Court Opinion

ID: 7049391
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 06:58:27.758453+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:11:40.533179
License: Public Domain

Zollars, J.
It is charged in the complaint that near Putnamville the track of the railroad is laid in a deep cut over which is a bridge upon a public highway; that the railroad company negligently constructed, and has negligently maintained, the bridge so low as not to afford sufficient space to allow brakemen walking or standing upon freight cars in the discharge of their duty in the management of trains to pass under it with safety; that the railway company could, and should, have so constructed the bridge that brakemen could thus pass under it in safety; that it had full knowledge that the bridge was dangerous to its brakemen operating its trains; that it negligently failed to plac'e upon or about the bridge lights or other danger signals in common use with well managed railways, to warn brakemen of the danger.
It is further alleged that on, and for a short time prior to, January 13th, 1882, appellee was engaged in the service of the railway company as a brakeman upon a freight train *380which passed back and forth over the road, under the bridge, and that with full knowledge of the dangerous condition of the bridge, the railway company negligently failed to notify him of the danger; that when the train upon which he was engaged as a brakeman was approaching the bridge at about 3 o’clock A. M. of January 13th, 1882, and when the rain was falling and a heavy fog and intense darkness covered everything, so that appellee could not see or determine what point the train was passing or approaching, and being unacquainted with that part of the railway, and not knowing that 'the train was approaching a dangerous bridge, appellee obeyed a call to brakes made by the engineer in charge of the engine and went upon the top of the cars to set the brakes, as it was his duty to do as such brakeman, and that while setting the brakes the train passed under the bridge, which, without any fault or negligence on his part, was brought in contact with the back part of his head with such force as to fracture his skull, thereby rendering him unconscious for weeks, causing him great suffering, both physical and mental, so as to impair his mind, causing paralysis of his right side, and thus ren- • dering him a cripple for life, so that he is, and will continue to be, unable to make a living .by manual or mental labor. Tim complaint closes with a general charge that all of the injuries were the result of negligence on the part of the railway company, and without negligence on the part of appellee.
A motion was made below for an order upon appellee to make the complaint more specific. The motion was overruled.
We have considered the arguments of counsel in support of the motion, but do not think that the matter is of sufficient importance to require more than a statement that, whether the ruling of the court below was right or wrong, no substantial injury could result to appellant.
The court below overruled a demurrer to the complaint, and also a motion by appellant for judgment in its favor *381upon the answers of the jury to the' interrogatories submitted by its counsel. Those rulings are assigned as errors. They may be considered together.
The substance of the answers of the jury to the interrogatories, so far as material, is as follows:
At the time of the. injury to appellee, the railway company was maintaining, and for seven years prior thereto had maintained, an overhead bridge upon a highway crossing its track a short distance south of the town of Putnamville. The distance from the top of the rails upon the track to the bridge above was, and is, fifteen feet and nine inches. The box freight cars used by appellant were eleven feet high. Neither appellee nor any other full grown man could walk or stand erect upon the top of such box-cars passing upon the track under the bridge without coming in contact with it. The only way in which appellee could have passed under the bridge in safety, when upon the top of such box-cars, was to sit down, or stoop very low. He could neither sit down nor stoop low enough to escape danger, and at the same time apply the brakes. The railway company neither erected nor maintained any danger signals to warn brakemen of the approach to or nearness of the bridge. By reason of the lowness of the bridge, and the lack of danger signals, the service of a brakeman upon appellant’s freight trains over that part of its road was a hazardous and dangerous service, and that fact and all other facts in relation to the bridge were known to the railway company before and at the time it employed appellee as a brakeman, and at the time he was injured. Previous to his employment upon appellant’s road, appellee had had about one month’s experience as a brakeman upon the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad. He was first employed by appellant on the 5th day of October, 1881, as a brakeman upon a freight train, his run being from New Albany to Greencastle, and continued in the service until the 4th day of November, 1881. That run carried him under the bridge in question. During that employment he *382passed with his train under the bridge from eight to ten times in the daytime, and the same number of times in the night. Subsequently, and on the 11th or 12th day of January, 1882, appellee was again employed by the railway company as a head brakeman to assist in operating freight trains, his run, as before, being from New Albany to Green-castle, and under the low bridge. From his first employment up to the time of his injury, he had passed under the bridge from seventeen to twenty times, one-half of the number being in the night-time. At no time px-evious to his injury did he know that the bridge was too low to allow him to pass under it with safety when standing or walking upoxi the box-cars in attending to the brakes. He had no knowledge that the service was a hazardous one, by reason of the low bridge, and was not notified of that fact, nor of any fact as connected with the bridge, either by the x’ailway company or axxy other person. The juxy further axiswered, that, prior to his injury, appellee did not have an opportunity to know that the bx-idge was too low to allow him to pass under it with safety when standing or walking upon the top of freight cars. They- also answered, that he made no effort to ascertain the height of the bridge, or whether or not he could with safety pass under it when upon the top of box-cars attending to the brakes.
