DocketNumber: 87
Judges: Field, Harlan, Blatchford, Matthews, Gray, Bradley
Filed Date: 2/1/1886
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court. After stating the facts as above reported, he continued :
1. As to the challenge to a juror. . It appears that one Weaver, summoned as a juror, testified that he was a lumber dealer, and that the company gave him a place on its right of way for a- lumber yard, without rent., and also that he had heard the accident to the plaintiff- spoken of and explained. It was not shown, however, that he had any actual bias for or, against either ‘ party, or any belief or opinion touching the merits of the case. He was, nevertheless, challenged, and the allowance of the challenge constitutes the first error assigned. It does not appear whether the challenge was for cause or was peremptory. Under the statute of Dakota each party is entitled to three peremptory challenges. It is for the party asserting error to show it; it will not be assumed. But if we regard the challenge as for cause, its allowance did not prejudice the company. A competent and unbiased juror was selected and sworn, and the company had, therefore, a trial by an impartial jury, which was all it could demand. United States v. Cornell, 2 Mason, 104 ; Heaston v. Cincinnati & Fort Wayne Railroad Co., 16 Ind. 275, 279; Atchison, Topeka <& Santa Fé Railroad Co. v. Franklin, 23 Kansas, 74; Carpenter v. Dame, 10 Ind. 125, 130; Morrison v. Lovejoy, 6 Minn. 349, 350.
2. The exaction, as a condition of refusing a new trial, that the plaintiff should remit a portion of the amount awarded by the verdict was a matter within the discretion of the court. It held that the amount found was excessive, but that no error had been committed on the trial. In requiring the remission
3. The dismissal of the suit at the close of the plaintiff’s case was moved on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to. establish a cause of action ; and in support of this position it is contended that the plaintiff was a fellow-servant of the officer' or agent of the company, who was-charged with the duty of-keeping the cars in order, and, therefore, could riot recover against‘the company for injuries suffered by reason, of the latter’s negligence, and that this exemption from liability is declared by the statute of Dakota.
The general doctrine as to the exemption of an employer from liability for injuries to a servant, caused by the negligence, of a fellow-servant in a common employment, is well .settled. When several persons are thus employed there is necessarily incident to the service of each the risk that the. others may fail in that care and vigilance which are essential to his safety. In undertaking the service he assumes-that risk, and, if he should suffer, he cannot recover from his employer. He is supposed to have .taken it into consideration when he arranged for his compensation. As we said on.a former occasion : “ He'cannot in reason complain if he suffers from -a risk which he has voluntarily assumed, and for the assumption of which he is paid.” Chicago & Milwaukee-Railroad Co. v. Ross, 112 U. S. 377, 383.
It is equally well settled, however, that it is the duty of the employer to select and retain servants who are fitted and competent for the service, and to furnish sufficient and safe .materials, machinery, or other means, by which it is to be performed, and to keep them in repair and order. . This duty he carinot delegate to a servant so as to exempt himself from liability for injuries caused to another servant by its omission. Indeed, no duty required of him for the safety and protection of his servants ' can be transferred, so as to exonerate him from such
In Flike v. Boston & Albany Railroad Co., 53 N. Y. 549, it
In Corcoran v. Holbrook, 59 N. Y., 517, it appeared that the .defendants operated a cotton mill, to the management of which they gave no personal attention, but entrusted it to a general agent with full power. ■ In the mill was an elevator, used by the employ és, which became out of repair and unsafe, of-which the agent had notice. He neglected to have it repaired and, an employe was injured by its fall. The- court held that the defendants were liable, that the general agent was not ,a mere fellow-servant, but occupied the place of the owners, and that they could not, by delegating their authority to another and absenting themselves, escape from liability for the non-performance of duties they owed to their employes. “ As to acts,” said the court, “ which a master or principal is bound as such to perform towards his employes, if he delegates the performance of them to an agent, the agent occupies the place of the master, ana the latter is deemed present and liable for the.manner in which, they are performed.”
