
    St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company v. Morgan.
    
    
      
      Original opinion delivered December 7, 1914, per McCulloch, C. J., and is reported at ipage 52l9, this volume.
    
   Hart, J.,

(dissenting). Mr. Morgan testified that lie was not able to read the release signed by Mm and that lie was promised permanent employment as a consideration for signing the release. It is true that lie was given employment, ¡but lie was discharged in a very short time after he was employed and, according to Ms testimony, he was capable of performing the services required of Mm, and Ms discharge was wrongful. When this fact is taken into consideration in connection with the fact that he was discharged shortly after the release was signed, I think the jury would have been warranted in finding that the release was procured by a fraudulent promise of permanent employment.

It is true the railroad employed him as it promised to do and claimed that it discharged Mm for cause; on the other hand, as we have already stated, the plaintiff testified that he was wrongfully discharged, and the discharge, coming within so short a time after the release was signed, warranted submitting to the jury the question of whether or not the release was procured by reason of fraudulent representations.

I am also of the opinion that there was no error in refusing to give instruction No. 24. I agree with the opinion of the majority that the former opinion is the law of the case, but, it is the law of the case only in so far as the facts in the present appeal are similar to those on the former appeal. It will be remembered that the engineer and fireman both testified when the case was first tried and the record on the former appeal shows that they stated they saw plaintiff for a long distance off; in the present appeal the testimony of the plaintiff shows that when he looked ¡back the train was about midway of the curve and that the curve was probably a quarter of a mile long. He stated that he never heard any whistle sound or bell ring. As soon as he looked back over his shoulder the plaintiff stopped the car as quickly as he could and threw off the track jack which was on the car beside him. He then immediately took hold of the car and lifted it off the ends of the ties and attempted to pick up the little wheel which had caught on the track, to lift it off. He said that when he attempted to pick up the little wheel the train was about two telegraph poles from him and that he looked back at the train and saw the engineer; that the engineer was standing, had hold of the throttle, and looked like he was stopping the train. The distance between telegraph poles is 130 feet.

The plaintiff was not a trespasser. He was a servant of the defendant and his duties required him to ride over the track on the speeder. It is true that it was his duty when he saw a train to remove the speeder from the track in order t'o permit the passage of the train. He knew that if the speeder caught on the track and was hit by the train it was likely to wreck the train. It was his duty, then, to remove the speeder if lie could do so with safety to himself.

There is nothing in the record tending to contradict the testimony of the plaintiff. We have, therefore, on the present appeal, an essentially different state of facts from that presented on the former appeal. As far as the record in this case discloses, when the engineer first saw the plaintiff on the track it was apparent to him that the plaintiff was in a perilous position. Therefore it was an abstract proposition of'law to tell the jury that the engineer had a right to rely upon the presumption that the plaintiff would get off the track, for, as we have already seen, as far as the testimony shows, the plaintiff was in a perilous position when the engineer first saw him.  