Filed Date: 6/15/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The above case was removed to this court by a writ of error directed to the Middlesex County Court of Quarter Sessions. The writ brings up the conviction of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company upon an indictment for the manslaughter of Horace Kemmener. The complete record made at the trial has been certified to this court. The case is before us on assignments of error and reasons for reversal.
On September 6th, 1933, a stevedore of the Atlas Powder Company was loading smokeless powder in several freight cars at a pier of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company at South Amboy. During the progress of the work of loading the powder a wooden freight car caught fire without negligence on the part of the railroad company. The car was at a point where a number of boats with persons upon them wore
We have examined the large number of assignments of error and reasons for causes for reversal which have been filed. We feel, however, that it is only necessary to consider one of the assignments of error. This is the assignment of error which deals with that portion of the charge made by the trial court, which reads as.follows: “It has been urged by the prosecutor that the failure of this company to print any rules that would govern the action of its employes in an emergency of this kind, constitutes failure on its part to perform a plain duty to the public. It is for you to say whether that is so, or not, under the evidence in this case. 'You may not infer; you may not go outside of the evidence that has been produced here before you.”
In these words the trial judge left it to the jury to determine whether the failure of the defendant company to provide rules to govern its employes in the emergency with which they were confronted constituted a failure to have enacted rules as to the conduct of employes in an emergencjr which could not be foreseen is sufficient ground for a jury to be permitted to hold a defendant liable for manslaughter. A railroad company could not be expected to provide rules to govern their employes in every emergency. Yét under the portion of the charge quoted above, if any emergency arose for
The judgment is accordingly reversed.