Court Opinion

ID: 8776039
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 13:01:35.221767+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:33.481716
License: Public Domain

HAND, District Judge.
The evidence upon the alter ego in this trial is similar to that on the first, with the exception that now the plaintiff has proved that by the long-existing custom of the road, when a conductor or engineer wished to call the superintendent, he always telephoned to the chief dispatcher’s office, and it was a question resting in the discretion of.the person answering in that office whether he should himself communicate with the superintendent, or should advise what was to be done. By so doing I think that the road substituted for the superintendent’s discretion that of those persons who got the messages in the chief train dispatcher’s office, and that the chief train dispatcher upon this proof was the alter ego not only for the movements of trains, but for the duties laid on the superintendent. If the road established such a custom, it necessarily substituted the person who got the message in place of the superintendent himself. It could pot prevent access to the superintendent by a custom of that sort and still be permitted to say that only the superintendent was the alter ego. - • This, 'however, does not in my judgment meet all the difficulties "which the Circuit Court of Appeals found in the plaintiff’s case as jqifigmally. presented. 176 Fed. 331. It is of course, well settled that, if the master delegate, to any one else his own duty of providing his mqn^with safe tools and appliances, he cannot excuse himself for a default because it arose from the negligence of those to whom he delegated its. This is settled by so many authorities that I need not cite any. If in this case, therefore, there was a default in furnishing safe appliances, the master was liable. But I do not think there was any default in that duty. The engine, when it started, had been repaired, ■and so far as appears was in reasonably safe condition. It is true that on its last inspection certain defects were found; but these had been corrected in the repairshop, and there was no evidence from which the jury could find that it was not reasonably safe when it started. The master of course is’not responsible from minute to minute for any defects which arise. His duty' is limited, first, to furnishing suitable appliances, and, then, to making proper inspection from time to time at reasonable intervals. The duty to inspect did not arise until the locomotive was. again returned to the place where it could be looked over and the break remedied, not while the locomotive was en route.
The question, .therefore, becomes, whether the defendant was negii-*881gent in the management of the engine before it got back to a roundhouse where it could be inspected and repaired. I must assume from the proofs that it was negligently run, for certainly that was a question for the jury; and, therefore, the question is: Who was the negligent person in permitting it to be used as it was until it got to the Port Morris yard? If there was negligence, clearly the engineer and the conductor shared in it; but they were fellow servants, and to hold the defendant some alter ego must have contributed his own negligence to the accident. As the proofs now stand, there must be some evidence of the negligence of the chief train dispatcher. Upon that I think the last paragraph of the opinion Of the Circuit Court of Appeals still controls. The words I refer to are these:
“Even if the train dispatcher knew or thought the delect was one likely to make it dangerous to proceed with the engine in that condition, he had a right to suppose that the engineer had disconnected the disabled side, as the proofs show he could perfectly well have done. The purpose of the message was to get from the train dispatcher the remedy which the conductor thought applied to the situation, namely, the pusher, and this was promptly supplied.”
In this trial the plaintiff thinks that he has met this difficulty by the testimony of Smith, who swore that, although the disabled side of the locomotive could have been disconnected, still there would have been a strain caused by the revolution of the rod. Smith’s testimony in that respect is in substance as follows:
“If he had killed that side, it would have done no work; hut the revolution of the rod would have still caused a strain on the lower guide after that, unless he was able to take down the main rod, which he could not ‘have done.”
This testimony, brought out on cross-examination, was directed to a strain on the lower guide which had not broken and which was not the cause of the accident, because it was the upper guide which had been lost. The witness’ testimony was somewhat confused as to whether there was any strain upon the top guide except in backing-; but of course that confusion w*s for the jury to resolve. However, this testimony is far from showing that the accident might still have happened if the right side had been disconnected. Laying aside the fact that he only says there would have been a strain on the lower guide, and even assuming that from it the jury might have inferred that there would also have been an upward strain, it nowhere appears that had the side been disconnected the strain was serious enough to cause a break. As the whole theory is that it was negligence for the chief train dispatcher not to insist upon the removal of the engine and for him to assume that the conductor could not have safely dealt with the situation, some such proof as this was essential to the plaintiff’s case. Again, even if the engine with the tools actually at hand could not in fact have been so disconnected as to remove all danger, yet the chief train dispatcher, acting in the stead of the superintendent, still had a right to suppose, as the Circuit Court of Appeals holds in effect, that the men on the ground would neutralize that danger, or else keep the employés away from the injured side of the engine. It is not as though the chief train dispatcher had been consulted as to how the situation should be managed; nor was he to assume that the discon*882nection 'of the injured side, was the limit of the possibilities of the-men on the spot. The conductor assumed responsibility for the situation by asking for a pusher, and the. chiéf train dispatcher could rely upon his doing what was necessary.. When he said that the top guide was lost, it was to explain why'' hé asked for the pusher, not to state "the facts and ask for advice; he'was then speaking, not to the'superintendent at: all, but to. the chief train dispatcher, and asking that a piece of rolling stock be moved from one place to another. Therefore the information to the chief’train dispatcher did not disclose to him a situation necessarily so dangerous that nothing short of entirely disconnecting the locomotive would have made it Safe. Perhaps in that case the failure of the Chief train dispatcher to intervene by affirmative action would have been a ground for negligence.
I cannot see that a substantially different case has been shown from that passed on above, and I shall therefore have' to deny the motion for a new trial; ■-