Court Opinion

ID: 8779512
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 13:13:42.655285+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:02:45.704375
License: Public Domain

WARD, Circuit Judge.
[1] This is a writ of error to a judgment on a verdict directed by the court in favor of the defendant. 180 Fed. 879. On a former writ we reversed the judgment entered on a verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff, because we found no negligence on the defendant’s part as master. 176 Fed. 331. It had prescribed reasonable rules, which required conductors to report defects in cars or engines to the superintendent. But the conductor, who was the plaintiff's fellow servant, reported to the chief train dispatcher, *56asking -merely for a pusher to help the train in, which was sent. The chief train dispatcher’s duties under the rules concerned only, the movement of trains and distribution of cars. Therefore we held that the master, having no notice whatever of the accident en route to an engine which started out after sufficient inspection, was not guilty of any failure of duty to the plaintiff in respect to it. That was the ground of the decision. On this trial-, however, the plaintiff proved that the rule requiring such defects to be reported to the superintendent was never observed. It was the practice, on the contrary, to report to the chief train dispatcher, who, by the regular course of business, whether- he consulted him or notj acted in the place of the superintendent. Accordingly the situation now is as if the defendant had allowed the engine to start on a trip in a disabled condition, or as if the superintendent himself had done en route exactly what the conductor and engineer did. It was therefore clearly for the jury to say whether letting the disabled engine proceed with the train was reasonable care on the part of the defendant as master or on the part of those who stood in its place. It is no defense that the chief train dispatcher, when acting for the superintendent as alter ego of the master, may have supposed that the engineer had disconnected the disabled side of the engine, because the failure to do so, if negligence, would be the negligence of the defendant as master, and not the negligence of the engineer as the plaintiff’s fellow servant.
[2] It is sought to sustain the judgment on the' ground that the plaintiff should not have been in the cab of the engine at the time of the accident, but should have been on the top of the cars, as required by rule 17, which reads:
“17. Trainmen must be on top of train going in and out of yards, nearing railroad crossings at grade, drawbridges, water stations, and on descending grades where, if air brakes fail, the engineer may not be able to control the train. Upon heavy ascending grades trainmen must be careful to prevent detached portions from running back, in case of train parting, by prompt application of hand brakes.”
It is a matter of dispute whether the train was going into the yard when the accident occurred, and the plaintiff testifies that he was at the time just leaving the cab to go on the cars. These were questions of fact for the jury, and so, to state it most favorably for the defendant, we think it was for them to say whether, if he did fail to obey rule 17, such failure was contributory negligence. The plaintiff’s being in the- cab at the time of the accident, though a necessary condition of his injuries, had nothing whatever to do with them causally. Rule 17 was not prescribed with reference to the cab as a dangerous place, or for the plaintiff’s safety. On the contrary, he had a right to bethere, except when rule 17 required him, for purposes in no way connected with the engine or cab, to be. on the top of the cars.
The judgment is reversed, with costs.