They further answered that the danger of brakemen being struck by the bridge was an open and obvious one in the daytime, but not at night. They still further answered, that, during the time appellee was in the employ of the railway company, he could not, by an ordinarily careful use of the opportunities afforded him, have discovered that the bridge was so low as to be dangerous.
On the morning of the 13th day of January, 1882, when it'was yet dark, appellee started with his train south from the Greencastle junction towards New Albany. He knew that the first station south was Putnamville, and that the bridge in question was near to and south of the station, but he did *383not know of the danger. When within about one-third of a mile of Putnamville, the engineer, by the use of the steam whistle, called for the setting of brakes. In obedience to that call, appellee went upon the top of the cars and moved from the front towards the rear end of the train, until he reached the brake. The train was moving over a down-grade, and did not stop at Putnamville, but passed through and under the bridge some fifteen hundred feet south, the engineer not having shut off the steam soon enough to stop the train at the station. As the train passed under the bridge, appellee being at the brake in a stooping posture, and his face towards the rear of the train, the bridge struck him upon the back of the head, about one and one-half inches from the top.
When called upon the top of the cars, appellee, because of the darkness, did not know what portion of the road the train was passing over. When the train was passing through Putnamville he was not aware of the fact, and when injured did not knowthat the train was near the bridge. After going upon the top of the cars he did not look in the direction in which the train was moving, and could not have seen the bridge had he looked, because of the darkness. Appellee could not, by the use of ordinary care and diligence, have avoided the injury.
In support of the motion for judgment in favor of the railway company upon the above answers to the interrogatories, its counsel argue that, upon the facts disclosed, it must be presumed and concluded as a matter of law that appellee contracted with the company with reference to the hazardous nature of the service, and that, therefore, he can not recover.
The objections urged to the complaint, as we gather from the argument, are:
First That no facts are alleged showing that the railway company was under a duty to erect or maintain any other or different bridge from that in question ;
Second. That no facts are averred showing that it was'the *384•duty of the railway company to have warned appellee of the danger, because the danger was in its nature open and obvious ;
Third. That it is not shown by the averments of the complaint that appellee’s ignorance of the lowness of the bridge was not the result of want of ordinary care on his part:
Fourth. That no facts are averred showing that the bridge was not built in the usual and ordinary way, and of the usual and ordinary height; and,
Fifth. That it is not averred that appellee did not know that the bridge was dangerous by reason of being too low for a brakeman to pass safely under it when standing or walking upon the top of box-cars.
We think that the complaint sufficiently shows that appellee had no knowledge of the dangerous condition of the bridge. We think, too, that the complaint sufficiently shows that appellee’s ignorance of the condition of the bridge was not the result of his own negligence. There is also a broad averment in the complaint that appellee received the injury without any negligence on his part. See Town of Rushville v. Adams, 107 Ind. 475, and cases there cited.
He was required to observe ordinary care for his own safety, but he was not required to go over the road upon a tour of inspection looking for defective bridges or faulty track before engaging in the service.
Because of its duty to him, appellee had the right to assume that the railway company had constructed and maintained its roadway and bridges in such a manner and condition that, as a brakeman upon its trains, he could perform his duties with reasonable safety, and that if there was any such danger to be encountered in the,service as the low bridge, he would be warned of it.
