employes. Day v. Railway Company, 2 Am. and Eng. Railroad Cases, 126; Railway Company v. Husson, 12 Am. and Eng. Railroad Cases, 24.

This is not the law, nor is the coupling of such car necessarily the extra - hazardous duty for the performance of which the servant is not presumed to contract izi assuming the ordinary hazards and risks of the service in which he voluntarily ozigages. It may be extra - hazardous in the sense that it is not a coupling ordinarily or frequently required; but it is ozie izzeidezit to the duties of the place, and ziot more hazardous, as a matter of law, than he stipulates to perform ozi the occasions, however rare or frequent, whore such couplings become necessary in the variety of shipments *473made to meet tlie demands and necessities of trade and transportation. Lumber of all kinds, iron, steel, and finished structures must often necessarily be transported on cars of shorter length than the material transported. It may not be practicable or proper to solidify the train by loading upon connected cars, and it must of necessity result that this loading .will project and still the cars reeprire to be coupled. To hold that such a service is not to be anticipated by a railroad employe as an occasional, incidental, though extremely hazardous duty to be performed, would be to do so in manifest disregard of the demands of the age upon transportation lines and their common and well understood service iu conformity to such requirements.

The manner in which this car was loaded was a fact proper for averment in pleading, and to be taken into consideration in connection with all the other facts of the coupling and affecting it, to determine whether the company was guilty of such negligence as made it liable; but the loading was not, of itself, negligence nor the acceptance of the car so loaded by others.

The charge was otherwise incorrect and misleading, particularly in defining the care necessary to have been exercised by Plaintiff Gower in order to entitle him to recovery. The Court, after telling the jury that “it was the duty of the plaintiff to exercise such a degree of care in making the coupling as a man of ordinary prudence” would *474have clone, adds: “Just such care as one of you, similarly employed, would have exercised under such circumstances. If he exercised that degree of care, and was nevertheless injured, he is entitled to your verdict. If he failed to exercise that degree of care, he cannot recover.”

The charge as to the exercise of such care as a man of ordinary prudence would have done was correct, but it was thought not full enough by the Judge, who illustrated what he meant by reference to the care which each one of the jurymen would have exercised. His charge, so limited, was erroneous. It does not appear that all or any of the members of the jury were men of ordinary prudence, and yet the Judge tells them that what he means by the “ exercise of such care as a man of ordinary prudence would have exercised” is that it was the exercise of such care as one of them would have exercised if similarly situated. Under this instruction, if any member of the jury thought he would have done what Gower did in the coupling, he would of course have determined that Gower acted with the care required, and was entitled to recover. This illustration, used to define what he meant by “the care of a man of ordinary prudence,” and thereby becoming its definition, was erroneous. The care he was ■required to exercise was that of a man of ordinary prudence in that dangerous situation, and not “just such. care as one of the jury similarly situated” would have done, be that much or little *475as each member might be very prudent or very imprudent.

The judgment must be reversed with cost, and the case remanded for a now trial.