Judges: Snow
Filed Date: 1/4/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff was employed to operate a one-man car upon the defendant's electric street railway, running out of Portsmouth. He claims to have suffered a rupture while lifting with others, in tilting a car to release one Rollins, a pedestrian, who had been run upon and wedged beneath the wheel guard.
The accident occurred on March 20, 1923. The action is subject. to the provision of section 2 of the employers' liability act (Laws 1911, c. 163), there being no evidence that the defendant had filed a declaration under section 3 thereof. Spilene v. Company,
The negligence alleged is the defendant's failure to equip the car (1) with a fender or life guard and (2) with a jack. *Page 477
1. The car had originally been equipped with a fender, of a type in common use in that section. It was so designed as to drop upon the rail when it came in contact with an object on the track, or whenever the motorman, observing such an object, should step upon a tripper pin in the vestibule floor. The fender had been removed because of trouble due to snow and ice, and the car had been operated by the plaintiff in this condition for more than a year. The plaintiff claims that the presence of a fender would have prevented the accident to Rollins, and thus obviated the necessity of tilting the car, assisting in which act the plaintiff ruptured himself.
It is unnecessary to consider the questions whether on the evidence it could be found that the defendant owed the operator a duty to maintain a fender under the conditions that existed, and that a fender would have prevented the accident to the pedestrian; or the further question, whether, on the record, it was "made to appear by a preponderance of evidence that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed" to the accident (Laws 1911, c. 163, s. 2); for in any event the accident which had happened to Rollins constituted no more than the occasion for the subsequent action taken to remove him.
Whether an alleged cause is remote or proximate is generally a question or fact. Ela v. Company,
2. The plaintiff, acting on the suggestion of a bystander, started for a nearby garage to secure a jack, but turned back upon receiving advice that an automobile jack would be inadequate. Accepting the voluntary assistance of men attracted to the scene of the accident, the plaintiff with their aid succeeded in tilting the car sufficiently to allow the removal of Rollins. It was while so engaged the he claims to have received his injury.
The defendant's contention that the plaintiff's duty was confined solely to the operation of the car, and that, therefore, he was not. acting within the scope of his employment in attempting a rescue, is without merit. No such limitation can be fixed as a matter of law. He had been sent out in charge of the car. The extent of his duties, within limits not here involved, presented a question of fact. The test to determine whether he was acting within the scope of his employment in attempting to rescue Rollins, is to inquire whether the ordinary man in the situation presented would have reasonably understood that he was expected to do so. Roussel v. Company,
This conclusion makes it necessary to consider the plaintiff's further contention that the defendant owed him a duty to equip its cars with jacks. Actionable negligence is a breach of duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff. Where there is no duty there is no negligence. Brody v. Gilbert, ante, 158, 159. The question presented is whether physical injury to its employees in rescue work was a foreseeable danger against which it was the master's duty to provide a jack as a safety device. Zajac v. Company,
As it cannot be found that the defendant owed the plaintiff the duty to provide a jack as part of the tools of his employment, no claim can be predicated upon its failure to do so, and the plaintiff's case fails for want of evidence.
This determination makes it unnecessary to consider the question whether the plaintiff's rupture, produced by overlifting, was *Page 480 proximately due to the want of a jack, and it has not been considered.
The defendant's motion for a nonsuit was properly granted.
Judgment for the defendant.
All concurred.
Straw v. Pittsfield Shoe Co. ( 1911 )
Dionne v. American Locomotive Co. ( 1911 )
Morrison v. Burgess Sulphite Fibre Co. ( 1900 )
Roussel v. Nashua Manufacturing Co. ( 1922 )
Lancaster & Jefferson Electric Light Co. v. Jones ( 1909 )
Zajac v. Amoskeag Manufacturing Co. ( 1924 )
Deschenes v. Concord & Montreal Railroad ( 1897 )
Ducas v. International Cotton Mills ( 1925 )
Derosier v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. ( 1925 )
Bennett v. Odell Manufacturing Co. ( 1911 )
D'Ambrosio v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1923 )
Ela v. Postal Telegraph Cable Co. ( 1901 )
Gage v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1914 )
Richardson v. Connecticut Valley Lumber Co. ( 1914 )
Caher v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. ( 1908 )
Gahagan v. Boston & Maine Railroad ( 1900 )
Spilene v. Salmon Falls Manufacturing Co. ( 1920 )
Kempe v. Illinois Central Railroad ( 1930 )
Fasekis v. J. J. Newbury Co. ( 1945 )
Williams v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. ( 1951 )
Herbert Alleyne, Jr. v. Scandinavi Inn, Inc., Edews, Inc., ... ( 1992 )
Balcus v. Sterling Express Co. ( 1947 )
Fraser v. Berlin Street Railway ( 1929 )
Paul R. Fernberg, etc.s. v. T.F. Boyle Transportation Inc. ( 1989 )
Reed v. Nashua Buick Co. ( 1929 )
Sheehan v. Elliott Manufacturing Co. ( 1929 )