Arthur Clark v. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 328 F.2d 591, 2d Cir. (1964)

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328 F.

2d 591

Arthur CLARK, Plaintiff-Appellant,


v.
The PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, DefendantAppellee.
No. 184.
Docket 28441.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.


Argued November 19, 1963.
Decided February 14, 1964.

Melvin A. Cohen, New York City (Bromsen & Gammerman, New York
City, on the brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
Thomas V. McMahon, New York City (Myron D. Cohen and Conboy,
Hewitt, O'Brien & Boardman, New York City, on the brief), for
defendant-appellee.
Before MEDINA, WATERMAN and MARSHALL, Circuit Judges.
MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

Arthur Clark, employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company as a buffet


lounge attendant, appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict for
defendant in an action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.
51 et seq. The claim by appellant is that he was denied a fair trial because
Judge Rosling: (1) refused to grant a certain request for instructions on the
subject of assumption of risk; (2) was not sufficiently explicit in his instructions
relative to proximate cause; (3) received in evidence over objection a certain
map as an exhibit without eliminating certain marks indicating street lights; and
(4) permitted the Railroad over appellant's objection to introduce the testimony
of two witnesses whose names were not included in the list of prospective
witnesses alleged to be required by the Rules of the District Court for the
Eastern District of New York to be filed as part of the pre-trial procedure of that
Court. We find no error and we affirm.

Clark was in the employ of the Railroad as a bar lounge attendant and was
working on the run between Jersey City and Point Pleasant, New Jersey. In
April of 1958 the schedule to which Clark was assigned required his presence
at the Bay Head Junction Yard at 4:30 A.M., long before sunrise. To
accommodate the men who reported for work in darkness at this early hour, far
from their homes, the Railroad provided overnight crew quarters. The place
where Clark was to sleep was a boarding house at 500 McLean Avenue in Point
Pleasant, New Jersey. On two afternoons just prior to the accident Clark
returned to this boarding house while it was still light, and he observed that
access to the house was by three wooden steps leading to a screened porch. To
enter the house it was necessary to go up the steps, open the screen door,
proceed across the small screened porch and open the main door leading to the
quarters inside the house. There was another set of three wooden steps on the
opposite side of the screened porch, but this set of steps is only of peripheral
consequence.

Two other fellow workers also spent the night at 500 McLean Avenue, Lucius
K. Morris, one of Clark's witnesses at the trial, and another man who was not
called as a witness by either party. On the morning of April 15, 1958, the day
before the accident, Clark came out of the house with Morris, who had a
flashlight and, with the assistance of the flashlight, they both went down the
steps, entered the taxicab provided by the Railroad and reached their
destination on time. On April 16, 1958 Clark heard the taxi driver blowing his
horn and he assumed that Morris had gone ahead and was already in the cab. As
a matter of fact Morris, who was holding his flashlight in his hand, was still
inside the house. Clark then went through the screened porch, opened the door
and started to go down the steps. As he said, he missed the first step and fell,
receiving the injuries complained of.

The simple factual issues related to the condition of the wooden steps and the
amount of light afforded by whatever means were available for the purpose.
While there is some talk about a slight defect in one of the steps, as shown in
the photographs received in evidence, the real alleged defect relied on by Clark
was the absence of any railing on either side of the steps. Morris testified no
lighting was provided near the steps and that there were no lights inside the
porch. He insisted the only street light in the vicinity was on the McLean
Avenue corner, 125 feet away. Clark admitted he did not look for any light
fixtures inside the screened porch, but he said he noticed the light up on the
corner. He denied there was any street light directly across the street from 500
McLean Avenue.

* Against this simple factual background we shall first address ourselves to

what we consider to be the most interesting and important question in the case,
Judge Rosling's ruling construing or amending the pre-trial order in the exercise
of his judicial discretion and receiving the testimony of the two witnesses
whose names had been omitted from the Railroad's pre-trial statement. The
question arose on the second day of the trial during the direct examination of
Clark. Feeling some concern over the omission to include the names of the two
witnesses, trial counsel for the Railroad, having previously notified his
opponent of his intention to do so, moved to amend the pre-trial order so as to
include the two additional names. When Judge Rosling became aware of the
fact that the two witnesses were to testify concerning the physical location of
lighting facilities of some permanence, and read the pretrial statement of the
Eastern District requiring no enumeration of witnesses to be called in "rebuttal,"
he ruled that this was rebuttal and also that, in any event, in his discretion he
would allow the witnesses to be called. He added:
6

"The Court: Well, I don't construe the pretrial order that stringently. It wouldn't
make sense. That's a physical condition of some measure of permanence, and I
will permit you to introduce a witness, whether it is rebuttal testimony or
exercising my discretion to permit such testimony be introduced.

