Stone v. Union Pacific Railroad , 35 Utah 305 ( 1909 )


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  • FEIGN, J.

    Tbis is an appeal from a judgment in favor of respondent entered ini an action brought by him to recover damages for the death of bis intestate, alleged to bave been caused by tbe negligence of tbe appellant. Tbe death resulted from a collision of a passenger train and a freight train run in opposite directions over tbe defendant’s line of railroad .near Azusa in tbe state of Wyoming. Deceased was in defendant’s employ, and was tbe engineer of tbe freight train, designated “Extra 1,661,” tbe number of tbe engine drawing tbe train. Tbe train’ consisted of tbirtv-one loaded freight cars carrying about 1,027 tons. It was started eastward over defend-•ánt?s line from Evanston at 5 :20 p. m. on November 11th, 1904. It was an ordinary fast freight, carrying miscellaneous through merchandise. It bad no regular time, and was not shown on tbe regular schedule of trains, but traveled, entirely on telegraphic orders. Its movements over tbe road ■weré controlled ,by .telegraphic orders' issued by Jhe train disr *312patcher at Evanston, which orders were transmitted by him by means of the telegraphic code to operators at various stations along the line, and which were by them repeated, transcribed, and delivered to the train operatives. The movements of all trains were kept by the train dispatcher from information furnished him by the operators at all stations where there was telegraphic communication. These operators reported to the dispatcher, among other things the arrival, departure, and passage of all trains.

    The first division over which extra 1,661 traveled was from Evanston to Granger, a distance of about seventy miles. Between Evanston and Granger were about fourteen stations, from four to seven miles apart. When! the train left Evan-ston, it had running orders to run to' Granger. When it reached Granger all orders theretofore delivered to the train crew of No. 1661 concerning the movements of the train ended and became ineffectual. From Granger east the train w'as in effect a new train. The crew was not authorized to proceed east of Granger without first having received new •telegraphic orders from the train dispatcher at Evanston. The passenger train designated No. 3 was running west. At Altamont, which is about twelve or thirteen miles east of Evanston, the crew of No. 1661, at 8:05 p. m., received train order No. 59, which read as follows:

    “No. 3 will' run one hour, thirty minutes late Green Biver to Evanston. No. 5 will run fifty minutes late Green Biver to Granger. H. V. P. (Initials of Superintendent.) Conductor and engineman must each have a copy of this order. Bepeated at 1:39 p. m. Conductor Lowham. (Conductor of No; 1661.) Made complete at 8:05. Bteceived by E. Gordon. (Operator at Altamont.)”

    Green Biver is about thirty miles east of Granger, or one hundred miles east of Evanston. Train 1661 arrived at Granger at 11:25 p. m. Its train crew at that place received, at 11:35, train order No. 66:

    “Engine 1661 will run extra Granger to Green Biver ahead of Nos. 19 and 25 Granger to Peru. H. V. P. Con*313.ductor and engineman must each have a copy of this order. Repeated at-m. Conductor Lowham. Train 1661. Made comp, at 11:35. Received by Miller.”

    At the same time and place they also received a train order from Miller, which was also numbered 59, and read as follows :

    “No. 3 will run one hour and fifty minutes late Green River to Granger. H. V. P. Conductor and engineman must have a copy of this order. Repeated 1 p. m. Conductor Lowham. Train 1661. Made comp, at 11:35 p. m. Received by North.”

    The method of issuing train orders by the train dispatcher at Evanston was as follows: He would issue the order and cause it to be transmitted by wire to the station operator first in order and this operator would then repeat it back to the dispatcher. In that way the dispatcher would be informed whether the order was correctly received and understood by the operator. If the order was repeated back correctly, the dispatcher would “O. K.” it and so inform the operator, and then make a record of it in a book kept for that purpose in the dispatcher’s office. All. orders were numbered consecutively, commencing at midnight of one day and ending at midnight of the next. If it was desired to transmit an order to more than one operator, it would be transmitted to as many operators along the line as would be required to report the same to the train crews which were affected by the order, and the order would be repeated back to the train dispatcher by each operator in the same manner as was done by the first who received it. The repetitions of the order would be indicated by the train dispatcher by writing in the record referred to the name of the station or operator opposite to the order as recorded in the book, ^and by drawing a line or underscoring the name of each operator receiving it. In this way the record would show to whom the order had been sent, and how often it had been repeated back as correct. Train order No. 59, in which No. 3 was reported to run one hour and thirty minutes late, had been repeated back in that form to the dis*314patcher six times by different operators along the line during the evening and night of the accident. E.aeh operator was required to transcribe train orders in accordance with the rule’ in force on appellant’s system, which provided:

    “Operators receiving train orders must write them in manifold during transmission!, and if they cannot at one writing make the requisite number of copies, must trace others from one of the copies first made, repeating the same to dispatcher and receiving his ‘O. K.’. ”

    The usual number of orders required for each train was three, one for the conductor, one for the engineer, and one for the operator, from which, if more were needed, others were to he traced as stated in the-rule.

    The record kept by the train dispatcher at Evanston contained the record of train order No. 59, in which No-. 3 was shown to ran one hour and thirty minutes late, but did not disclose any order that No. 3 would run one hour and fifty minutes late. How the second No. 59 order was changed from one hour and thirty minutes to one hour and fifty minutes is not made to appear, except by inference. It does •appear, however, that both train orders, No. 59 and No. 66, were received by Miller, the telegraph operator at Granger, and were transcribed by him and delivered to the train crew ■of No-. 1661. Both were in his handwriting. Prior to November 9th, Miller had been the regular night operator at Granger. He resigned on the 9th day of November. An-operator by the name of Northington was sent to take his place. Northington was not on duty the night of the 11th. Miller was the operator in charge and received, transcribed, and delivered the last two train orders referred to-. He signed his own name to one of them; to the other the name ■of “North” — for Northington.

    In addition to the foregoing, there are other material facts, but, in order to avoid’unnecessary repetition, it is deemed best to state them in connection with the particular question ■discussed.

    Ini the complaint, the acts and omissions constituting ap*315pellant’s alleged negligence, so far as. material' bere, are, substantially, stated to be as follows: That said appellant wasi “negligent and careless in this, to-wit, that whenever in a train order it was necessary to use figures, that the same should be transmitted by its train dispatcher to the operators at the various stations concerning the movements of trains on its road, ordinary care and prudence require that such figures should be expressed in the telegraphic code over the telegraph wires in both words and numerals, and plaintiff says that ordinary care and. prudence required of the- said defendant company that it should make and promulgate a rule to its various train dispatchers, operators, and other employes requiring them in transmitting their orders from the telegraph wires to express figures used therein in both ■words and numerals, so as to prevent possibility or probability of such message being wrongly transcribed”; that the appellant negligently failed to promulgate such a rule, “but allowed and permitted its train dispatcher to issue, the order heretofore referred to in figures only” ; that the defendant well knew “that such a rule was required to. prevent mistakes, and said train dispatcher, being permitted to do so by said defendant, failed to send said train order in words and figures but sent the same ... by the use of numerals only, thereby causing said train order to be transcribed s.o as to read that No. 3 would run one hour and fifty minutes late, whereas said No. 3 was not one hour and fifty minutes late; that said train order as transcribed was delivered to the employees of said freight train, which caused them to believe they had sufficient time to run to Azusa and go upon the side track before No. 3 reached them, . . . and thereby the- said failure of the said company to make and promulgate such, rule caused the said two trains to collide together, and caused the death of plaintiff’s intestate.”

    There are further allegations of negligence, but they relate to the defective condition of the freight engine operated by *316tbe deceased, and bave no bearing upon the questions now to be considered.

    The appellant denied all acts .of negligence, set forth the rules of the company, and averred that the deceased had disregarded them, and pleaded contributory negligence and assumption of risk.

    From the allegations in the complaint it is reasonably clear that there is no charge that the train dispatcher issued and transmitted a false train order, or caused such a one to be delivered; but the charge is that the train order was incorrectly written or transcribed and delivered by the operator, and that the appellant was negligent in not promulgating a rule that train orders should be issued and transmitted in both words and figures. That is, where a certain number was given, it should, for example, be written thus: “(20) twenty.” Upon the trial, to establish the negligence alleged as stated above, the respondent was permitted to- prove, over appellant’s objections and exceptions, that prior to 1902, and up to the spring of that year, the appellant had a rule in force which required that .in train orders where numbers were given they should be stated in both figures and words, as indicated in the foregoing example; that in, the spring of that year the rule was changed so as to require numbers to be stated in figures only; that other railroads either had a rule in force which required numbers to be stated in both figures and words, or, that, in issuing train orders, they used the method of repeating numbers in both words and figures.