In Fuller v. Jewett, 80 N. Y. 46, an engineer on the Erie Rail.Way-was killed by the explosion of the boiler of a locomotive, caused by its defective condition. To the action brought by his administratrix, it was contended that the negligence of the mechanics in not keeping the'boiler in a safe condition was the negligence of his co-employés in the service of the company, for which it was not responsible. But the court
In Ford v. Fitchburg Railroad, 110 Mass. 240, which was a .similar action for injuries caused by the explosion of an engine boiler out of repair, the same defence "was made, that the ¡want of repair was owing to the negligence of a fellow-servant in the department of repairs, .but the court said, that “ the agents who are charged with the duty of supplying safe machinéry are not, in the true sense of the rule relied on, to be regarded as fellow-servants of those who are engaged in operating it. ’ They are charged with a master’s duty to his servant. They are employed in distinct and independent departments of service, and there is no difficulty in distinguishing them, even when the'Same person renders service by turns in each, as the convenience of the employer may require. In one the master. cannot escape the consequence of the 'agent’s negligence; if the servant is injured in the other he mayl” And the court held that there was no error in a refusal to instruct the jury that the corporation was not liable unless the plaintiff proved that the president, directors or superintendent, either personally knew, or by the exercisp of reasonable care in the performance of their duties might have known, of the existence of the defect in the engine which caused the explosion, or that the persons employed to have charge of the engine and keep it in repair were incompetent ; observing that “ the question was not whether the officers named knew;-or might have known, of the defect or of the incompetency of those who had charge .of the repairs, but
In Shanny v. Androscoggin Mills, 66 Maine, 420, the action was by an employe of the defendants for injuries to her.hand caused by insufficient and defective covering to machinery and gearing, which she was employed to clean. On the trial the. defendants contended, among other things, that" if the defective covering was owing to .the negligence of a fellow-servant, whose duty it was to repair it, they were not hable: But the court said, “ that the person whose duty it was to keep the, machinery in order, so' far as that duty goes,,was not,.in any legal sense, the fellow-servant of the plaintiff. To provide machinery and keep it in repair, and to use it for the purpose'' for which it was intended, are very distinct matters. ■ They are not employments in-the same common business, tending to the ' same common result. The one can properly be said to begin only. when the other ends. The two persons may, indeed, • work under the same master and receive their pay from the same source.; but this is not sufficient. They must be at the time engaged in a common purpose or employed in the same general business. ¥e do not now refer to the different grades of services about which there is considerable conflict of opinion,, but of the different employment. - In the repair of the machinery the servant represented the master in the. performance of his part of the contract, and, therefore, in the language of the instructions, his negligence in- that réspect is. the omission of the master or employer in" contemplation of law.’ ”
Numerous decisions from other courts to the same purport might be added. Bessex v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 45 Wisc. 477, 481; Wedgwood v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co., 41 Wisc. 478 ; Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw Railroad Co. v. Conroy, 68 Ill. 560; Drymala v. Thompson, 26 Minn. 40. The doctrine laid down in them is specially applicable when the employer is a common carrier of passengers and property, and steam is the motive power, inasmuch as any
According to the authorities cited there can be na.question ■as to the liability of the railroad company to the plaintiff for. the injuries' he sustained. If no one was appointed by the . company to look after the condition of the cars, and see that' the machinery and appliances used to move, and to stop them,' vtere kept in repair and in good working order, its liability for the injuries would not be the subject of contention. ' Its negligence in that case would have been in the highest degree culpable. If, however, one was • appointed by it charged with ■that duty, and the injuries resulted from his negligence in its ■ performance, the company is liable. He was, so far as that ■duty is. concerned, the representative of the company; his v negligence -was its negligence, and Imposed a liability upon it, i unless, as contended, it was relieved therefrom by the statute of Dakota. Section 1130 of the Civil Code of that Territory is in these words :
“ Co-employés. — An employer is not bound to' idemnify his employé for losses suffered by the latter in consequence of the. ordinary risks of the business in which he is employed, nor in consequence .of the negligence of another person employed by the same employer in the same general business, unless he has neglected to use ordinary care in the selection of the culpable employe.”
The-next .section, 1131, is as follows:
“ Employee’s Negligence. — An employer must in all cases*653 ■indemnify .his employé for' losses caused by the former’s want of ordinary care.”