"Of course, if your adversary is able to indicate that he was surprising him, and
he moves for a mistrial or adjournment, I will take it under advisement."

The matter came up again the following day, prior to the calling of the two
witnesses, and Judge Rosling again offered Clark's counsel a reasonable
adjournment if he desired to have one because of any surprise.

As counsel seemed to be more interested in throwing out an anchor to


windward, in the event of an adverse verdict and an appeal, than he was to
procure a continuance for the purpose of investigating the facts or the
prospective witnesses, he remained silent. There was no motion for a mistrial
and no request for an adjournment.

10

The wisdom of Judge Rosling's ruling was apparent when the two witnesses
testified. George T. Chapman, a building and license inspector for Point
Pleasant Beach, produced a map, later received in evidence, and he testified that
there were two street lights, one on the corner of McLean Avenue, by actual
measurement 100 feet from the steps where Clark fell, and another on the
opposite side of the street from the steps only 60 feet away. This is the one
Clark insisted did not exist. Chapman testified that to his personal knowledge
these lights had been there for ten years prior to the accident. Marian L. Lufft,

employed as an inspector by the Borough of Point Pleasant Beach, testified she


inspected the premises at 500 McLean Avenue on June 16, 1958, that there
were two electric light fixtures in the ceiling on the screened porch, one just
above the steps used by Morris and Clark, and another just above the steps
leading from the other side of the porch. She also testified that during April,
1958 she had observed these porch lights to be on as she passed by.
11

Thus it need not surprise us that counsel for Clark evinced no enthusiasm for a
continuance to check the facts as testified to by these witnesses or the witnesses
themselves. Despite the testimony of Clark and Morris, it was now pretty clear
that light was available and that the fixtures on the porch and the lights on the
street had been there for a long time.

12

In the heyday of Common Law Pleading, when each of the numerous


technicalities involved provided the members of the bench and bar with a
source of continual intellectual amusement and pleasure, the sporting theory of
justice prevailed. To win a lawsuit by guile and surprise or by the skillful
manipulation of mysterious rules, understood only by the elite, was quite the
thing to do. The development of pre-trial procedure and the formulation of Rule
16 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and similar provisions in most if not
all of the States, represents one of the great Twentieth Century contributions to
the improvement of judicial administration and the furtherance of effective,
timely justice. One of the prime objectives of this new, but now firmly
established procedural device, is to do away with the old sporting theory of
justice and substitute a more enlightened policy of putting the cards on the
table, so to speak, and keeping surprise tactics down to a minimum. With this in
mind many courts throughout the country have required some specification by
the parties of the identity of the witnesses to be called.

13

The more general rule is the one in force in the United States District Court for
the Southern District of New York, where each party must file a pre-trial
memorandum including, among other items, "A list of the witnesses which
each party intends to call, along with the specialties of experts to be called."
The Eastern District rule that governs this case requires "Separate lists of the
witnesses whom each party will call at the trial of the action, distinctly
identifying those witnesses to be called as experts." One of the provisions
included in all Eastern District pre-trial orders is: "There is reserved to each
party the right to call such rebuttal witnesses as may be necessary without
previous notice thereof to the adversary party or parties."

14

The word "rebuttal" is equivocal and we think the judges in the Eastern District
of New York might well consider changing their rule to make it conform to the

practice in the Southern District of New York. Moreover, the pre-trial order in
this case contains the provision almost universally adopted or implied:
15

"IT IS ORDERED that this Pre-Trial Order may be modified at the trial of the
action, or prior thereto, to prevent manifest injustice, and that such modification
may be made either on the application of counsel for the parties or on motion of
the Court; * * *"

16

Whatever the phraseology of the rule in a particular federal District Court, it is


a fundamental principle of pre-trial that this procedure be flexible, with power
reserved to the trial judge to amend the order or permit a departure from strict
adherence to the pre-trial statements of either party, when the interests of
justice make such a course desirable. Otherwise a pre-trial order or pre-trial
statements would hold the parties in a vise, and the result might be just about as
bad as a return to the old sporting theory of justice. See Scott v. Spanjer Bros.,
Inc., 2 Cir., 1962, 298 F.2d 928. Of course a ruling amending the pretrial order
or permitting a departure by any party from his pre-trial statement may be
reviewed for abuse of discretion. But there is clearly no abuse of discretion
here.