    The rule, a copy of which was introduced in evidence, which was in force on appellant’s system up to the spring of 1902, is as follows: “Rule 526. Designation of trains. Regular trains will be designated in orders by their schedule numbers, as ‘No. 10 (ten)’ or ‘Second No. 10 (ten)’; extra trains by engine number, as ‘extra 798 (seven, nine, eight).’ All numbers in body of orders to be written in figures and words. The direction of the movement of extras will be added when necessary, as ‘east’ or ‘west.’ ”

    *317Tie rule as changed and in force during and after the year 1902, is as follows: “Rule 206. Regular trains-will Re designated ini train orders by their number, as ‘No. 10,’ or ‘2d No. 10,’ adding engine numberes when necessary to further identify train; extra trains by engine numbers, as ‘extra 798,’ with the direction when necessary, as ‘east’ or ‘west.’ Other numbers and time will be stated in figures ■only.”

    The rule which was testified to be in force on a large number of other railroad systems both East and West, and which was shown to be among the rules in force on the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, is as follows: “526. Regular trains will be designated in orders by their schedule numbers, as '‘No. ten (10),’ or ‘2nd No. ten (10),’ ‘1st No. one (1st 1),’ ■and the direction of the movement of irregular trains shall be ■added, as ‘east,’ or ‘west;’ also adding engine number in figures. Time and number of trains will be stated in words ■duplicated in figures. Abbreviations, except such as are ■specified in rule 527, will not be used.”

    In addition to the foregoing rules, a copy of a train order 'issued by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ee Railroad ini February, 1898, wherein numbers were given in words and repeated in figures, was also introduced in evidence. The evidence also tended to show that the deceased was provided with a copy .of appellant’s rules after the change was. made •as aforesaid, to-wit, on February 24th, 1902, and at which time he passed an examination! with regard to his knowledge ■of appellant’s rules. The testimony of experts in the railroad business also tended to show the difference in the method ■of issuing train orders by the appellant, and a large number of other roads. This testimony, as well as the rules and train ■orders of other railroads, was all admitted over appellant’s objections and exceptions. The testimony was, however, limited to a particular fact, as the questions and answers ■dearly show. It is not practical to set forth all the testimony upon this point,, nor is it necessary to do this, since the questions propounded to all of these experts and the *318answers, thereto are,’in effect, the same. We will therefore give only the questions asked and answers given thereto by Mr. George B. Winters and Mr. E. E. Bipley, both of whom seem well qualified from, experience to testify upon the point in question. Counsel for respondent propounded the following question to Mr. Winters, namely: “Did you become familiar with the method employed on the Santa Ee in train orders used on that road in the particular asked about? What was the method employed by them?” Mr. Winters answered: “The method' was to write the figures out in .words and figures in the body of the train orders.” The same question was asked him with regard to the Chicago & Northwestern Bail'way, and the answer was:' “That, the ’figures were written out in words; also figures were used in orders.” Mr. E. E. Bipley, in answer'to the saipe question, said: “The time in the body of train orders was given in figures as well as written in words.” The only practical difference between the several witnesses who testified upon this point was that of limiting the testimony of each witness to _ the railroad of railroads with whose method the witness was familiar. The assistant superintendent of appellant also testified that rule 206, as herein set forth, was a standard rule, and “is made up by the principal railway official's, such as general managers, of the United States, and is generally used on the most important railways in the United States.” The evidence, therefore, with regard to the promulgation and enforcement of rules governing the issuance and transmis-- ■ sion of train orders which are claimed to have been insufficient, in substance amounts to this:

    That a large number of railroads, including the appellant, prior to 1902, had a rule in force requiring train orders to the train crews to be issued by giving numbers in both words and figures; that in the year 1902 appellant changed the rale and method upon its railroad system, and thereafter required that numbers be given in figures only, and that' operators were required to transcribe orders in manifold, and, if additional copies of any order were required, to trace them *319from an original; that at least a few of the larger railroads were shown by direct evidence to have continued the method of giving numbers in both words and figures after 1902 and up to the time of the accident, while nothing is'shown with regard to the majority of the other railroads after 1902 ini. this regard except by the inference that those roads may have "continued the old- method in force from the fact that it was in force prior to that time; that two No. 59 orders were delivered to the train crew on train 1661, one of which read that No. 3 would run one hour and thirty minutes late, the other that it would run .one hour and fifty minutes late; that the first order was recorded in the record book of the train dispatcher, but no record appeared of the latter; that the first was correctly repeated back six times, while there was no record that the latter had been sent out or repeated back.

    Upon tins evidence the court submitted the question of appellant’s negligence with regard to its duty in the promulgation and enforcement of rules in the following instruction: “The court charges you that it was the duty of the defendant company to use ordinary care to make and publish to its employees engaged in controlling the operation of its trains such reasonable and necessary rules for the. safe promulgation, transmission, and delivery of its train orders as would afford reasonable protection to its employees engaged upon such trains, and such as would reasonably provide against the probability of mistakes being made in the transcribing of such orders. Therefore the court charges you that if you find by a preponderance of the evidence m this case that ordinary care required that the defendant company at the time of the accident here in question should have adopted a rule providing that when time is stated in the body of a train order it should be expi'essed both in words and ■figures, and not simply in figures, then the cbiort charges you that the failure of the defendant company to exercise such ordinary care would constitute negligence; and if you find by a preponderance of the evidence that such failure to exercise ordinary care in that respect was a proximate cause *320of ihe injury and death of plaintiff's intestate — that is, that had it not been for the failure to adopt such a rule the plaintiff’s intestate would not have been injured and hilled — then the plaintiff would be entitled to recover in this action, unless you find that plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of contributory negligence, or assumed the risk, as will be hereinafter explained to' you; but if you find from the evidence either that the ordinary care did not require the adoption of such a rule, or that the failure to adopt such a rule was not the proximate cause of the injury and death of plaintiff’s intestate — that is> that even if such a rule had been, adopted the accident could still have happened — then the court charges you that the plaintiff is not entitled to' recover in this action.”

    The same rule was laid down in another instruction in practically the same phraseology. Appellant excepted to that portion of the instruction! which w'e have italicized, and also excepted to the same phraseology in the other instructions, and has assigned the giving of these portions as constituting prejudicial error. The admission of the evidence with regard to the rules and methods in force on other railroads is likewise assigned as error. At the close of the evidence the ap*-pellant requested the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor upon the ground that respondent was precluded from recovering as a matter of law. The court refused to so direct the jury. The appellant excepted, and now urges such refusal as error. These assignments, for obvious reasons, may be considered together.

    The assignment that the court erred in admitting in evidence the rules and methods adopted by other railroads with respect to issuing train orders: We are of the opinion that in the mere admission of this evidence the court committed no prejudicial error. Where the claim is made that the conduct of a particular business requires the promulgation and enforcement of certain rules and regulations for the protection of the employees, and the.assertion is made that *321the employer was negligent in not promulgating any, 1 or in promulgating insufficient, rules, it is always proper to' show that others who are engaged in the same line of business have methodized the business by the promulgation and enforcement of rules and regulations. From this it must necessarily follow that it may likewise be shown what the rules and regulations are that have been adopted and enforced by others, at least as a foundation for other evidence and in connection therewith. This matter is discussed in 1 Labatt, Mast. & Serv., in sections 211 to 211, where the authorities are cited .which support the doctrine as above statéd. Where, however, the- question is narrowed, as in this case, to the one proposition, that the rule promulgated and enforced by the party complained against is insufficient because it prescribes a method of doing particular work, which method is not reasonably safe, 2 and, therefore, the master was negligent in not promulgating a different rule and safer method, then the rule asserted to- be insufficient-may not always be shown to be so by simply showing that others who are conducting a similar business have adopted different rules upon the same subject. “Where a master is engaged in a complex or dangerous business, he must adopt and promulgate such rules and regulations for the conduct of his business and the government of his servants in the discharge of their duties as will afford reasonable protection to them.” Further than this: “It is the duty of the master to use reasonable care to see that the rules adopted by him for the safety of his servants are complied with.” 26 Cyc. 1151-1159. - The master must likewise use all reasonable care to inform the servants of the rules adopted by him. But it is not the duty of the master to adopt or enforce any particular rule or method 3, 4 ini conducting his business. If the rule or method adopted and enforced by him, when followed, is sufficient to protect the servant and to secure his safety so far as this may be done by the exercise of ordinary care of the master in the supervision of his business and servants, then the rule *322adopted by bim may not be condemned npon the sole ground that others who are conducting the same kind of a business have adopted and are enforcing a different rule or method. As between master and servant, the master is not negligent simply because he has not adopted what others may deem a better method, provided the one he has adopted is sufficient to adequately protect the servant and to secure his safety as above stated. The test, therefore, with respect to the sufficiency of any rule which prescribes the method of 5 doing the work must always be whether or not the rule, if obeyed, fulfills the measure or standard of protection and safety required by law. The sufficiency or insufficiency of a particular rule can therefore, in most eases, not be determined' by a simple comparison of one rule with that of another adopted upon the same subject. Where the complaint is made that the master was negligent because he failed to promulgate and enforce any rule with regard to the conduct of his business, then the fact that the conduct of the business is commonly regulated, and the manner of such regulation, when shown, may be evidence of negligence, and may, under certain circumstances, alone be sufficient to establish negligence in failing to promulgate a rule. But in any event, if the servant complains that no 6, 7 rules have been adopted, or of insufficient rules and defective methods, the burden is cast upon him to establish that a rule was necessary, and, in case one has been adopted, he must show wherein it is insufficient.