We do not consider that the first of these sections changes the lavy previously existing as to the exemption of an employer, ■from responsibility for injuries committed by a servant to a féllow-servant in the same general business, or identifies the business of providing safe machinery and keeping it in repair with the business of handling and moving it. The two kinds of business are as distinct as the making and repairing of a.cai;.riage is from the running of it. They are., as stated in the case decided- by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, from which we have cited above, separate and independent departments of ser-, vice, though the same person'may, by turns, render service in each. The person engaged in the former represents the employer, and in that business is not a fellow-servant with one engaged in the latter. The words “ same general business ” in the section have reference to the general’ business of the department of service .in which’the employé is engaged, and do not embrace, ■business of every kind which may have some, relation to the'affairs of the employer, or even be necessary for their successful management. If any other construction were adopted there would, under the section, be no such thing as separate departments of service in the business of railroad companiés; for whatever would tend to aid in the transportation of persons and property would come under the designation of its general, business. The same section is in the civil code of California, and our construction of it accords with that of the Supreme Court of the State. In Beeson v. The Green Mountain Gold Mining Company, 57 Cal. 20, the defendant, a corporation 'engaged in quartz mining, appointed a superintendent to supervise and manage its mining operations, with authority to employ and discharge laborers at the mine. One of the laborer^ thus engaged lost his life in a fire, which' originated from a defective pipe put up by a tinner under the supervision of the superintendent, and connected‘with the engine used to raise ore ■and take water from the mine. It did not appear that the deceased knew or had reason to know of the defect. In an action by his widovv for damages in consequence’ of his death', it was
We do not perceive that the provision of the sixth section of the Civil Code of Dakota, that in the Territory “ there is no common law in any case where' the law is declared by the codes,” at all affects the question before us. There cannot be two rules of law on the same subject'contradicting each other. Therefore, where the code declares the law there can be no ocpasión to look further; but where tbe code is. silent the common law prevails. What constitutes the “ same general business ” is not defined by the code, but may be explained by adjfidged cases. The declaration by the code of a general rule, which is conformable to existing law, does not prevent the courts from looking to those cases for explanation any more than it prevents them from looking into the dictionary, for the meaning of words.
Section 1131 of the Dakota code expresses the general law, as we have, stated it to be, that an employer is responsible for injuries to his employes 'caused by his own want of ordinary pare. His selection of defective machinery, which is. “to be moved: by steam power, is of itself-evidence of a want of ordinary «are, -and. allowing it to remain out of repair, when its •condition, is brought to his notice, or by proper inspection might jbé known, is culpable negligence. . Here, the cars had been defective for 'years.' The brakés weré all worn out, and their condition had-been , called to the attention of the yard
4. As to the alleged negligence of the plaintiff only a few words need be said. Of course, he was bound to. exercise care to avoid injuries to himself. If he had known, or might have-known by ordinary attention, the condition of the brakes and cars when he mounted the cars, and thus exposed himself to danger — -in other words, if he did not use his senses as men ■ generally use theirs to keep from harm — he cannot complain of ■ the injury which he suffered. He had been employed in the yard only one day before the accident occurred, and it does not appear that the.defécts in the brakes or cars were brought to his notice, though there was some evidence that statements as to their defective condition were made in his presence and hearing. He testifies that he saw no defect in either of them, and was not apprised of any. The defect in the brakes was not patent to the eye; it could be known only from an attempt-to set-them, or by information from others. He had a right, therefore, to assume, without such information, that they were, in a condition in which it was safe to mount the cars to set them, when ordered by the yard-master.
It was contended in the court below that the plaintiff might have inferred-, from the manner in which the cars were attached, that there was a defect in them. The manner of their attachment showed nothing as to the condition of the brakes;, and .the court left the question of his negligence to the jury. It instructed them that if, from the unusual appearance of the car upon which he was engaged, as, for instance, its being attached to the next car by chains, or if from any statements of the yard-master or car-repairer, he had reason to believe that the car in "question was defective or had been broken, he .was
The verdict of the jury, upon these instructions and others of the Same- general purport, negatived any imputation of ■negligence on his part. We see, therefore, no error on the trial, and the judgment below must be
Affirmed.