In the case of Boyce v. Fitzpatrick, 80 Ind. 526, 529, in commenting upon cases cited, it was said: “ These cases show that, while a servant assumes the risk, more or less hazardous, of the service in which he engages, he has a right to *385assume that all reasonable attention will be given by his •employer to his safety, and that he shall not be carelessly and needlessly exposed to risks, which might be avoided by ordinary care and precaution on the part of his employer.” 'See, also, Rogers v. Overton, 87 Ind. 410 (413).
In the recent case of Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co. v. Adams, 105 Ind. 151 (161), this court said that, as a general rule, In the contract of hiring there is an implied undertaking upon the part of the master that he will use all reasonable care to furnish safe premises, machinery and appliances for the conducting of the business safely.
In the recent case of Baltimore, etc., R. R., Co. v. Rowan, 104 Ind. 88, 93, in speaking of low bridges, in a case in all essentials like that before us, and after citing the cases pro and con, it was said: “ It seems to us that a railroad company is, and ought to be, required to construct and maintain Its roadway and appendages, and its overhead structures, in such a manner and condition that its employee or servant ean do and perform all' the labors and duties required of him, with reasonable safety.” See the cases there cited; see, also, Indiana Car Co. v. Parker, 100 Ind. 181; Umback v. Lake Shore, etc., R. W. Co., 83 Ind. 191; Louisville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Orr, 84 Ind. 50; Atlas Engine Works v. Randall, 100 Ind. 293 (50 Am. R. 798).
In the case of Indianapolis, etc., R. R. Co. v. Love, 10 Ind. 554, in speaking of the duty of the master to furnish a safe roadway, and to inform the servant of unusual dangers, it was said: “ If a defect existed in the road which was known to the company, but which it was impossible for them to immediately remove or remedy, and in consequence thereof the road was unsafe but not impassable, and yet they should place an employee upon the road, and suffer him, in ignorance of said defect, to attempt to operate it, and injury should thereby result to him, certainly there would be a lia*386bility.” See, also, Thayer v. St. Louis, etc., R. R. Co., 22: Ind. 26.
In the case of Baxter v. Roberts, 44 Cal. 187 (13 Am. R. 160), it was said: “That one contracting to perform labor or render service thereby takes upon himself such risks and only such as are necessarily and usually incident to the employment, is well settled. Nor is there any doubt that if the employer have knowledge or information showing that the particular employment is from extraneous causes known to him hazardous or dangerous to a degree beyond that which it fairly imports or is understood by the employee to-be, he is bound to inform the latter of the fact or put him in possession of such information; these general principles, of law are elementary and firmly established,” etc.
The facts in the case of Illinois Central R. R. Co. v. Welch, 52 Ill. 183, in brief, were these : The railroad track atMendota was about eighteen inches from the edge of an awning,, which projected from the station-house, so that when a freight car stood-upon the track the inside edge of the car was about even with the outer edge of the awning. The awning was-about eighteen inches higher than the car. There being a signal for brakes, the plaintiff in the case, a brakeman, ran upon the ladder on the side of a car, and before reaching the-roof was struck by the awning and injured. It was insisted in behalf of the railway company, that there could be no recovery, for the reason that the brakeman had assumed the risks incident to the service, and had an opportunity to know of the danger from the awning. In answer to that contention the court said: “ There are many freight depots and station-houses upon the line of the Central Railway, and it would be preposterous in us to say, or to asir a jury to say, that a brakeman engaging in the service of the company must be held to know whether or not there may be one among them whose roof or awning so projects over the line of road that a brakeman on a freight train, in the performance of his duties, would be liable to be swept from the train by a col*387lision with it. We held, in the Chicago & N. W. R. R. Co. v. Swett, 45 Ill. 201, that the corporation is bound to furnish to its servants safe materials and structures, and must, in the first instance, properly construct its road with all its necessary appurtenances. This, of course, includes the obligation to keep in proper repair. When the appellee entered the service of this company, he had- a right to presume that it had, in these respects, discharged its obligations. The ordinary perils of railroad life he of course assumed, and also any special dangers arising from the peculiar condition of the road so far as he knew of their existence. * * * But it would have been morally impossible for him to have ascertained the existence of all such special perils as this which caused the injury, and there is no reason for supposing that he had acquired such knowledge before the accident, as he had been but two months upon the road, and had always passed the station, where he was injured, in the night, except upon two trips. Moreover, it is to be remarked that the danger was of such a character that it might well escape the observation of a person who had been even for a long time upon the road.”
