Citation Numbers: 16 S.E. 698, 111 N.C. 482
Judges: Shepherd, Maorae, Burwell
Filed Date: 9/5/1892
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
SHEPHERD, C. J., concurring; BURWELL, J., dissenting.
The court below held that, upon the whole evidence, (487) the plaintiff had failed to make out a prima facie case. The burden was upon the servant suing his employers to show, (1) that the machinery was defective; (2) that the defects were the proximate cause of the injury; (3) that the master had knowledge, or might, by the exercise of ordinary care, have had knowledge, of such defects. Hudson v. R. R.,
The first point to be considered is whether the defendant company was negligent in failing to provide what is known as the Janney, or some other improved coupler, which would obviate the necessity, under any circumstances, of going between the ends of cars in order to fasten one to another. The general rule is that it is not the duty of railway companies to furnish machinery of the very best varieties or to attach appliances of the latest and safest kinds, but that it is culpable to use cars or engines of any particular pattern which, on ordinary inspection, would show to be defective. In view of the changes incident to new inventions and discoveries, facts which would not have shown negligence a few years since, may now, or in the near future, be declared in law ample evidence of culpable dereliction in duty, such as involves liability for damages. 1 Shearman and R. Neg., sec. 12. Blackwell v. R. R., ante, 151. We think that the time has arrived when railroad companies should be required to attach such couplers, and perhaps air brakes or appliances equally safe and effective for checking the speed of moving trains on all passenger cars, since, as a rule, each corporation uses for carrying passengers none but its own conveyances, and the new couplers have now become so cheap, as compared to the value of *Page 306
the lives and limbs of servants and passengers, that it is not unreasonable to require that they provide them on peril of answering for (488) any damage which might have been obviated by their use. But, while doubtless the day will soon come when they can be attached at comparatively small cost to all freight cars, it might seriously embarrass our commerce, involving an interchange for the purpose of expeditious transportation of vehicles between all the roads from Canada to Mexico, were every carrier required not only to incur the expense of buying the right and readjusting all of its own cars for the use of the improved fastening, but also to choose between refusing to receive a car of another company without incurring contingent liability for using it, since the liability of the corporation for such defects in those received from other companies is the same as for defects in its own. Patterson R. R. Acc. Law, 312; Miller v. R. R.,
It appears from the evidence, that the plaintiff was suddenly called upon a very dark night to couple to the train two box cars, standing upon the siding at Durham, one of which belonged to the defendant and another to a different company, and that when the train backed towards the train on the siding, he saw that the pin which he had adjusted with a stick in the drawhead of the car standing on the track would not go down into the link of the drawhead in the moving car, which he had also arranged with his stick, unless he should use his hand to push it down, and in this emergency he rushed in between the cars, as the conductor had ordered him to do whenever he failed in the effort to couple with a stick. After getting between the standing and the moving car he discovered for the first time that there were no bumpers on either car. Bumpers are blocks of wood fastened to the end of a box car, above and below, and on either side of the drawhead, and usually protrude about eight or ten inches, so that they serve the double purpose of preventing drawheads from being broken by (489) a collision, and of protecting brakemen who may be between the cars. Drawheads have springs in them and give way when they come into collision with each other, so that they cannot serve the purpose, like bumpers, of holding the cars apart.
In Gotlieb v. R. R.,
The case being exactly in point, it seems not inappropriate to (490) reproduce the language of Judge Earl from this elaborate opinion, instead of discussing the same question at greater length for ourselves. The general rule is, that when freight cars are obviously so defectively made, whether by a failure to attach bumpers at all or to make them sufficiently long to protect a person standing between the cars when in motion, or in consequence of any other fault in construction, that the slightest indiscretion on the part of an operative may endanger his life, the company is liable for any injury resulting from such defects. R. R. v.Fredericks,
In Gotlieb's case, supra, it will be observed that stress was laid upon the fact that the want of a bumper would have been discovered by an ordinary inspection, and in our case, as well as in that, the brakeman was suddenly called upon to pass between two cars, of the condition of which he could not have previously informed himself. Before daylight on a dark morning the duty devolved upon him of attaching a car, which, it may be, was never south of Wilmington until brought by some freight train with which plaintiff had no connection on the day before to the station where he found it.
