DocketNumber: No. 1,255
Judges: Lotz, Ross
Filed Date: 5/28/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
The appellee was in the employ of the appellants as a brakeman, and was injured by falling from ■ the top of a car. He brought this suit to recover damages for the injury sustained.
In his complaint he averred that near the center of the train of freight cars on which he was engaged as a brakeman one of the defendant's cars had been by them negligently constructed and negligently provided with an unsafe and narrow running board, and that the brake wheel attached to said car was negligently constructed .and maintained, so that the brake wheel projected over the running board and made the passageway along said board narrow, unsafe and dangerous for the use of the plaintiff as such brakeman; that while the plaintiff was passing along the top of the cars to loosen the brakes, as he was required to do in the line of his duty, he came to the end of the car, where the running board, brake and brake-wheel had been negligently provided and constructed, and while attempting to pass upon said car, and along said running board, and while in the exercise of due and reasonable care on his part he fell from said running board and car; that his loss of foothold and fall was caused solely by and through the negligence of the defendants in failing to provide reasonably safe and suitable appliances and
There are other acts of negligence charged in the complaint, but as there was no evidence to support them it is unnecessary to set them out. If there be several acts of negligence charged, the proof of any one of them will support a recovery.
Counsel for appellants concede that the complaint is sufficient to withstand the demurrer. This disposes of the first assignment of error.
The overruling of appellants’ motion to make the complaint more specific and of the motion to strike out parts of the complaint are each assigned as error. Neither of these motions is properly brought into the record by the bill of exceptions. The bill of exceptions embodying them is not signed by the presiding judge. Had these motions been properly in the record there was no available or reversible error in overruling them.
The overruling of the motion for a new trial is also assigned as error. It is contended that the verdict is not supported by the evidence.
There was evidence which tended to prove, substantially, this state of facts, that the appellants were operating a railroad and that the appellee was in their employ as a freight brakeman; that on or about the 21st day of January, 1892, a freight train composed of a locomotive engine, tender, caboose and a number of freight cars, was standing on a railroad track in the yards owned by appellants at Chicago Junction, Ohio, ready to start on a west bound run to the town of Garrett, Indiana; that
It is the duty of the master to provide his servants with reasonably safe places in which to work, and suitable and reasonably safe appliance with which to work. No point is made by the appellants that the evidence fails to show negligence on their part in failing to provide a safe place or appliances, but we may say in passing that the master is not bound to furnish the best and most approved machinery and appliances. Nor can the courts as a general rule determine what particular form or kind of machinery and appliances, or the manner of their construction, which the master must provide .for his servants. There may be cases in which the court may rule as a matter of law that certain appliances and the manner of their construction are reasonably safe or unsafe, and that the master is or is not negligent in providing them. But between these two extremes there is a large number of instances in which the negligence or want of negligence of the master in providing given appliances is a question for the jury. So in this case at the least it was a question for the jury to say whether or not the appellants were or were not guilty of negligence in providing the car with the brake staff and wheel projecting near the center of the running board.
It is next contended that the appellee assumed
In Kane v. Northern Cent. R. W. Co., 128 U. S. 91, 9 Sup. Court Rep. 16, the facts were that the plaintiff, a brakeman on defendant’s freight train, while making a trip on a cold, stormy night, discovered that a step was missing from one of the cars between his place of duty and the caboose, and at once notified the conductor, who promised to drop the car at a certain point if he found it did not contain perishable freight. Before reaching that point the train stopped at a station, and the plaintiff went back to the caboose as was his custom to warm himself and eat his breakfast. The train suddenly started, and the plaintiff hastily ran over the top of the cars to .resume his part as was his duty. When he reached the defective car he forgot about the missing step, and in attempting to let himself down fell, and was injured. The court held on this state of facts that the question of contributory negligence or the assumption of the risk was one for the jury, and not a question of law for the court.
In the course of the opinion the court, by Justice
“An employe upon a railroad train, likely to meet other trains, owes it to the public, as well as to his employer, not to abandon his post unnecessarily. Besides the danger arising from the defective car was not so imminent as to subject him to the charge of recklessness in remaining at his post. * * * But it is said that the efficient, proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff was his use of the defective appliances at the end of the car from which he fell, when he knew, and, at the moment of letting himself down from that car, should not have forgotten, as he said he did, that one of its steps was missing.
“It is undoubtedly the law that an employe is guilty of contributory negligence, which will defeat his right to recover for injuries sustained in the course of his employment, where such injuries substantially resulted from dangers so obvious and threatening that a reasonably prudent man, under similar circumstances, would have avoided them if in his power to do so. * * * But in determining whether an employe has recklessly exposed himself to peril, or failed to exercise the care for his personal safety that might reasonably be expected, regard must always be had to the exigencies of his position, indeed, to all the circumstances of the particular occasion.
“In the case before us, the jury may, not unreasonably, have inferred from the evidence, that while the plaintiff was passing along the tops of the cars for the purpose of reaching his post, he was so blinded or confused by the darkness, snow, and rain, or so affected by the severe
So, in the case at bar, it was the duty of the jury to take into consideration all the exigencies of the occasion, the hurry under which the appellee acted and the fact that his attention was diverted to the ratchet wheels in determining whether or not he assumed the risk. There was evidence which tended to show that the appellee was not guilty of contributory negligence, or that he did not assume the risk. Pennsylvania Co. v. Sears, 136 Ind. 460.
It is further insisted that the evidence shows that the car from which the appellee fell was a passenger car and that the appellants owed appellee no duty of inspection as to the manner of its construction. But there was some evidence which tended to show that the car from which appellee fell was a car owned by appellants. It is lastly contended that there was no evidence whatever to show that one of the appellants, the Baltimore and Ohio and Chicago Railroad Company, had anything to do with operating the train or the railroad. But there was some-evidence which tended to show that it operated tlie train
We find no reversible error in the record.
Judgment affirmed.
Gavin, J., concurs in the result.