In Mr. Wood’s work on Eailway Law, vol. '3, at pages 1480-1, in speaking of low bridges, and the cases in which it was held that the railway company was not liable, it is said that the doctrine of those cases proceeds upon the ground that the servant knew of the hazard, and, therefore, assumed the risk incident to it, and that the master will be liable, where the circumstances are such that the servant can not be charged with such knowledge.
As it is the duty of the master to inform his servant of increased danger and hazard created by him in the change of machinery or premises, unless the servant has notice, or the change and increased danger are so apparent that he ought to take notice, so, where there are dangers and hazards known to the master, or of which he ought to have knowledge by the use of ordinary care, and which are not ordinarily and *388usually incident to the business, he should inform the servant of such danger when hiring him, unless the danger is so apparent that the servant will be bound to take notice of it. Hawkins v. Johnson, 105 Ind. 29, 35 (55 Am. R. 169); Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co. v. Adams, 105 Ind. 151 (165); Bradbury v. Goodwin, 108 Ind. 286.
A person contracting to work upon a railway as a brakeman, assumes the risks ordinarily and properly incident to such service, but he does not, by such hiring, assume the risk of unusual dangers of which he has no knowledge, or of which he is not bound to take notice.
It can not be said here that, by the contract of hiring, appellee assumed the risk of injury from the bridge by which he was injured. Clearly, it ought not to be said that the railway company was under no duty to build and maintain the bridge in a different manner and condition from what it did. It is charged in the complaint, and shown by the answers of the jury to the interrogatories, that the railway company was guilty of negligence, both in the building and maintenance of the bridge.
It is charged in the complaint that, it was so low that a brakeman, in the discharge of his duty in setting brakes, could not, without injury, walk or stand upon the top of the cars. It is shown by the answers of the jury to the interrogatories that the distance from the top of the rails to the bridge was fifteen feet and nine inches, and that the box-cars were eleven feet high, thus leaving a space of four feet and nine inches only between the top of the cars and the bridge. To say that a railway company has performed its whole duty when it erects and maintains such a bridge is, in effect, to say that it may abandon all reasonable care for the safety of its brakemen upon its trains. At best, that service is hazardous enough. Surely, the railway companies should not increase the danger by the erection and maintenance of such low bridges. All reasonable precautions ought to be taken to decrease the danger as much as possible. There can be no *389sufficient reason for a holding that while the railway company must exercise reasonable care to provide a safe roadway and bridges below, it may abandon, to a large extent, all care as to bridges above.
Called, as they often are, to their brakes, upon the top of the train in rainy and dark nights, when they have no means of determining exactly the portion of the road over which the train is passing, it might be expected that brakemen will be injured by collisions with bridges such as that described in the complaint and the answers of the jury to the interrogatories.
Assuming that railway companies perform the duties which they owe to their employees, it can not be conceded that the bridge in question was built of the usual and ordinary height.
There is nothing in the complaint or the answers of the jury to the interrogatories showing, or tending to show, that it is a usual or customary thing for railway companies to build and maintain overhead bridges so low as that which caused the injury to'appellee.
It is shown that appellee had no knowledge of the condition of the bridge, and that his want of knowledge was not the result of negligence on his part. Because of his want of knowledge, and the increased and unusual hazard caused by the lowness of the bridge, it can not be said that appellee voluntarily assumed the risk of injury therefrom.
Both the demurrer to the complaint, and the motion for judgment in- favor of appellant upon the interrogatories, were properly overruled.