In Johnson v. R. R.,
So, apart from the special contract which is pleaded as a defense, the defendant is prima facie liable to answer in damages because of its negligence, when its officers ought to have known of the defect and to have remedied it, and it has not relieved itself of this apparent liability by showing that the plaintiff knew or had opportunity to know the condition of the particular cars on the siding; but, on the contrary, the only testimony on the subject is that of plaintiff, to the effect that he did not see the cars till he had put himself in danger, and then in the imperfect light discovered that there was no bumper on either of those between which he was already caught. Crutchfield v. R. R.,
The case at bar is not one in which the plaintiff was injured by the fault of a fellow-servant, but by the negligence of the master in carelessly retaining on the line and receiving from other carriers (492) palpable defective conveyances, the master being presumed to know of the danger, which could have been discovered by ordinary inspection, while the servant had no opportunity to know until it was too late to avoid it. The dangerous condition of the car was not, as inPleasant's case, supra, known to both employer and employee, but only to the former. Where the rolling stock or machinery of a company is so defective in its construction, that by an ordinary inspection the company could discover its condition, unless it appear that notwithstanding such want of care on its part the supervening negligence of the servant was the proximate cause of the injury complained of, the company *Page 309
is liable. Wedgewood v. R. R., supra; Hudson v. R. R., supra; R. R. v.Valenous,
The cars being palpably defective, and it appearing plainly that the company might, by ordinary care in inspecting them, have known their condition, the defendant still insists that, though the plaintiff may not have been negligent in knowingly incurring risk that he might have avoided, still he was violating a rule of the company of which he had express notice when he passed between the cars to adjust the coupling, and his want of care was therefore the cause of the injury. The authorities which we have cited fully sustain the position that, in the absence of such an agreement, the company would be deemed negligent and the plaintiff would be held free from blame. In addition to those authorities, we can fortify our position more strongly still by recurring to the principle that, notwithstanding any real or supposed negligence of an injured plaintiff, a railway company is liable in (493) damages if, but for its own want of care, the injury could have been avoided. Deans v. R. R.,
Mr. Beach, citing with approval
The question involved in all such cases is whether the subordinate feels constrained to obey the orders of his superior, though apparently obedience will be attended with peril, rather than run the risk of defying his authority. The fact that the conductor has the power to employ and discharge brakemen on his train, is but evidence to show that the brakemen fear to disobey his commands. The existence of such authority, in the very nature of things, cannot be made the invariable test of the servant's culpability. If the servant never knows or communicates with a higher official than the conductor, and receives every order upon which he acts in the line of his duty from him as a superior, as it is a matter of universal knowledge is the true state of facts on all railroads, is it not reasonable for the laborer to conclude that the conductor has power to waive the requirement of the rule that he has signed, and that, if he refuses to couple cars in accordance with his direction, and thereby delays the departure of a train, he may at least be reported for inefficiency and discharged from the service of the company? If the servant acts upon a well grounded fear of losing his place, the reason of the rule would be met, and he should be declared free from culpability, unless the plaintiff recklessly exposed himself to manifest peril, or chose to subject himself to danger, when another safe mode of discharging his duty was open to him, as in Chambers v. R. R.,
(495) The elaborate opinion of Justice Field in R. R. v. Ross,
"The true view," says Wharton (Law of Negligence, sec. 232) "is, that as corporations can only act through superintending officers, the negligence of those officers, with respect to other servants, are the negligences of the corporation." The command of the conductor to the brakeman to go between the cars when he could not couple them otherwise, was one to which unhesitating obedience was expected and demanded. The giving of such an order by the conductor ought, upon the plainest principles of right and justice, to be declared a waiver of the regulation by an officer who is the representative of the corporation. That a brakeman feels impelled to obey the orders of the conductor, no observant person can deny; and since we can take judicial notice of a relation so common and well understood, it would be a voluntary (496) preference of fiction to fact were we to adhere to an arbitrary rule founded in a supposed reason that we know does not exist. A brakeman does not contract to incur the risk of serving under a conductor who will order him to disobey the regulations of the company and leave him to choose on the instant between observing the rules and obeying his superior.