17

On the other hand, in a case, for example, where a party springs a surprise
witness on his adversary in defiance of the terms of a pre-trial order or
statement, and the circumstances indicate bad faith and an intent to take some
unfair advantage, the trial judge again has ample power to deal with the
situation. He may exclude the testimony, Matheny v. Porter, 10 Cir., 1946, 158
F.2d 478, 480; Globe Cereal Mills v. Scrivener, 10 Cir., 1956, 240 F.2d 330,
335; Texas & Pacific Ry. v. Buckles, 5 Cir., 1956, 232 F.2d 257, 260, cert.
denied, 351 U.S. 984, 76 S.Ct. 1052, 100 L.Ed. 1498, grant a continuance or
declare a mistrial, assessing costs and perhaps a counsel fee against the lawyer
who acted in bad faith in calling such a witness. In a flagrant case no amount of
reasonable adjournment, with a jury present, would be of any avail. In other
words, the common law powers of the trial judge are preserved intact, but what
is to be done in a particular case depends upon the facts and circumstances of
that case, and the rulings when made are always subject to appellate review for
abuse of discretion. See Meeker v. Rizley, 10 Cir., 1963, 324 F.2d 269;
Syracuse Broadcasting Corporation v. Newhouse, 2 Cir., 1959, 271 F.2d 910,
915.

II
18

It was not error to refuse to grant the following request for instructions to the
jury on the subject of assumption of risk:

19

"Assumption of risk is not available as a defense, either in whole or in part, to


the defendant railroad. Therefore, if you find that the plaintiff's injury resulted
in whole or in part from the negligence of the defendant, the plaintiff himself
shall not be held to have assumed the risk of his employment, his employment
including the use of the crew quarters, provided to him by defendant. That is,
plaintiff's recovery, if you find he is entitled to such recovery, shall in no way
be diminished by the fact that he may have been aware of the defective
condition of the steps and the lack of adequate lighting and used the crew
quarters in any event. Plaintiff does not assume the risks attendant upon the use
of those quarters if you find that defendant was negligent in failing to provide
him with reasonably safe quarters for his use."

20

To begin with, the inclusion of the statement that Clark's recovery "shall in no
way be diminished by the fact that he may have been aware of the defective
condition of the steps and the lack of adequate lighting" made the instruction as
requested tantamount to the elimination of the defense of contributory
negligence from the case. Thus the instruction was properly refused, as the rule
is that a failure to grant a request for instructions that are in any respect
incorrect and unsound does not constitute error.

21

On the merits, however, there was no occasion for the giving of any instruction
whatever on the subject of assumption of risk. Quite aware of the confusion
that would have resulted had the subject been adverted to in a case where the
defense as pleaded and as strongly relied upon at the trial was contributory
negligence, Judge Rosling resorted to the expedient of instructing the jury first
to decide the question of the negligence or lack of negligence on the part of the
Railroad and the amount of damage suffered by Clark as a result thereof, before
addressing themselves to the separate subject of contributory negligence in
possible mitigation of damages. As the verdict was for the Railroad, it is
extremely improbable that the jury ever reached the only issue to which
assumption of risk would have any relevancy.

22

Ordinarily it is a mistake to give instructions on subjects not directly in issue in


a case. Occasionally, however, for the purpose of clarification, it is proper or
even necessary to explain how some apparently similar situation is really
different. DeLima v. Trinidad Corporation, 2 Cir., 1962, 302 F.2d 585, strongly
relied upon by appellant, illustrates a situation in which an instruction on
assumption of risk is proper, by way of contrast to the present case in which
such an instruction is not proper because it might well cause such confusion as
to water down or even eliminate the issue of contributory negligence.

23

DeLima was a seaman. He slipped on an accumulation of oil on the floor of the

fireroom where he worked as a combination fireman-watertender. The action


was under the Jones Act, with the usual alternative allegation of
unseaworthiness. The trial judge had fallen into the familiar error of including
references to the duty of the shipowner only to use reasonable care in providing
a sufficient number of crew members to wipe up oil on the floor of the
fireroom. In emphasizing the rule that the liability of the shipowner for
unseaworthiness is absolute and not dependent on fault, we held that the
particular circumstances of that case made it necessary to give the requested
instruction on assumption of risk "to avoid confusion in the jury's mind."
Without such a complementary instruction the jury might have thought the duty
to provide a seaworthy vessel was less than absolute.
24

The circumstance that assumption of risk was not pleaded as a defense is quite
irrelevant to the subject we have just discussed. If such a defense had been
pleaded, it would on motion have been stricken as insufficient in law on its
face.

III
25

The other alleged errors require little discussion. There was no objection to the
instructions on the subject of proximate cause. While the trial judge did not use
the traditional formula, we think his meaning was clear, especially in the light
of the fact that he pointed out that defects in the sleeping quarters upstairs in the
boarding house would not be a proximate cause of Clark's falling as he went
down the steps.

26

The markings on the map produced by the witness Chapman were merely for
the purpose of indicating where the lights were and not for the purpose of
indicating that the lights were on in the early morning hours of April 16, 1958.
As he explained in his testimony, Chapman was not at the scene on the day of
the accident and he had no personal knowledge on the subject of whether or not
these lights were then functioning properly. It was not error to receive the
exhibit without removing the allegedly objectionable markings.

27

Affirmed.

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