DocketNumber: Appeal, 131
Judges: Moschzisker, Frazer, Walling, Kephart, Sadler, Schaffer, Plaintiff
Filed Date: 11/30/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued November 30, 1927. While in defendant's employ, on November 19, 1922, Charles Baumgartner was fatally stricken and died in a few hours. This suit, brought by his widow as administratrix, under the Federal Employers' Liability Act (Act of April 22, 1908, 35 Stat. 65, ch. 149), charging negligence on part of defendant as the cause thereof, resulted *Page 109 in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff and defendant has appealed.
Assuming, as we must in support of the verdict, the truth of the evidence for plaintiff and every inference fairly deducible therefrom, the record discloses no cause for reversal. The interstate character of the occurrence was admitted. Under one of defendant's tracks at Washington, Penna., there was an ash pit, forty-five feet long, forty-five inches wide and forty-two inches deep. It was open at the top except a third rail for narrow gauge cars, and three metal cross ties. Live ashes, including burning coal, red hot clinkers, cinders, etc., were dumped therein from engines standing over. As the engines moved on the ashes were drenched by means of a hose, then shoveled onto the platform and from there into a car. It was one of Baumgartner's duties to assist in shoveling the ashes. As he finished this work on the day above stated he lapsed into a semi-unconscious condition, and died some hours later. He was a man thirty years old, in good health, and this case was based on the contention that he was fatally poisoned by carbon monoxide gas, arising from the hot ashes. It is a well known fact by those familiar with the subject that such gas is deadly poison, and is generated, inter alia, by imperfect combustion, especially of coal. Water sprinkled on live coal ashes, sufficient to check but not to fully extinguish the fire, will sometimes cause the poison gas to arise in sufficient quantities, if inhaled, to cause death. Carbon monoxide gas is more dangerous because its presence cannot be detected by sight, taste or smell. When a sufficient quantity is taken into the lungs, it causes death by a destruction of the red blood corpuscles. It was the duty of a coemployee named Bebout to drench the ashes so thoroughly as to fully quench the fire before attempting their removal; but there is evidence that on the occasion in question there was a partial failure to perform this duty and that the ashes, piled to the depth of eighteen inches, were shoveled *Page 110 while steaming. When engaged in this work Baumgartner's face was over the ashes, so he naturally inhaled the released gas. He was a common laborer, had been working for defendant ten weeks, but had received no instruction as to the proper performance of the work or of the danger to which he was subjected, and, as far as appears, had no knowledge thereof. The gas in question is a trifle lighter than air and in general when the latter circulates freely it will dissipate the former so as to avoid danger; but, as the pit was located between an embankment and a hill, sometimes the air was not active there. Experiments made by plaintiff's experts after the occurrence disclosed gas there in fatal quantities, while those made by defendant's experts did not.
The suggestion that defendant was ignorant of the fact that burning coal ashes would, under certain conditions, give off carbon monoxide gas is untenable. The evidence contains no such averment and the master is presumed to know the nature and qualities of the materials he places in the hands of his servants. In other words, he is presumed to have such knowledge of matters pertaining to his business as is possessed by those having special acquaintance with the subjects involved. For example, a master placing dynamite in the hands of his servants is bound to know its dangerous character by reason of liability to accidentally explode and his ignorance thereof is no defense. See Tissue v. Baltimore Ohio R. R. Co.,
Assuming as we must at this stage of the case, that the situation was one of danger, known to the master but not to the servant, then the duty of the master to give warning was imperative. "On the other hand, it is equally well settled that an employer is bound to exercise reasonable precaution against injury to his employees while they are in his service and obeying his *Page 111
orders. Not only must he provide suitable implements and means with which to carry on the business which he sets them to do, but he must warn them of all the dangers to which they will be exposed in the course of their employment, except those which the employee may be deemed to have foreseen as necessarily incidental to the employment in which he engages, or which may be open and obvious to a person of his experience and understanding, and except, also, such as the employer cannot be deemed to have foreseen. And the employer will be presumed to be familiar with the dangers, latent as well as patent, ordinarily accompanying the business in which he is engaged": Wagner v. Jayne Chemical Co.,
Carbon monoxide poisoning cannot be regarded as something outside of the range of human experience. One of defendant's experts testified to having treated over two thousand cases during the past eighteen years. That defendant knew the dangers here involved may be inferred from the fact that it gave other employees strict orders not to remove the ashes until after the fire therein had been entirely extinguished. As the deceased had no knowledge of the danger to which he was exposed, it cannot be urged that he assumed the risk.
That the immediate cause of the death in question resulted from the act of a coemployee in neglecting to completely extinguish the fire before removal of the ashes is no defense under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, which expressly provides that the carrier shall be liable for the death of an employee resulting from the negligence of any of the officers, agents or employees of such carrier: see Grybowski v. Erie R. Co., (N.J.),
There was a conflict in the expert evidence as to whether Baumgartner's death resulted from the inhalation of the carbon monoxide gas. Plaintiff's three experts affirmed that it did and defendant's three expressed a contrary opinion. Under this state of the evidence the question was clearly for the jury. "Where there is a substantial conflict in the evidence as to whether death resulted from carbon monoxide or some other cause, the question is necessarily for the jury": Davies v. Rose-Marshall Coal Co.,
There was no such glaring contradictions in the testimony of any witness as to render a finding thereon a mere guess. Furthermore, the case did not depend on the evidence of any one witness. Appellant's searching analysis of the evidence for plaintiff went to its credibility, but that was for the jury. We cannot set aside a verdict because of doubt as to the credibility of oral testimony. The only error assigned is the trial court's refusal to enter judgment for defendant non obstante veredicto, and that cannot be sustained.
The judgment is affirmed. *Page 114
Vorbnoff v. Mesta Machine Co. ( 1926 )
Mudano v. Phila. Rapid Transit Co. ( 1927 )
Kanawha & Michigan Railway Co. v. Kerse ( 1916 )
Grand Trunk Western Railway Co. v. Lindsay ( 1914 )
Fritz v. Elk Tanning Co. ( 1917 )
Davies v. Rose-Marshall Coal Co. ( 1913 )
McCray v. Sterling Varnish Co. ( 1898 )
Flaherty v. Scranton Gas & Water Co. ( 1906 )
Tissue v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad ( 1886 )