    In 1 Labatt on Master & Servant, sec. 211, in speaking to this point, the author says:

    “If.the plaintiff relies upon the theory that some specific rule should have been promulgated under the circumstances, he must show not only that the rule suggested was necessary, but that it was reasonable and proper, and, if observed, would have adequately protected the employees. . . . The principle that a master is not bound to adopt any particular methods of work involves, in the present connection, the corollary that, where the rules promulgated by an employer afford ample protection if they are duly observed, *323the fact that different rules for the same emergency have been adopted by other employers is not sufficient to show that he is negligent.”

    In Smith v. N. Y. 0. & H. R. Ry. Go., 88 Hun, 468, 34 N. Y. Supp. 881, Mr. Justice Mayham, at page 882 of 34 N. Y. Supp., at page 470 of 88 Hun, says:

    “It is urged by the appellant that the proof shows that other railroads have different rules from those adopted by the defendant, and that from that proof the jury might have found that the rules of the defendant were defective to such an extent that the jury might have found it guilty of negligence; but we find no proof that the rules of the defendant were so defective that, if strictly followed by the employees, they would not have afforded adequate protection to all employees acting under them.”

    The trial court in that case held that the jury were not authorized to find that the defendant was negligent ini adopting a rule upon the sole ground that other railroads had adopted a different one upon the same subject by simply comparing the defendant’s rule with such other rules, and the Supreme Court of New York sustained the ruling of the trial court, as appears from the foregoing quotation.

    In Hannibal & St. Joe Ry. Go. v. Kanaley, 39 Kan!. 1, 17 Pac. 324, the Supreme Court of Kansas held that to show that other railroads had adopted different rules, when standing alone, afforded no proof that the rules in question were insufficient..

    The case of A., T. & S. F. Ry. Go. v. Oarrulhers, 56 Kan. 309, 43 Pac. 230, is to the same effect.

    In the case of Abel v. Delaware & H. G. Go., 128 N. Y. 662, 28 N. E. 663, cited by counsel for respondent, we think the court clearly holds that negligence may not be predicated upon the mere fact that others in the same line of business have adopted a different rule from the one in question upon the same subject. In the opinion, at page 667 of 128 N. Y.? at page 665 of 28 N. E'., it is said:

    *324“The ’ defendant’s counsel excepted to that part of the charge •‘in relation to the jury determining what were proper rules and they might conclude what rules should be.’ If the charge is to be construed as leaving it to the jury to determine, irrespective of the evidence, what rules ought to have been adopted for the safety of the repairmen, and to find the one way or the other-on the question <rf the defendant’s negligence in conformity with the conclusion so reached, the charge was undoubtedly erroneous.”

    From wbat is there said it seems clear that the New York court holds that the jury must determine the sufficiency or insufficiency of a rule prescribing a method of doing the "work from the evidence in which the character of the work is shown, and in what way the rule should 8 regulate the work so as to make it reasonably safe^ and further show why the rule in question, if followed, does not accomplish such a result. To require this is but reasonable, and to our minds is seif-evident It may be that the thing requiring regulation may be so apparent, and the defect in the rule upon the subject may be so obvious, -that a mere inspection of the defective rule, when compared with a different one, may make clear to the ordinary mind the defect, and in what the defect consists. But this cannot be universally true. In a matter so complex as the operation of numerous trains upon a single track in opposite directions during all kinds of weather, both day and night, with a large force of employees working to a common purpose in different departments, it necessarily requires a large experience and a thorough knowledge of details to formulate rules for-the government and control of trains so as to make the running of them as safe as possible, in view of all the circumstances. In this regard the safety of the public must be considered, as well as the safety of the employees. If, therefore, it is claimed that a rule with regard to the regulation of trains is insufficient, can an ordinary jury, by a mere inspection of a rule, say whether it is so or not % If it cannot do this from the mere inspection of the rule in question, is it in a better position to do so by comparing the rule in question with some other rule upon the same subject ? Would *325any one seriously contend that an ordinary jury would be competent to formulate proper rules for the government 9 and regulation of a complex railroad system ? There can be but one answer to this question, which must be in the negative, because the men composing the jury ordinarily lack the knowledge and experience which are essential to the proper discharge of such a duty. If, therefore, a jury is permitted to pass judgment upon a rule which of necessity must be based upon a knowledge of details and experience in the business sought to be regulated, without evidence which points out and makes clear to them the requirements of the business and in what manner and for what purposes regulation is required, and the facts from which the deduction may be made why one method is better than another, then a jury may condemn a rule that they would be utterly incompetent to make. Suppose a juror were called as a witness to testify upon the question whether a certain rule promulgated to regulate a certain business Avas sufficient or not for that purpose, would he not have to qualify as to his competency by showing his knowledge and experience upon the subject ? If, therefore, he would be incompetent to pass upon the sufficiency or insufficiency of a particular rule, would he be competent to pass judgment upon another rule upon the same subject, and by comparing the one with the other say which one is insufficient ? If a jury may do this, all that is necessary is to submit the rules to them and permit them to compare one with the other, and from such comparison either sustain or condemn the rule in question. In this way one jury may condemn one rule today by comparing it with another, and a second jury may the next day condemn the rule which was used for comparison by the first. Thus both rules are condemned by simply comparing one with the other. In point of fact it may be that both rules were insufficient and were justly condemned, but this is not the question. The vice is not in the fact that both rules have been condemned, hut in the method by which such a result was reached, namely, by simply comparing rules or methods, and without further *326evidence to inform tbe jury why -and in wbat respect tbe rules were in fact insufficient. Without sucb evidence tbe jury acts without tbe information which is required to enable them to pass judgment, and which the experience of experts in the business alone can impart to them. If a jury may condemn rules by mere comparison, then just' as long as rules differ both may be condemned upon the sole ground that there is such a difference. In such event.the conclusion is not based upon the evidence establishing the insufficiency of a rule, but merely upon the conjecture of the jury that one rule must be defective because it differs from another on the same subject. This identical question came before the Court of Appeals of New York in 1907 (Pearsall v. N. Y. 0. & E. R. R. Go., 189 N. Y. 474, 82 N. R Y52), and that court held that merely to show what the rules of defendant company were, in comparison with the rules of other railroad companies upon the same subject, presented nothing for a jury to pass on, and that the cause was erroneously submitted to the jury. The case at bar affords a striking illustration of how easily a jury ma.y be misled by merely comparing rulés and from such comparison alone determining, their insufficiency. The rule of appellant which prescribed the method of issuing and transmitting train orders was in force, so far as the deceased was concerned, since February 24th, 1902, when he received a copy of it and passed an examination with regard thereto. The accident occurred on November. 11th, 1904.