In answer to their contention that the bill of exceptions is not in the record, because the rendition of the judgment and the approval of an appeal bond intervened between the overruling of the motion for a new trial and the giving of time within which to file a bill of exceptions, we refer appellee’s counsel to the recent case of Kopelke v. Kopelke, 112 Ind. 435.
*390Appellant’s counsel offered to prove that there are bridges on all railways in the United States too low for brakemen, standing or walking upon the top of ordinary box-cars, to pass under with safety. The court below did not err in excluding the evidence. As we have seen, a railway company falls short of its duty if it constructs overhead bridges so low as to be dangerous to its brakemen in the discharge of their duties. If such bridges are constructed, it is the duty of the company to notify its brakemen of the danger, unless they already have knowledge, or the circumstances are such that they are bound to take notice. That other companies may have neglected their duty and built and maintained low and dangerous bridges, can not exonerate, or tend to exonerate, appellant from liability. There may be some such bridges upon other roads, but there was no offer to prove that they are in such general use as to be an ordinary and usual incident of the service of brakemen. Here, appellee had had but two months experience as a brakeman, and had no knowledge of the low bridge. The fact that other railway companies may have maintained some of their bridges so low as to be dangerous, is not sufficient to charge appellee with notice here. If such low bridges are thus maintained, they are surely the exception and not the rule. Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Pedigo, 108 Ind. 481.
Appellant’s counsel first offered to introduce in evidence a letter, and, second, a portion of a letter, written by appellee to an officer of the railway company before this action was commenced. It is earnestly insisted that the court erred in excluding the letter and the portion thus offered. The letter was written in answer to one received by appellee. It is well settled that an offer or proposition for a compromise of a legal controversy, not accepted, is not competent evidence for or against either party. Board, etc., v. Verbarg, 63 Ind. 107; Donley v. Coons, 64 Ind. 545.
It is also settled that an admission of an independent fact *391•in no way connected with the offer of compromise, although .made during the negotiations, is competent evidence.
In the case of Wilt v. Bird, 7 Blackf. 258, it was said: '“An offer, concession, or admission, made in the course of an ineffectual treaty of compromise, and constituting, in itself, ithe point yielded for the sake of peace, and not because it was just or true, is not competent evidence against the party making it; but the law is otherwise with regard to an independent fact admitted to be true, but not constituting such yielded point."
An admission of a fact, not made simply because it is a fact, but expressly or clearly for the sake of, and as a part of .an attempted compromise, is not competent evidence in a subsequent action against the party making it. Cates v. Kellogg, 9 Ind. 506.
And so, if an admission is made not simply because it is a fact, but to open the way to a compromise, it is not admissible. Binford v. Young, ante, p. 174.
That the letter, as a whole, constituted an offer of compromise, is not questioned. Ve have examined the letter -carefully, and are fulfy persuaded that no portion of it is competent evidence in this action against appellee.
It is very apparent that nothing was admitted as an independent fact, simply because it was a fact, if, indeed, it can be said that there is any admission or statement that could in any way be beneficial to appellant. On the other hand, it seems very clear to us that all that was written was by way -of argument for the purpose of bringing about an adjustment to avoid litigation. The whole letter had that single object in view, and, as said in the case of Home Ins. Co. v. Baltimore Warehouse Co., 93 U. S. 527 (548), in speaking of an •offer to introduce a portion of a letter, written with the object •of effecting a compromise, “ it contains no statement which can be separated from the offer and convey the idea which was in the writer’s mind."
Dr. S. W. Yost, at the time of the trial, had been a practising *392physician and surgeon for more than twenty years. Prima facie, at least, that rendered him competent to give an opinion, as to the probable result of appellee’s injuries. He had attended him as physician' for some two months after he was injured, at which time he was also in the employ of the railway company as surgeon.
After stating in detail appellee’s condition, and the character- and condition of his wounds at the time he attended him, he was allowed to state that the probabilities are that he will never, to any great extent, be able to perform manual or mental labor, without a removal of a depressed portion of the bone which was, and is, pressing upon the brain, by reason of the wound upon the head, and that such an operation-would be fraught with great danger. It was competent for Dr. Yost to give his opinion as to the probable results of appellee’s injuries. Carthage T. P. Co. v. Andrews, 102 Ind. 138, 145 (52 Am. R. 653), Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Wood, 113 Ind. 544; Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Falvey,. 104 Ind. 409; City of Fort Wayne v. Coombs, 107 Ind. 75.