The Supreme Court of Georgia, in R. R. v. Delroy,
The Supreme Court of South Carolina held, in Boatwright v. R. R.,
It will be conceded that though the owner and manager of a manufacturing establishment should make a rule and cause every employee to sign it, to the effect that the employee would not pass between certain machines, go into an engine-room, or expose himself to any specified danger connected with the machinery of the mill, and would hold the owner discharged in advance for any liability growing out of such exposure, yet if the manager should, in the face of the rule, order the servant who signed it to disobey it, and his obedience to orders should expose him to a danger caused by defects in the machinery that on an ordinary inspection would have been obvious to the master, though not so readily discoverable to the servant acting instantly on the order, it would scarcely be contended that the superior who had made the regulation would not thus waive its observance. A corporation is usually governed by its directors, but they may shift its responsible management by such a variety of orders, by-laws and regulations as to make it impossible to discover a real tangible directing head. If, as authority and reason clearly dictate, we consider a conductor in charge of a train as representing the intangible head of the company, then his order is as much a waiver of the regulation as that of the owner or head of a mill.
But speaking for a minority of the Court only, it seems that there should be but little difficulty in arriving at the same conclusion by the solution of another question, to wit, whether, in consideration of receiving employment, a brakeman can by written agreement "waive the liability" of the company incurred by furnishing cars without bumpers and which cannot be coupled with a stick, in the event (498) that he shall be injured in the attempt to fasten the couplings *Page 313
of such cars, under the command of the conductor in charge of the train, with his hands instead of using his stick, as the rule of the company requires, and when the injury is due to the negligence of the company. It is settled as the almost universal rule in America, that though a common carrier of freight by contract upon consideration may relieve itself of the full measure of responsibility as an insurer, no limitation can in that way be placed upon its liability for its own negligence.Smith v. R. R.,
For the reasons given, we think that the court below erred in holding that the plaintiff could not recover. This case should have been left to the jury, and the judgment of nonsuit will be set aside and a new trial granted.
REVERSED.
BURWELL, J., dissents.
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co. v. Ross , 5 S. Ct. 184 ( 1884 )
Augusta Factory v. Barnes ( 1884 )
Johnson v. Richmond & Danville Railroad , 81 N.C. 453 ( 1879 )
Pleasants v. Raleigh & Augusta Air-Line Railroad , 95 N.C. 195 ( 1886 )
Patton v. Western North Carolina Railroad , 96 N.C. 455 ( 1887 )
Smith v. North Carolina R. R. , 64 N.C. 235 ( 1870 )
Deans v. . R. R. , 107 N.C. 686 ( 1890 )
Cowles v. Richmond & Danville Railroad , 84 N.C. 309 ( 1881 )
Hudson v. Charleston, Cincinnati & Chicago Railroad , 104 N.C. 491 ( 1889 )
Purcell v. . R. R. , 119 N.C. 728 ( 1896 )
Bryan v. . R. R. , 128 N.C. 387 ( 1901 )
Rogers v. Whiting Manufacturing Co. , 157 N.C. 484 ( 1911 )
Shadd v. Georgia, Carolina & Northern Railroad , 116 N.C. 968 ( 1895 )
Hollifield v. . Telephone Co. , 172 N.C. 714 ( 1916 )
Williams v. Southern Railway Co. , 119 N.C. 746 ( 1896 )
Troxler v. . R. R. , 124 N.C. 189 ( 1899 )
Liles v. . Lumber Company , 142 N.C. 39 ( 1906 )
Beal v. Champion Fiber Co. , 154 N.C. 147 ( 1910 )
Ward Ex Rel. Ward v. Odell Manufacturing Co. , 126 N.C. 946 ( 1900 )
Turner v. . Lumber Co. , 119 N.C. 387 ( 1896 )
Russell v. . Monroe , 116 N.C. 721 ( 1895 )
Witsell v. . R. R. , 120 N.C. 557 ( 1897 )
Lamb v. Littman. , 132 N.C. 978 ( 1903 )
Leak v. Carolina Central Railroad , 124 N.C. 455 ( 1899 )
Chesson v. John L. Roper Lumber Co. , 118 N.C. 59 ( 1896 )
Greenlee v. . R. R. , 122 N.C. 977 ( 1898 )
Means v. Carolina Central Railroad , 126 N.C. 424 ( 1900 )