    The testimony shows that there were at least sixty-six train orders issued upon the division upon which the deceased was employed on the day of the collision; that some days more than that number were issued, and some days less, but from the testimony sixty-six may be taken as a fair daily average; that train orders would usually be repeated back by the different operators a considerable number of times, and that order No. 59 was in fact repeated back six times in the form it was originally transmitted by the dispatcher. In view of the evidence, we are certainly below the average *327when we assume that all train orders were repeated back at least three times. If we thus multiply the average daily number, namely sixty-six, by the average daily repetitions, it gives us 198. This is the number of times that the method employed by the appellant was applied each day on only one of the divisions of its system. If we multiply the daily repetitions by thirty, it gives us a monthly average of 5,940, while the yearly average amounts to 71,380 times. The testimony further shows that there were nine divisions on appellant’s system west of Omaha, Neb., and that, the trains of the Oregon Short Line Kailway passed over the rails of the appellant east of Granger, Wyo. From this it is only fair to assume that the average number of repetitions of train orders as we have given them is below rather than above the average. As we have stated, the rule became effective on February 24th, 1902, and was thus in force at least thirty-two months at the time of the accident. The number of repetitions on the Evanston division within that time, according to the average we have adopted, would amount to 190,080. So far as the evidence discloses, the method adopted by appellant of transmitting and transcribing train orders thus failed, if it failed at all, once in 190,-000 times upon one of the nine divisions of its railroad system. It may be that it failed more often, but if it did it would have been an easy matter for respondent to have shown the fact. In view that train orders are sent out as often as we have shown, and that they necessarily must be received "by a great number of trainmen and station operators, it would seem absolutely impossible to conceal the defect in or insufficiency of the rule prescribing the method, if such be the fact. But notwithstanding the fact that not a single instance was shown where the method used by appellant failed, if followed by the employee, the jury condemned the method, and did so upon the sole ground that a considerable number of other railroads used a different method. 10, 11 There is no evidence whatever that by following the ■ method used by such other roads mistakes are obviated, nor is *328there any that under the method used by appellant mistakes are not avoided if the rules are followed and obeyed by the employees. The jury simply assumed that such was the fact, and, under the instructions as given by the court, they were authorized to assume it. Not only were the jury permitted to enter the realm of speculation with regard to the foregoing facts, but they were also permitted to assume that appellants’ rules were insufficient when followed.

    The test of whether a rule is insufficient or not lies in the fact that it fails to afford adequate protection when followed, and not that it fails because it is disregarded. Quite true, á rule may be so framed that it is impracticable to follow it, but, if it is, it may be insufficient for that reason. Moreover in the instruction it is in effect assumed that a rule or method which provides that numbers in train orders shall be stated in both words and figures is a proper rule, and.a standard to which all other miethods shall conform. With regard to this the court told the jury that, if they found that ordb nary care required that the defendant “should have adopted a rule providing that when time is stated in the body of a train order it should he expressed both in words and figures and not simply in figures, then the court charges you that the failure of the defendant company to exercise such ordinary care would constitute negligence.” The duty east upon the appellant by this instruction is not that it was required to exercise ordinary care and diligence to provide rules which under the circumstances would prove adequate when followed to protect the employees against avoidable and unnecessary dangers, and which would make the conduct of its business reasonably safe, but the appellant was in effect declared negligent unless it adopted a particular method, namely, that of stating the time in the body of its train orders in both words and figures. We know of no law by which an employer is required to adopt one method 12 rather than another in conducting his business. The law, as we understand it, upon this point is well stated in *329Norfolk & W. B. Go. v. Cromer, 101 Va. 671,'4.4 S. E. 899, in tbe following language:

    “Courts and juries cannot dictate to railway companies a choice between methods, all of which are shown to he reasonably adequate for the purposes intended to he subserved. Thus to subject them to the varying and uncertain opinions of juries in questions of policy, and to substitute the discretion of the latter for their discretion would be wholly impractical, and would prove alike disastrous to the companies and the public.”

    If tbis is'tbe law, it is obvious that whether appellant was negligent or not witb regard to tbe conduct of its business cannot be determined by a mere comparison 13 of its methods witb those employed by others, although it were conceded that- tbe method used by others was reasonably safe. .It does not necessarily follow that because- one method is safe a different one is not.

    As-we have pointed out, there is no evidence in this ease which shows, or tends to show, that the rules adopted by • appellant which governed the transmission and transcribing of train orders were less effective if followed than were the rules of other companies upon that subject. As we have seen, the rules of appellant required each order and each repetition thereof to a different operator to be repeated bach to the dispatcher who issued and transmitted the orders. If it was repeated back correctly, it received the “O. K.” of the dispatcher; otherwise not. In repeating it bach, the operator thus had the correct order before him, and by another rule he was required to trace all copies from the order which was proved to be correct. If the operator thus had the time correctly stated in figures, and if he traced the additional copies from the correct order, it is not easy to see why all copies would not have been the same. No doubt, if the operator disobeyed the tracing rule and attempted to copy from memory, a mistake might occur in the copy although the original was correct.- But can it be said that a rule is insufficient simply because a mistake may occur if it is not followed ? Would it not be quite as easy and just as probable *330that the operator would make a mistake in copying ■a train order in which the time was stated in both words and ■figures as in copying one in which the time was stated in figures only ? If this is so, how can it be said, in the absence ■of any evidence upon the subject, that a rule which.required time to be stated in both words and figures is sufficient, while one which required the time to be stated in figures only is insufficient ? The question here is not that the appellant was negligent in issuing and transmitting an incorrect train order. There is no claim nor evidence that the train dispatcher did not issue and transmit the order giving the running time of No. 3 correctly, nor is there any claim or evidence that the order was so imperfectly written that it either confused or misled the trainmen. The order in question was plain and easily understood. The only defect in the order was that “50” was, by some one and in some way not disclosed by the evidence, substituted for “30,” and in that way gave a difference of twenty minutes in the actual running time of No. 3. If the dispatcher had issued such an order •and had thus misled the trainmen, and this order had been the proximate cause of the collision, a different question would be'presented. No such a claim is made in the complaint, and there is no evidence to substantiate such a claim. Neither was the case submitted to the jury upon such a theory, but, as we have seen, it was submitted to them upon the theory that the rales of the appellant with regard to the transmission and' transcribing of train orders were insufficient upon the sole ground that they did not require the time in train orders to be stated in both words and figures.

    A striking illustration that a rule which requires time to be stated in both words and figures may not, under all cir■cumstances, be the best, is afforded in the case of McLeod v. Grinther, 80 Ky. 399. In that case a train order was issued which gave a certain train until 10 o’clock to make a .certain point. The order was written thus: “Fish extra east; can Fave until ten, 10 o’clock a. m., to make Beards for number 2 and' number 4.” This order was intended to mean 10 *331o’clock, while the conductor construed it to mean ten minutes after 10 o’clock. The company was .held liable in that case for not exercising ordinary care .in writing the message, in that the figures “10” should have been placed in brackets to show that they were intended as a repetition of the word “ten,” and not as additional time. We cite this case merely to show that neither a court-nor jury is justified in assuming that one rule or method is to. be upheld and another should be condemned upon the sole ground that they differ with, regard to the methods that are to be followed in doing a particular thing which requires careful and constant regulation. In this connection it should also be kept in mind that, where rules have been deliberately formulated and promulgated by the master for the government of a complex 14 and dangerous business, they should be condemned only when it is clearly made to appear that they are in fact insufficient. “The presumption is that rules which the master has adopted for the government of his servants, to prevent injuries to them, are reasonable and sufficient.” (26 Cyc. 1169; Bex v. Pullman Palace Gar Go., 2 Marvel (Del.) 337, 43 Atl. 246; Lillie Bock, etc., By. v. Barry; 84 Fed. 944, 28 C. C. A. 644, 43 L. E. A. 349; Yedáér v. Fellow's, 20 N. T. 126.)

    While in the last two cases cited the doctrine that the question of the sufficiency of a rule is one of law and not of fact is enforced— a doctrine which we think is against the weight of authority — yet, so far as we are aware, the courts, whether they hold to the doctrine that the sufficiency of rules is a question- of fact for the jury or one of law for the court, all agree that the insufficiency of a rule should clearly be established before it is condemned. This court is committed to the doctrine that the sufficiency 15 of a rule is a question of fact. (Jolmson v. U. P. Goal Go., 28 Utah 46, 76 Pac. 1089, 67 L. E. A. 506.) The controlling reason, however, ivhich has impelled a majority of the courts to hold that the question is one of fact rather than of law is because it requires evidence from a competent *332source to determine the question of sufficiency or insufficiency of a rule, which evidence the jury, it is said, is perhaps better qualified to weigh and pass on than the courts-. The reasons for holding the question one of law are perhaps as well and as clearly stated by Mr. Justice Sanborn in Little Rock, etc., Ry. Co. v. Barry, supra, as they can be, while the reasons in favor of the-rule, that the question in one of fact are convincingly stated by Mr. Justice Thayer in his dissenting opinion in the same case. ¥e are impressed with the soundness of the reasons advanced by Mr. Justice Thayer in favor of the doctrine that the question is one of fact-. If it should be held, however, that the jury may, without other evidence than that of a mere comparison of rules and methods, in all cases declare one sufficient and the other insufficient, then the vices of both doctrines as they are declared to be by the courts would be adopted, while the virtues of neither would be preserved..

