DocketNumber: 1697
Citation Numbers: 127 P. 693, 36 Okla. 1, 1912 OK 675, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 800
Judges: Rosser
Filed Date: 10/23/1912
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
This suit was brought by A. H. Watson in the district court of Pottawatomie county against the defendant railroad company to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained on the 6th day of September, 1907, while working for the defendant as brakeman. The evidence shows that, while the plaintiff was unloading bundles of galvanized iron pipes at defendant's station at Addington, he received the injuries complained of. There is some conflict in the testimony as to the character of bundles he was unloading, but the plaintiff himself testified that it was three-fourths inch pipe, put up in bundles from fifteen to twenty feet long, and that each bundle weighed from 75 to 100 pounds. Plaintiff further testified that it was badly loaded, in that the pipe was for four different stations, all loaded in one pile, and badly mixed, and that the last bundle to be loaded was on top of the pile. He did not testify as to the height of the pile, and the only testimony as to the height of the pile was that of the conductor, who states that it was eight or ten inches high as it was piled upon the floor of the car. As the plaintiff was unloading the pipe, one of the bundles rolled over on the one which he was lifting and gave him a jerk, which hurt his back. There was some conflict between the physician who testified for the plaintiff and the one who testified for the defendant as to the extent of his injuries, but that is immaterial under the view which is taken in this case.
The proof shows that some months prior to the accident, the company had three brakemen upon this particular train, but for some two months before the accident had only two. It also shows that two men usually helped unload freight, though it was sometimes unloaded by only one. The plaintiff testified that the conductor told him to hurry and unload the freight. This *Page 3 statement is denied by the conductor. In his direct examination the plaintiff testified with reference to the accident as follows:
"Q. Now, if you had an accident there in attempting to unload the pipe you have described, go ahead in your own way and tell all about it. A. In lifting up a bundle of pipe to unload, another bundle rolled over on the bundle that I had picked up and got hold of, giving me a jerk, hurting my back. Q. At the time of the accident describe your position, and how you were holding that bundle you were trying to unload. A. I was in a stooping position, and had ahold of another bundle of the pipe lifting it up to unload, when another bundle rolled over, or fell over on me, and I was in such a position that I couldn't turn loose of the bundle that I had hold of or it would fall on my feet."
A number of questions are raised in plaintiff in error's brief, but it will only be necessary to consider one.
Defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a finding that it was guilty of negligence. The question of the effect of evidence is always for the jury. The question of whether there is any evidence at all is for the court. It would seem that the statement of the facts of this case ought to be all that is necessary. If the company is responsible in this case, then the rule, so often announced, that the railroad company is not responsible for mere accidents, is not the law. Many people believe that they should be made insurers of the safety of their employees, but the writer of this opinion believes the legislative department of the state should make law, and believes that it is a usurpation for a court to change the law, whether the change is a needed one or not. To lay down a wrong rule against a corporation in one case will inevitably lead, sooner or later, to some private individual suffering from the application of it, or, what is much worse, an uncertain and fluctuating construction of the law, absolutely intolerable in a government by law.
Negligence is the failure to do what a reasonable and prudent person would ordinarily have done under the circumstances; or doing what such a person would not have done. Anderson, Law Dic. *Page 4
Negligence must be shown by evidence. Proof of injury is not proof of negligence. The evidence to justify a finding of negligence must show a breach of duty on the part of the defendant, such that a reasonable person should have foreseen would as a natural consequence cause an injury. Not necessarily would probably cause an injury in the sense of more likely to cause an injury than not. But the likelihood must be such that a reasonable person could foresee that injury would result in the ordinary course of things; that injury was one of the probable results and likely to happen. A mere possibility of the injury is not sufficient where a reasonable man would not consider injury likely to result from the act as one of its ordinary and probable results. See Solts v. Southwestern CottonOil Co.,
In Shultz v. C. N.W. R. Co.,
"Was it negligence of the company, even if they knew of such a customary method of loading the tenders on their road? Such an accident had never happened before from such a cause. It was a very strange and almost unaccountable accident. It was common to load the tender in that way. * * * This case in this respect falls within the principle of a mere accident, occurring unexpectedly and almost unaccountably, from a common course of things, in which it had never happened before, and is not likely to happen again, and is attributable to a cause not unusually, and scarcely ever, followed by such a consequence. The case in this respect also falls within the decision of a similar class of cases of unexpected and unusual accidents, where no recovery can be had, as in Morrison v. ConstructionCo.,
See, also, Wood v. St. L. S.W. R. C. of Texas,
No case has been found that will sustain the judgment in this case. It should be reversed and remanded.
By the Court: It is so ordered.
Abdo v. Mullen , 173 Okla. 144 ( 1935 )
Electric Supply Co. v. Rosser , 88 Okla. 220 ( 1923 )
Union Transportation Co. v. Lamb , 190 Okla. 327 ( 1942 )
Jenkins v. Davis , 111 Okla. 191 ( 1925 )
Missouri, O. & G. Ry. Co. v. West , 50 Okla. 521 ( 1915 )
CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILROAD v. Wright , 1954 Okla. LEXIS 738 ( 1954 )
Graham v. Dawson Produce Co. , 106 Okla. 294 ( 1924 )