Filed Date: 1/22/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Only one of the questions which we are asked on this motion to certify for review by the Court of Appeals seems to us to invite particular attention. This is whether the trial court erroneously refused to charge at appellant’s request that “If the drawheads or couplers of the flat car and the box car were four to six feet apart when the two cars were at a standstill, the' second time, so that the plaintiff could not have reached the hand-holds on both cars until they had come closer together, then their verdict must be for the defendant of no cause of action ? ”
Plaintiff was a brakeman employed by the defendant at the time he was injured. The injury occurred while he was engaged in the operation of coupling cars. Two previous attempts to couple the cars had failed because the drawheads were not in proper alignment. When the plaintiff was injured he was trying to push with his left foot the drawhead of one of the cars over so that it would line up with the drawhead of the other car with which the coupling was to be made. The crucial question in the case was whether the engine and the cars attached to it were moving towards the car with which the coupling was to be made at the time plaintiff tried to push the drawhead over. The court charged in effect that, if the engine with the cars which were coupled to it was moving at the time, plaintiff could not recover. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the cars which were to be coupled both came to a stop after the second ineffectual attempt to couple them had been made, with their ends so near each other that he took hold of the grabiron on the end of the car to his left with his left hand and the grabiron on the end of the car to his right with his right hand in order to get a purchase in his effort to shove the drawhead over with his foot. The evidence
The motion is denied, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred.
Motion for leave to appeal to Court of Appeals denied, with ten dollars costs.