    For the foregoing reasons, therefore, we are clearly of the opinion that there was not sufficient evidence in this case to authorize the court to submit the question of the sufficiency of appellant’s rules- and methods to the jury, and that the court likewise erred' in its statements of the law in the instructions herein referred to.

    We will now proceed to consider the questions ’of the alleged contributory negligence and assumed risk of the deceased. Both of these questions arise out of the assignment that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for appellant,- a matter already referred to. In order to appreciate the full import of the propositions involved, it becomes necessary to refer to some facts in addition to those already stated.

    The deceased, his fireman, the conductor, and two brake-memi constituted the train crew of extra-train No. 1661, which left Evanston, Wyo., at 5:20 p-. m. on the evening of November 11th, 1904. • Engine 1661 was in a defective condition, by reason of which it leaked steam from the valve stems, cylinder, and piston heads to such an -extent as to *333envelop tbe engine and boiler with the escaping steam, and thus obscured the headlight of the engine so that it could not be seen by those on an approaching train, and prevented those on engine 1661 from seeing in advance of it. This condition of the engine had existed for several months prior to the accident, and the condition thereof and the dangers incident thereto had been reported by the trainmen to the proper persons whose duty it was to make repairs six or seven times prior to the accident, but the engine was not repaired. On the night of the accident, in making the trip between Evans-ton and Granger, numerous persons saw engine 1661 and noticed the escaping" steam, and their testimony is to the effect that engine 1661 was so enveloped in steam when in motion, and even when standing still, that it seemed like a bank of steam, and the numbers upon it could not be seen or the engine identified unless one went close up to it. This condition was discussed by some of the witnesses with the deceased and the fireman on the engine while they were on the trip and before arriving at Granger. The testimony, also, was to the effect that the harder the engine was required to work the more steam it leaked; that there were some considerable grades between Evanston and Granger to overcome, and that it was slightly downgrade for five miles after leaving Granger toward Azusa, and the remainder of the distance was slightly upgrade ; that train order 66, which was delivered to the deceased .at Granger, and under the ■authority of which he left that station for Azusa, although marked “complete,” was not so, because it lacked a statement of the time when it was repeated, if repeated at all, and that said order gave the crew of train 1661 the right of way over the trains mentioned therein, and authorized said crew to proceed on their way to Green íüver, but it was not a direction for .them to start at any particular time, and such start was to be made upon the judgment of the deceased and in accordance with the ten minute clearance rule hereinafter referred to; that there was no record in the dispatcher’s office that train No. 1661 had left Granger, nor is there any *334evidence tending to show that tbe dispatelier knew that 1661 was about to leave or had left that station, and there is no record of the time -the train did leave Granger for Azusa. There is also evidence to the effect that the escaping steam did not materially affect the running capacity of engine 1661 except with a load when going upgrade, and that the distance between Granger and Azusa, in the judgment of the witnesses, could have been made in from ten to twelve -minutes with engine 1661 on the night of the accident. It also was made to appear that when the collision occurred the deceased engineer, his fireman, the conductor,' and the head brakemen were all on engine No. 1661, and that the three latter were killed outright, while the deceased died some time after the collision. There are numerous facts, which, in view of our conclusions, are not deemed material, but such as are deemed so will be stated in connection with the points discussed.

    As we understand the law when applied to the undisputed facts, it prevents a recovery in this case as the record now stands. The underlying principles which govern and control the questions of contributory negligence and assumed risk have so often been stated, illustrated, and applied by both courts and text-writers that it seems a work of supererogation to even make an attempt to state them here, and we shall not do so. That these questions are ordinarily 16 questions of fact is elemental. That there are well-recognized exceptions is equally so. We shall therefore not pause to state under what circumstances they are either questions of fact or of law. Nor do the courts greatly differ, if they differ at all, in the statement of the rules of law which control, but they frequently differ with regard to the application of these rules to a given state of facts. We shall therefore review the facts as we understand them at some length, and, in doing this, shall attempt to show that both questions, in view of the undisputed evidence, are questions of law and not of fact.

    The true solution of both questions must necessarily depend upon the facts and circumstances of each case, and' *335cannot be determined as questions of law unless all reasonable minds, in considering all of the facts when 17 reasoning from cause to effect, should and would arrive at the same con,elusion. Applying these rules to the undisputed facts in this case, was the deceased guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law ? As a preliminary condition it must be remembered that the deceased must be regarded as an expert; he was engaged in a department of appellant’s business calling for special skill and experience; he was familiar with all of appellant’s rules and methods applicable to the movement of trains, and, as an expert,, must be held to have known and appreciated the ordinary dangers incident to the movement of trains under the rules and methods adopted by appellant, in so far, at least, as those rules and methods were reasonably sufficient to protect him against unnecessary and avoidable dangers. To this extent the rules and methods of appellant which were, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence could have 18 been, known to the deceased, became a part of his contract by which the relation of master and servant was created' between them. Upon this proposition the authorities leave little, if any, room for either doubt or dispute.

    Mr. Dresser, in his work on Employer’s Liability, in section 69, p1. 310, says:

    “Rules established in the business become a part of the contract made by the servant upon entry into the employment, and risK of injury from the impropriety of them was assumed, so far as the danger could be Known to the servant by the exercise of reasonable care.”

    Again, in section 109, p'. 521, the same author says:

    “The plaintiff is bound to obey the rules established by his master relating to the conduct of the business, and they become a part of the contract of service.”

    In 3 Elliott on Railroads (2d-Ed.), sec. 1291, the author says:

    *336“The general rule is. that enginemen assume the risks incident to the employer’s methods of business; and there is, indeed, no valid reason why they should be excepted from the rule.”

    The doctrine is also thoroughly discussed in some; if not all, of the following cases: Slater v. Jewett, 85 N. Y1. 61, 39 Am. Rep’. 627; Ilinz v. G. B. & N. B., 93 Wis. 16, 66 N. W. 718; Hewitt v. F. & P. M. By. Go., 67 Mich. 77, 34 N. W. 659; Hughes v. Winona & St. P. By., 21 Minn. 137, 6 N. W. 553; Naylor v. G. & N. W. By., 53 Wis. 661, 11 N. W. 24; Illinois Gent. By. Go. v. Neer, 26 Ill. App'. 356; Illinois Gent. By. Go. v. Neer, 31 Ill. App. .126; Wolsey v. Bailway Go., 33 Ohio St. 227.

    He must also be held to' have been fully aware of the condition of the engine operated by him at the time, and to have known what, if any, effect this condition would or might have upon its capacity; that whatever these defects were they might give rise to complications in the movement 19 of his, and possibly in that of other trains. In other words, he, as a matter of law, was charged, as between himself and his employer, with that knowledge which an ordinary man possessing the skill and experience he possessed would know', or, by the exercise of ordinary care, ought to have known in view of all the circumstances.

    In connection with these matters, he was. also bound to observe and follow the rules which were adopted by the master governing the employees’ actions for the 20 purpose of insuring reasonable safety in the movement of trains, in so far a he knew them, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence might have known them. When the deceased, as an engineer on engine No. 1661, received the second edition of train order No. 59, which gave the running time of the passenger train as one hour and fifty minutes late instead of one hour and thirty minutes; we shall assume, for the purpose of this opinion, that the deceased was not negligent in not observing that the second No 59 order was not worded as the first was, although the rules positively stated that train orders of the same number *337must be worded precisely alike, and tbe deceased tben bad in his possession, and had had for over three hours, the first No. 59 order, showing the wording to be different. We shall assume, further, that the deceased had a right to rely upon the train order giving the time of No. 3 passenger train as running one hour and fifty minutes late, and that train order No. 66 which gave the deceased the right to move his train from Granger to Green River was complete and gave him authority to start his train eastward, although there is some undisputed evidence in the record that train order Noi 66 was not in that complete condition. It, however, was indorsed complete, and we shall so treat it.

