Casko v. ELGIN, JOLIET AND EASTERN RAILWAY COMPANY

Decision Date25 May 1966
Docket NumberNo. 15273,15274.,15273
PartiesLouis CASKO, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. ELGIN, JOLIET AND EASTERN RAILWAY COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant. Louis CASKO, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ELGIN, JOLIET AND EASTERN RAILWAY COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Seventh Circuit

Harlan L. Hackbert, Chicago, Ill., G. Edward McHie, Hammond, Ind., for E. J. & E. Rw. Co.

Max Cohen, and B. K. Delph, Gary, Ind., for Casko.

Before HASTINGS, Chief Judge, and DUFFY and KILEY, Circuit Judges.

KILEY, Circuit Judge.

This is a FELA1 case with a verdict of $100,000.00 in plaintiff's favor, a remittitur by him of $62,500.00, and a modified judgment in his favor for the balance of $37,500.00. Defendant appeals from the modified judgment entered on the remittitur. Plaintiff filed a "notice of appeal and cross-appeal" from the order directing the remittitur, and defendant has moved to dismiss the appeal and cross-appeal. We allow the motion to dismiss and affirm the modified judgment.

Plaintiff was injured March 15, 1962, while operating a fork-lift tractor to push three gondola cars from a repair track in defendant's Gary, Indiana repair yard. He had been working for defendant since 1952, and for four or five months before his injury had worked as a tractor operator. At the time he was injured, plaintiff was helping in a program of replacing the trucks (or sets of wheels) of gondola cars; the cars were placed on the repair track, jacked up so the trucks could be removed and replaced, and the substituted trucks were then connected to the gondola body lowered upon them. Plaintiff's function was to use the tractor to push the gondola cars off the repair track.

On the day of the injury, he had used the fork to lift, about a foot from the repair track, the rear end of the rear of the three cars, so that he could shove them "into the clear" across a planked crossing. In this movement one tractor wheel was between the two rails of the repair track, and the other was outside the rails. He shoved the cars over the crossing. But when the front wheels of the tractor struck the planks, the forks "went down," and the rear wheels of the tractor went up in the air four or five feet. Plaintiff applied the foot brake, the tractor stopped and the three cars separated and continued "into the clear." When the tractor wheels came down, plaintiff landed forcibly on the springless, fixed metal seat of the tractor and his back was injured.

The complaint charged generally defendant's negligent failure to provide a safe place to work, and three specific acts of negligence. The only specific charge submitted to the jury, however, was that defendant negligently required plaintiff to move the cars by means of a tractor, instead of having them moved by a locomotive.

Defendant contends there was no evidence upon which to submit the specific charge to the jury. To test this contention we take only the evidence favorable to plaintiff and draw the inferences most strongly in the light favorable to him. We do not consider evidence unfavorable to plaintiff or inferences favoring defendant.

The evidence favorable to plaintiff is that he had driven automobiles but had never operated a tractor before being assigned by defendant to do so; that in driving the tractor he faced the large "stationary" front wheels and to steer the tractor to the right or left he had to turn the small rear wheels in the opposite direction, using the steering wheel; that defendant gave him no training in operation of the tractor; that he had shoved only one car at a time prior to the day of his injury; that the cars weighed 23 or 25 tons each; that to push the cars "into the clear" he had to gain momentum before releasing them at the crossing; that most of the ties on the repair track were above the ground, the rails on the ties six or seven inches high and the crossing level with the rails; and that a switch engine was used to place the cars on the track for repair.

We think this evidence and the favorable inferences justified the district court's submission of the specific charge of defendant's negligence to the jury.

The district court ordered the remittitur because the verdict was "grossly excessive" and the size of the verdict "shocks the conscience" of the court.2 Defendant argues that this view of the district judge "coupled with the complete absence, or, at best, paucity of evidence"3 of negligence requires a new trial of the questions of liability and damages. We disagree that there is a paucity of evidence upon which the jury fastened liability, or that the question of liability is "close or doubtful (at best)."4 The facts here leave no room for reasonable inference that plaintiff's injury on March 15, 1962, was not due to the occurrence he described. The district court's decision to grant a new trial, if there was no remittitur, was "on the grounds of an excessive verdict." We see no merit in defendant's argument that the question of liability should be retried. There is no merit either in the argument of defendant suggesting that contributory negligence of plaintiff was a proximate cause as a matter of law and that the jury did not diminish damages because of plaintiff's contributory negligence.

This court in Shupe v. New York Central System, 339 F.2d 998 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 381 U.S. 937, 85 S.Ct. 1769, 14 L.Ed.2d 701 (1965), reversed an order denying defendant's motion for new trial as to damages and liability. There the $125,000.00 verdict, upon which judgment was entered, was grossly excessive, and plaintiff's claim that a defective door caused his shoulder injury was "so grossly at variance" with his own statements to numerous others that the injury was caused by lifting a carton from the floor, that this court was left with a "grave doubt as to truthfulness and reasonableness" of plaintiff's claim. The case before us is not "one of those exceptional cases which call for a reversal," as the court said of the Shupe case, 339 F.2d at 1002.

Defendant challenges the propriety of the court's instruction to the jury that it might consider the "permanency" of plaintiff's physical injury, his "further disability and loss of health," his "future loss of earnings and inability to work," and, in effect, that his life expectancy was 32.6 years. It contends there is no basis in the evidence for the instruction and that the instruction probably led to the grossly excessive verdict which cannot be cured by the remittitur.

We think there is a basis in the evidence for this instruction, in which the jury was told they could consider "what evidence, if any," there was of such damages....

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    ...where that 'defense' has been neither pleaded nor argued, serves only to obscure the issues in the case.' Casko v. Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Ry. Co., 361 F.2d 748, 751 (7th Cir.1966). The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, relying on the proposition that 'it is a mistake to give instr......
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