Court Opinion

ID: 8012890
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:00:18.959731+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:09.871530
License: Public Domain

Williams, J.
Plaintiff, a brakeman on one of defendant’s freight trains, while coupling the engine to *87the front ear of said train, had his left hand very badly hurt. The injury was so serious that amputation of the arm between the wrist and elbow became necessary. The accident occurred at the town of Kenoma, in Barton county, on the fourteenth of February, 1892. This suit was brought by plaintiff in the circuit court of Jackson county to recover $15,000 damages on account thereof. A change of venue was granted on his application, and the case sent to Cass county. It was tried there at the May term, 1895.
Defendant, at the close of plaintiff’s case, offered a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused. It was renewed after all the testimony was in. The court again declined to sustain it. The matter was then submitted to the jury. They reported, after several hours, that they were unable to agree. The court thereupon withdrew all its previous instructions, and substituted one, telling the jury, that, under the pleadings and evidence, the verdict must be for defendant. ■ Plaintiff took a nonsuit, with leave, etc., and in due time filed his motion to set the same aside. This was overruled; hence, the present appeal.
The ground of action stated in the petition is, that, as plaintiff was making the coupling between the tender and front car of the train, the engineer negligently ran the engine back against said car “with such speed, force and violence” that plaintiff did not have time to withdraw the hand with which he was adjusting the link; that in consequence thereof, it was caught between the “bumpers” and injured as above mentioned; that this would not have happened if the movement of the engine had been slower, as it should have been. It is further charged that said engineer was incompetent for the position, careless, negligent and reckless, and that this was known to defendant at the time of and long prior to the accident.
*88Plaintiff and the engineer were fellow servants. The injury occurred in 1892. It was essential to plaintiff’s case for him to show, not only the incompetency of the engineer, but also, that defendant failed to exercise reasonable care in employing and retaining him in its service. Roblin v. Railroad, 119 Mo. 476. “There is no dispute as to this proposition of law, namely, that the master must use ordinary care in employing and retaining competent and suitable servants. This is a personal duty devolved upon the master, and he is liable for a failure to perform this duty, resulting in an injury to a fellow servant.” Williams v. Railroad, 109 Mo. 482.
It is equally well established, that the burden is on the plaintiff seeking to recover for injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow- servant, to show want of proper, care on the part of the master in employing or retaining the latter. Roblin v. Railroad, 119 Mo. 476. If there was a failure to make this proof, then - without reference to any other questions in the case, the instruction, which resulted in .a nonsuit, was entirely proper. This brings us to the consideration of the evidence upon that point.
Plaintiff’s testimony was that he had been in defendant’s employ eight or ten months before he was hurt. He had made four or five previous trips with the engineer, who was in charge of the engine, when he was injured. He had never heard that said engineer had the reputation of being incompetent or careless, and testified to nothing tending to show such incompetency.
Lee Glasgow said that he had known the engineer since August, 1889, and “would not consider him as careful as the majority of the engineers working there at the time.” It is clear that this statement does not show that the defendant was negligent in not discharg*89ing him. He may have been a skilled and careful engineer, and yet others there at that time may have been better than he. Where a number are employed it is not to be expected that all will be of the same order of ability. Each could not well be the best. The defendant was only bound to see that all employed by it possessed the requisite skill and carefulness to properly discharge their duties without injury to their fellows.
This witness further narrated an instance in which he thought the engineer was careless, but it does not appear that this ever came to the knowledge of the proper officers of the defendant, or that they ever heart! of it. He also mentioned an accident at Ash Grove, but conceded that it was caused by the fault of the witness and not of said engineer.
J. A. Cottér and Roy Soutor testified to an accident to the former on a train when the said engineer was in charge of the engine. The former said that he gave a signal “to go ahead” and the engineer backed the engine and witness was hurt. He further claimed that the engineer “had it in for him” on account of some trouble between them. This accident was reported to the company. It happened about three years before the plaintiff was hurt. The engineer in the meantime had been constantly in charge of his engine and it does not appear that there was ever after any complaint of his conduct to the defendant.
Plaintiff here rested and defendant interposed a demurrer. While this was being argued, plaintiff asked and obtained leave to recall the witness Lee Arnold. He was again placed upon the stand. He then said “the reputation of the engineer Dulin among the employees of the company with reference to being careful and cautious, was bad.” He refused, however, to fix the time when the engineer had that *90reputation and was unable to state the year. It certainly does not appear affirmatively that he was so reputed among his fellows at the time plaintiff was injured. Plaintiff states that he never heard it, and the witness could not give the year.
It is useless to go into the defendant’s evidence in detail. It did not supply the omission in plaintiff’s testimony. A number of witnesses testified to the competency of the engineer and his good reputátion in his chosen business. He was forty-one years old and had been in defendant’s employ thirteen years. He served two years and three months as fireman and about the same length of time as “hostler,” in running engines in and out of the round house and taking care of them. He became a locomotive engineer in 1886, and had been constantly running an engine since that time. This engineer was placed upon the stand by defendant and upon his cross-examination said that three or four persons possibly had been injured upon trains where he was the engineer. It was not shown, however, that these resulted from any negligence upon his part.
We have made a careful examination of the testimony and can not say that it tends to show that defendant failed to use ordinary care in employing and retaining the engineer, Dulin, in its service at the time of plaintiff’s injury. We are unable therefore to hold that the circuit court committed error in its peremptory instruction that, under the evidence, the verdict must be for defendant.
The court below was also asked to set aside the nonsuit on the ground of newly discovered evidence. Several affidavits were filed in support of this application, and some are printed in appellant’s abstract. This point is not presented in appellant’s brief, and *91does not seem to be relied upon here. Respondent claims that counter-affidavits filed by it are not printed.
Plaintiff was able within a short time after the nonsuit, to obtain voluntary ex parte affidavits from eight or nine different persons in support of his case. The same diligence in advance would probably have enabled him to present their testimony to the jury at the trial. Want of diligence upon the part of the applicant is a sufficient reason for denying such motions.
Again,- “The granting of new trials because of evidence subsequently discovered, rests for the most part with the trial court; and any doubt, as to whether the discretion vested in this regard in that tribunal, has been soundly exercised, is to be resolved in favor of its ruling. It is only in a ease entirely free from any element of uncertainty as to the impropriety of such ruling, that appellate courts feel themselves called upon to interfere.” Cook v. Railroad, 56 Mo. 384.
There is certainly no reason for such interference in this case, where plaintiff took a nonsuit and there is no judgment to conclude his rights. The judgment must be affirmed.
Brace, P. J., and Robinson and Marsahall, JJ., concur. ■