    Under the circumstances in this case the deceased expected to meet a passenger train, which was superior to his train, at the next station. He was therefore required to start his train in accordance with rules No. 1261 and No>. 89. Rule 1261 is as follows: “Engine men must know their time on the road, and will not start from the station, even though they receive a signal from the conductor, unless they can reach the next station in time to properly clear superior trains.” Rule No. 89, which must be read in connection with the foregoing, is as follows: “At meeting points between trains of different- classes, the inferior train must take the •siding and clear the superior train at least ten minutes, and pull into the siding when possible. If necessary to back in, the train must first be protected as per rule 99 unless otherwise provided. An inferior train must keep- at least ten minutes off the time of a superior train in the same direction.” The evidence without conflict shows that it was the •duty of the trainmen under those rules to keep in mind the difference between the schedule time of the train and the time it was in fact running under late orders, and arrange the movements of inferior trains so as to comply with the foregoing rules at meeting points. The regular leaving time for No. 3 from Green River was 9 :30 p. m. Assuming it to have been one hour and fifty minutes late, it should have *338left Green Fiver at 11:20 p. m. It actually did leave, according to the evidence of the conductor, at 11:14, and, according to tbe records of the train dispatcher, at 11:13 p>. m. Funning one hour and fifty minutes late, this train should have passed Azusa station, the meeting point, at 12:02 a. m. The deceased, before starting his train from Granger, had the right to assume that the passenger train would pass Azusa not sooner than 12:02 a. m. He would •thus have to time his train so as to be on the siding and in the clear not later than 11:52 p. m. The only evidence as to the time the deceased left Granger with his train is given by the rear bralteman' on that train, who says it left the east switch, which was about fifteen car lengths from the stations building, at 11:41 p. m. The distance from Granger to Azusa is six miles. The deceased, therefore, had just eleven minutes after leaving the east switch at Granger to make the run to Azusa and get his train on the siding in order to comply with the safety rule of appellant. In doing this he had the right to take into consideration the condition of the roadbed, the grades, and all matters favorable to him, but he also had to. consider the condition of his engine and all matters unfavorable to making the run. Under the rules the ■whole matter, whether to start out with the train or not, was left to his judgment. He could not shield himself behind any order in determining whether it was safe or not in starting out his train. He knew that he had to clear the approaching passenger train at least ten minutes at the next station, which was six miles distant. If he could do this ha. was safe; if not, of all men he knew and must have appreciated the dangers of two trains meeting on a single track. The ten-minute clearance rule is a rule of safety, and should be implicitly followed. (Evansville, T. & II. Ry. C®. v.. Tohillj 143 Ind. 49, 41 N. E. Y09, 42 N. E. 352; Terre Saute & I. Ry. v. Beclcer, 146 Ind. 202, 45 N. W. 96.) The object and purpose of such a rule is, however, palpably manifest, and the dangers to life and limb of 21,22 both passengers and employees in case of its nonob-*339servanee so great that it would seem to require neither argument nor authority to show that a conscious failure to comply with it, if possible to do so, can be nothing short of negligence.

    It is contended, however, that the distance between Gran-ger and Azusa was only six miles; that it was downgrade most of the distance, and that there is evidence in the record that this distance could have been made in ten minutes with the kind of train and engine the deceased' was moving. It is urged, therefore, that it was a question of fact for the jury to say whether the deceased, in starting out as he did, was exercising ordinary care or not. It is contended, as we understand counsel, that unless the act of starting out was a violation of the rule, then there is no violation of it in this case. It is further urged that if others engaged in the operation of trains under similar circumstances would have started out the train, .then the act of the deceased in-starting out his train cannot be held to have been negligent as a matter of law. No doubt the ordinary test of negligence is whether men of ordinary intelligence and prudence ' would have done or omitted the act in question under 23 the particular circumstances. But there are conditions and circumstances under which the law does not permit an act or its omission to be excused simply because some men would have been willing to undertake it, or willing to testify, in effect, that the act or omission did not necessarily involve danger. The hazard or danger may be so apparent and withal so serious that the law will not permit an excuse of this kind. If this were not so, then, in this case, if the run between Granger and Azusa could have been made in ten minutes, and the deceased could have entered the siding in one minute or two, as the evidence shows, why could' he not be excused for undertaking the run if he had had only twelve minutes instead of twenty-one or twenty-two to make it? In case only eleven or twelve minutes had intervened, would the law permit one to produce witnesses who were willing to testify in effect that it did not necessarily involve danger to *340Undertake the run because the capacity of the engine and the condition of the roadbed were such that it might have been accomplished ? True, in such an instance the engineer would have had only two minutes or less to escape the opposite train, while in this case he had the two minutes to keep within the ten-minute clearance rule. These ten minutes were given as a margin of safety, no part of which was at the disposal of the inferior train. If the train was on the main track within the ten-minute rule, it was where it had no right to be. Any other construction of the rule would make it useless. The true situation, therefore, was as follows: The trainmen of train No: 1661 were experts' in the handling and movement of trains. As such experts they were placed in charge of that train, and to control and move it in accordance with the rules and regulations which had been adopted for the safety of themselves and the employees on other trains and of the passengers thereon. In starting out from a station to meet a train coming in an opposite direction, the time and manner of starting was left entirely to the judgment of these expert trainmen. The only condition imposed was that unless inferior trains could make the meeting point and be in the clear for the space of ten minutes before the superior train, running upon its schedule time or upon orders, would reach the passing point, then the inferior train must not undertake the run. The whole matter was, in the nature of things, left, and had to be left, to the judgment of the trainmen. The safety of the property of appellant, as well as that of its employees and passengers, was thus intrusted to the care and judgment of these trainmen. Under the rule, although the conductor thought the run could be made, and he ordered the engineer to start (it being assumed that the engineer was perhaps better acquainted with the 'physical condition of his engine and machinery), the engineer not only was given the right, but it was made his duty, to disregard the orders of the conductor and to refuse to start his train unless he felt satisfied that the run could be made and the train cleared at the meeting point at least ten minutes *341before tbe arrival of the superior train. Tbis, in and of itself, shows that it was intended that the eare to be exercised in starting an inferior train was to be commensurate with the danger involved in meeting a train going in an opposite direction on the same track. The engineer thus was required to consider everything which could in any way affect the result of placing his train in the clear under the ten-minute rule. If there was something wrong with the engine or the train, it certainly was a matter to be considered as of the highest importance. That engine 1661 was in a defective physical condition, and that the trainmen on the train drawn by it knew it, is beyond cavil. That the finding of the jixry that the appellant was negligent in sending out this engine was sustained by the evidence, we have already held in the case of Stone v. U. P. By. Go., 32 IJtah 185, 89 Pac., 115. The collision in this case is the same as the one involved in that case, and the evidence with regard to the condition of the engine is the same in- this case as it was in that, since the evidence taken in that case upon this point was read to the jury in this case. It was further held in that case that the jury were authorized to find that in the exercise of ordinary care the appellant “ought to have anticipated that injury would naturally and likely result therefrom (from the sending out of this engine), and that it even ought to have anticipated the probability of an accident such as happened.” If it was negligence to send out this engine by appellant, why was it not, prima facie at least, also negligence on the part of the trainmen, in view of their knowledge and experience, to run the engine after having full knowledge of its condition ? If the defects in the engine were such as to probably result in a collision, and this was a matter-appellant, in- the exercise of ordinary care, could have anticipated, why should not the expert trainmen who were in control of it also have anticipated the result? But the situation as it affects appellant, and as it confronted the deceased in starting with the engine from Granger, is hardly parallel. If appellant had ordered engine 1661 to start out with the train *342from Granger to' Azusa whi]e believing that No. 3 was one hour and fifty minutes late, and under the conditions and circumstances in wbieb it was started, then tbe situation and condition- as they affect both appellant and deceased would be parallel. Would any one doubt the negligence- of appellant if'it had ordered engine No. 1661, in the condition it was, to make the run from Granger to Azusa when there were only twenty-one or twenty-two minutes in which to make the run, of which ten minutes had to be excluded under the safety rule ? If appellant had done this, then it would have stood in precisely the situation in which the trainmen, and especially -the deceased, stand with respect to- the starting of engine 1661 from Granger. The train was under the-direction and control of the engineer whenever the question of meeting a superior train was involved. It was left to his judgment as to whether he would meet the superior train at the station his train then was, or whether he would make the meeting point at the. next station. In this regard the appellant imposed no conditions upon the engineer except so to time his train that it would be in the clear at the meeting point at least ten minutes before the superior train was to be there. The question, therefore, is, whether the deceased, in- view of all the circumstances, can be said to have acted as an ordinarily careful and prudent man in starling out his train from Granger on a margin of only eleven or twelve minutes in which to make a distance of six miles and keep within the ten-minute safety rule. Can it be said that to run an engine which is defective on a margin of only one or two minutes to meet a fast passenger train at a point where it is known it will not stop is an act that admits- of any debate with regard to- being prudent or- otherwise ? If, under such circumstances, the appellant had ordered engine 1661 to make the run, and a collision would have occurred, would this act. not have been one of gross, if not criminal, negligence as against the passengers, and one of culpable and inexcusable negligence' as- against its employees on the passenger train ? Could any court be found anywhere that would *343bold sucb an act under such circumstances, and in the face of such danger to human life, not to be negligence as a matter of law? Would, under such circumstances, appellant be permitted to introduce evidence to show that in the judgment of trainmen the run could have been made within time to be within the safety rule ? There are circumstances and conditions where human life is in danger, and the danger is imminent, when the law will not permit men to say that others would also have taken the chances. Nor is it an answer to say that the appellant was under the law required to exercise greater care than the trainmen. If this be conceded, so far as it related to the safety of the passengers, it, under the circumstances, did not apply as between it and its employees. With regard to the starting out with this train, appellant had left the matter in the hands of the trainmen. It could have left it nowhere else. It was their duty to safeguard the lives of their co-employees as well as those of the passengers'. Did they act as ordinarily prudent men in taking the chances they did upon so slight a margin of time, with an engine in a defective condition? . In our judgment there is, there can be, no room for difference by reasonable men upon this question.