His evidence in that regard was not incompetent because he had not attended appellee continuously up to the time of the’trial. He could state his opinion, based upon his knowledge and observation at the time he attended appellee. Had he attended him continuously his testimony might have been-of more weight, but it would have been no more Competent-
Objections were made below, and are urged here, to the testimony of Dr. Harry L. Taylor. He had been a physician and surgeon since 1872, and at the time of the trial was-a professor in the Indiana Eclectic Medical College. Primafaaie, he was competent to give an opinion as to the probable results of the fracture of appellee’s skull. Dr.'Yost had given a detailed statement of appellee’s condition for two-months after he had received the injury. A hypothetical question, involving the facts as stated by him, was propounded to Dr. Taylor, and upon that he was allowed to give-his opinion as to the probable results of the injuries. The-*393testimony of Dr. Yost as to appellee’s condition at the time he attended and treated him, was competent evidence in the case, and hence it was competent to embody the facts so given in a hypothetical question to Dr. Taylor. Here, again, the testimony of Dr. Taylor was competent, although it might have been of more weight and importance had it been based upon a hypothetical question embodying the facts as to appellee’s condition at the time of the trial.
With a description of the locality, the height of the bridge, and a statement that no danger signals were kept at the bridge, John B. Cooper was allowed to state that, prior to the injury to appellee, three persons, giving their names, being upon the top of moving trains, were injured and crippled by coming in contact with the bridge, some of whom died from the effects of the injuries.
There is some conflict in the authorities, but under our cases, supported by many others, the evidence was competent as tending to show notice on the part of the railway company that the bridge was dangerous. It would not be profitable here to do more than cite the cases. See City of Delphi v. Lowery, 74 Ind. 520, 523 (39 Am. R. 98), and cases there cited] Cleveland, etc., R. R. Co. v. Newell, 104 Ind. 264 (54 Am. R. 312); City of Fort Wayne v. Coombs, supra.
The arguments by appellant’s counsel upon the instructions given and refused, are elaborate, and such as to challenge careful consideration, were the instruction in the record. We are met, however, with the contention on the part of appellee’s counsel that the instructions are not in the record, for the reason that the record contains no evidence that they were ever filed. They are not embodied in a bill of exceptions. The clerk has copied the instructions into the transcript, but, as contended by appellee’s counsel, there is nothing to show that they were ever filed, and hence can not be regarded as a part of the record. As said in the case of O’Donald v. Constant, 82 Ind. 212: “The transcript contains no copy of the clerk’s notation of the filing, nor *394any recital that they were filed.” Not being a part of the record, the instructions found in the transcript can not be considered by this court. To bring instructions into the record without a bill of exceptions, the statute imperatively requires that they shall be signed by the judge and filed. That they must be. thus filed, is a rule of practice established by the Legislature, which this court could not change, if such a change were desired. See R. S. 1881, section 533, clause 6; Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor v. Johnson, 78 Ind. 110; Elliott v. Russell, 92 Ind. 526, and cases there cited; Olds v. Deckman, 98 Ind. 162, and cases there cited; Landwerlen v. Wheeler, 106 Ind. 523; Childress v. Callender, 108 Ind. 394; Fort Wayne, etc., R. W. Co. v. Beyerle, 110 Ind. 100.
Filed March 23, 1888.
It is further contended by counsel for appellant that the verdict and judgment are not supported by sufficient evidence, and are contrary to law. It may be said that it was possible for appellee, while in the employ of the railway company, to have discovered that the bridge was dangerous. He, however, testified positively that he did not know that it was dangerous, and the other facts stated by him and other witnesses are not such as to justify this court in holding, as a matter of law, that he was bound to take notice and exercise the necessary precautions, having such notice, to avoid injury.
Nor can this court, considering all of the evidence in the case, say that the judgment for $10,000 is excessive.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.