    Assuming, however, that it was not negligence as matter of law to attempt to run between Granger and Azusa under the circumstances, the question still remains whether the deceased was not guilty of negligence as a matter of law in not preventing the collision, or, at least, in not guarding himself against injury while on the track between Granger and Azusa. The duty to use ordinary care to prevent injury to one’s self as well as to others is continuous, 24 and is not suspended on the part of the employee simply because he may have been exposed to danger through the master’s negligence. However gross the negligence of the master, when the servant discovers the danger arising therefrom it is his duty to use ordinary care to avoid the danger and consequent injury. If the servant by the exercise of ordinary care can prevent injury and does not do so, he can*344not rely upon tbe' precedent negligence of tbe master. Tbis is elementary. Tbis principle is directly involved in view of tbe following facts and circumstances: As we have shown, No. 3 passenger train, if running one hour and fifty minutes late, was due at Azusa at 12:02 a. m. No. 1661 left Granger at 11:41 p. m. Tbe collision, as nearly as it is possible to ascertain tbe time, occurred at about 12 o’clock midnight. Tbe conductor on No. 3 says that tbe shock threw him off tbe seat; that be picked up bis lantern and bis scattered tickets, lighted tbe lantern, and then looked at bis watch, and tbe time was 12:01:35 a. m., and that bis watch was twelve seconds fast. If we assume that be' consumed about a minute and a half in doing tbe things be says be did, it would malee tbe time of tbe collision about as stated above. There is other evidence in corroboration of tbis, namely, No. 3 passed Marston station, about four and three-quarters miles east of tbe point of collision, according to tbe conductor’s statement, at 11:52, and, according to tbe dispatcher’s record, at 11:50 p. m. At Marston tbe engineer shut- off steam, and, in tbe language of tbe conductor, allowed the engine to drift, for the reason that tbe engineer was waiting for a signal from tbe station operator. From Marston to Azusa it is slightly upgrade, and from Azusa to tbe point of collision it is downgrade. If tbe engine was permitted to drift without taking steam at Marston, it would eonsmne some little time in gaining headway again. It is only fair to assume, therefore, that tbe time of tbe collision as tbe conductor gives it must be about right. The collision thus occurred about nineteen minutes after No. 1661 bad left tbe east switch at Granger, at which time tbe train was in motion. Tbe collision! occurred less than five miles east of Granger. It therefore required nineteen minutes for train 1661 to make less than five miles. If it bad twelve minutes to make Azusa and get into tbe switch, it exceeded its right to be on tbe main track at least seven, possibly eight, minutes when tbe collision occurred and' it bad only two minutes left in which to make Azusa station before No. 3 was due there in case it was running one hour *345and fifty minutes late. If No. 1661 required nineteen minutes to make less than five miles all of wbicb was downgrade, it is not reasonable to assume that tbe additional mile and one-eigbtb, all of which was upgrade, could have been made in two minutes. All this must have been absolutely clear to the trainmen on No. 1661. They knew that, when they were on the way from Granger more than twelve min-. Titea, the excess was taken from the time required by the ten-minute rule. They knew they were on the main track, that it was dangerous to be there, and that they had no right to be there. By this is not meant that they were trespassers, but what is meant is that they were there in violation of a positive rule. Moreover, they knew that if they had arrived at Azusa station in time under the ten-minute rule, and the train would have to be backed into the switch instead of pulling in, they were required to protect their train against other trains. If they had not done SO', and a collision would have occurred while they were backing in, that is, while they occupied the main track within the ten-minute rule, the omission to protect their train would have been a plain violation of the rule, and, under all the authorities, would have constituted negligence. If it was their duty to protect their train'at the station in view of the ten-minute clearance rule, why was it not their duty to do this anywhere after their train was on the main track within the ten-minute rule? They knew that No. 3 would not stop at Azusa; that it would .pass right through, and would have to pass on the-very rails they were occupying. But in the face of all this they made not the slightest effort either to protect their train or the passenger train that they knew was due in a very few minutes.

    But it is suggested that there is no evidence to show that the trainmen on 1661 did not protect their train, nor that they did not comply with the rule. We confess that we are unable to so construe the only evidence that relates to this subject. Meranda, the rear brakeman, and the only member of the crew that was not killed, after testifying to the time *346the train left Granger, and that the conductor went forward over tbe train toward the engine, said: “I remained in the cupola of the caboose until we passed around the second curve out of Granger; then I got down in the caboose to fix the fire and prepare a bucket of dope to fix a hot box. Q. “While you were doing that, what happened ?” A. “The collision happened while I was there.” Upon cross-examination he testified that, as near as he could approximate the speed of the train after leaving Granger and before the accident, it was running from twenty to thirty miles an hour. He also testified that immediately after the collision he left the caboose and went forward to the head end of the train, and that he found “a pile of cars smashed up and people scattered around;” that the conductor was dead, and was lying between the track and the boiler of engine 1661, which was off the track; that the fireman was held fast between the boiler and tender, and was dead, and that the brakeman was under the wreck, also dead, while the engineer was buried under “some rubbish,” but was still alive. It is true that there is no direct evidence to show just what the deceased, the conductor, fireman, and head brakeman did just before or at the time of the collision. But if they had observed the rule which required them to protect their train in case it was on the main line within ten minutes of the running time of a superior train, is it reasonable to assume that they all would have been caught in the collision and killed ? Further, when •it is shown that the train was in motion, as the rear brakeman testified, can it be assumed that itwvas stopped before the collision occurred ? Moreover, if the train had' been stopped and protected as the rule required, it would not have been at all likely that all four would have been together on the engine and injured or killed, as they were.' One or more, at least, would have seen the oncoming passenger train while in the act of protecting their train, and thus have given warning to the others. In view of this evidence, can it be said with any show of reason that in the face of such a danger ordinarily prudent and careful men would not have stopped *347tbe train, and made at least some effort to protect tbe passenger train coming to meet tbem against a collision ? If they found they did not have time to signal tbe passenger train, they certainly bad ample time, after they knew they were witbin tbe ten-minute rule, to protect themselves against tbe results of a collision. This was an imperative duty they owed to themselves, and one they could have discharged by tbe exercise of tbe least ordinary care. Tbe danger was one that was present and pressing. They were experienced in tbe business, and must have appreciated tbe consequences; they knew that their headlight was being obscured, and it could not be seen .by a train coming to meet them. 'The trade was straight for a long distance ahead of tbem after they bad passed beyond tbe curves just east of Granger, and was straight for at least two miles immediately east of the collision in tbe direction they were going, and from which No. 25 3 was approaching. In view of all this, how can it be ■contended that the deceased and those with him on train 1661 were not guilty of negligence in not preventing the collision, or, at least, in not protecting themselves against its fatal consequences ? The only possible construction that can be given to the undisputed facts is that the trainmen on 1661 paid attention to neither time nor conditions, but went blindly forward with their train until it was struck by the fast moving passenger train, and by the force of it they were hurled into eternity.

    It may be said that if the foregoing conclusions are sound, then theStone Oase, supra, should have been decided in favor of the appellant upon the ground that Murphy was a fellow servant of the trainmen on No. 1661. The decision in the Stone Oase was, however, based upon the principle that, where the negligence of the master concurs with 26 the negligence of a fellow servant, the master is still liable to the injured servant In that case it was held that appellant was negligent in sending out engine 1661 in view of its defective condition, and that the defect in the engine caused or directly contributed to Murphy’s injuries'. The *348negligence of the trainmen on No. 1661 was, therefore, not the only element in that case, but the controlling element was-the concurring negligence of appellant. Ini this casej however, the controlling factor is the contributory negligence of the deceased and his associates in not at least avoiding the injury to themselves, if not in preventing the collision, when they must have known that it was imminent. The fact of appellant’s negligence, even when conceded in this case, cannot aid the respondent if the deceased or his fellow servants failed to exercise ordinary care for their own safety when in the face of danger. Can any reasonable man say that the deceased was not guilty of negligence in not protecting himself against the fast-running passenger train when, he knew that he was on the track which that train must pass over, and that he was there in violation of a positive rule of safety? - Did not the least ordinary care require of him to make at least some effort to protect himself? He had at least seven minutes in which to act, and there was no emergency confronting him that might have confused him. It was a simple question of having exceeded his time on the road, and thus he was required to protect himself against another train on the same track. But whether he failed to act, or those with him failed to do so, is immaterial. Each one was required to use ordinary care for the safety of all. If experienced railroad men can be excused from acting in such a case and can recover for injuries inflicted under such circumstances, then it must follow that a railroad company is an insurer of the safety -of its employees, regardless of their own conduct when in the face of danger. If the law permits a recovery under such circumstances, then it in effect invites carelessness in the movement of trains, and experienced trainmen are under no obligation to take precautions in the face of danger, providing they can point to some precedent act of negligence of the master’s. This is not the law. Where, as in this case,, the undisputed facts show that the complaining servant could have avoided injury to himself by the exercise of ordinary care, and the circumstances are such as exclude the presumpr*349tion of care on the part of the servant, the law does not permit a recovery against the master. To our minds the circumstances show beyond all question that the deceased failed to act when he was in duty bound to do so, and hence he cannot legally recover.

    But there is still another reason why the respondent must fail. In our judgment there is no escape from the conclusion that the deceased assumed the risk of injury, in view of the conceded facts and under all the circumstances of the case. "While it is true that it is the duty of the master to exercise reasonable and ordinary care to provide his servants 27 with reasonably safe machinery and appliances, •and at all times to. exercise that degree of care to maintain them in repair and reasonably safe, still the servant may not, if he Imows the defects of a certain machine or appliance, treat it as safa He may assume it to be safe until he Imows the contrary. If he knows of its unsafe, condition, and Imows and appreciates the danger inherent to such a ■condition, or if the defect is so obvious that by mere casual inspection he can see it, then, in the absence of any special circumstance or emergency giving rise to a question of fact, he must be held to assume the danger which may be incurred in using the defective implement or machine. This is especially the case where the servant is an expert 28 in the business, and as such is operating the machine or appliance. In this case, therefore, it may be assumed that •the master had provided the servant with a defective engine. The defect was well known to the deceased, and as an expert engineer he also knew what effect the defect would likely have upon the capacity and effectiveness of the engine, and what effect its use might have upon the other trains. Hnder the rules promulgated by appellant, the deceased was given absolute control of his train with respect to the time of starting it from a given station with the view of meeting a train at another station which was running in the opposite direction. The only limitation that the appellant imposed was that the inferior train should be on the siding at the meeting *350point ten minutes before the superior train was due there. The deceased had thus the sole option whether he would make the run to some other station, or whether he would meet the superior train at the station where he was with his train. In order to determine whether he should go or stay, he was obliged to exercise his best judgment in view of all the conditions and circumstances known, or, which, by the exercise of ordinary care, should have been known to him. In arriving at the conclusion, it was his duty to keep in mind the safety of the passengers and employees, not only of his train, if any he had, but also of those upon the other train. If, therefore, he knew the time he had in -which to make some other station, and likewise knew the condition of his engine and machinery, the state of the weather, the condition of the roadbed, and the circumstances surrounding him, he was in a position to make an intelligent choice of whether 'to stay or go. All the appellant in effect said to him was: “You must not go unless you can place your train upon the siding at the meeting point at least ten minutes before the train you expect to meet is due there.” In starting 29 out the train, therefore, the deceased assumed all the ordinary risks incident to the operation of railroad’ trains. If anything happened which retarded the speed of the train which was merely incident to railroading, or if the condition of his engine was such that it might retard its speed, or delay it on the way, all these matters were incident to' the run, and had to be taken into consideration by him in starting, and of all of which he assumed the risk. It may be quite possible that in starting a train an engineer may not be lacking in ordinary care, and he may yet assume the risks and dangers incident to making the run to the meeting point. If he starts his train on a margin of a few minutes only, as in this case, he must assume the risk that is incident in not reaching the meeting point on time. All the elements involved ini assumed risks are present in such a case. The engineer may go or stay; he knows the condition of his engine and train; he knows the danger incident to the movement of *351trains and tbe consequences of a collision; be knows tbe master’s rules of safety, and tbe importance of obeying tbem. If be starts out, therefore, be assumes* tbe risk incident to tbe failure of not getting bis train to tbe meeting point on time, and tbis is so regardless of tbe degree of care be exercised in starting out with bis train. He might possibly avoid contributory negligence, but be cannot avoid' assuming ■ tbe ordinary risks incident to making tbe run and getting bis train to the meeting point within tbe time required by tbe rule. If something happens on tbe way, or he should have done something to protect bis train which be failed to do, be may likewise be guilty of negligence; but tbis does not do away with tbe risk be assumes. By what we have said we do not mean that be assumes tbe risks that are attributable to the master’s negligence, and which occurred on tbe way, unless be knew of such acts, or by tbe exercise of ordinary care ought to have known them, and still proceeds regardless of them. If the act of tbe deceased in starting out from Granger under tbe circumstauces was not negligence as a matter of law, and if it was for tbe jury to say in view of all the circumstances whether be was negligent in doing so or not, it nevertheless is not a question of fact under tbe evidence as to whether he assumed the risk in going or not. Tbe risks and dangers to be incurred were incident to the movement of trains on time. Tbe mere fact that No*. 3 was one hour and thirty minutes late was proof that trains lose time. Tbis fact is so generally known that experts in tbe movement of trains must be held to know it and should govern themselves accordingly. If a train loses time at all, it may do so at any time or place. It is a mere incident in railroading of which all railroad men must assume knowledge. If tbe deceased calculated on making tbe run in ten or twelve minutes between Granger and Azusa, and it required twenty-five minutes instead, be assumed tbe risks incident to tbe excess of time as well as the risks incident in making it in a shorter time. Moreover, in view of tbe undisputed facts, it is, to say tbe least, a matter of pure speculation whether *352tbe mistake in the train order was the proximate cause of the 'collision. It seems to us that the want of ordinary care upon the part of the train crew on train 1661 in not protecting themselves when they knew that they were within the ten minute rule of safety was the proximate cause of the collision. When there is a positive rule of safety 30 which a servant is required to observe and obey, and the evidence without dispute or conflict shows that the rule was not obeyed by the complaining servant, and that if it had been obeyed the accident would not have occurred, the servant cannot recover, and it is the duty of the court to- so declare as a matter of law. A jury may not excuse the failure to obey rules except for good cause. (St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v. Dewees, 153 Fed. 56, 82 C. C. A. 190.)

    From what has been said it necessarily follows: (1) That the respondent has not established by competent evidence that the appellant was negligent in not adopting a different rule or method in transmitting train orders, or in pursuing the method it had adopted and was using; (2) that the deceased and his train crew were guilty of contributory negligence in not protecting either their train or themselves when running upon the time of the superior train; (3) that the deceased determined for himself whether he would make the ran between Granger and Azusa within the time he had to do so, and hence, as the evidence now stands, he assumed all risks of danger incident to the run between Granger and Azusa; and (4) that in view of the undisputed evidence, it is a matter of mere conjecture whether the mistake in train order No. 59 was the direct and proximate cause of the collision. The court, therefore, likewise erred in refusing to-direct a verdict in favor of the appellant as requested by it at the -close of the evidence, for the reason that, in view of the undisputed evidence, respondent was not entitled to recover as a matter of law.

    The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court with directions to grant a new trial and to pro*353ceed with the ease in accordance with the views herein expressed. Appellant to recover costs on appeal.

    Mo CARTY, J., concurs.

Document Info

Docket Number: No. 1906

Citation Numbers: 35 Utah 305, 100 P. 362

Judges: Carty, Feign, Straur

Filed Date: 2/9/1909

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/24/2022