134 Tenn. 438 | Tenn. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by plaintiff below against the receivers of the Tennessee Central Railroad Company to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him while in the employ of said receivers. There was a directed verdict in favor of the defendants below. On appeal this judgment was reversed by the court of civil appeals, and the case is before us on petition for certiorari.
The plaintiff below was a section hand, and was thrown from a hand car, run over by the car, and
On the morning of the accident there was a freight wreck at Silver Point, and this section crew who were working near Baxter were directed to get on the hand car, go to the scene of the wreck, and aid in clearing it away. One Crownover, a section boss or section foreman, was in charge of the crew. The hand car was a lever car. Two other workmen were on the rear, and Crownover, the section boss, was somewhere about the center of the car with his foot on a brake which controlled the speed of the car. Some distance before reaching the scene of the wreck there was a long hill down which the car ran by force of gravity. Plaintiff below was holding to a pick handle, when, on nearing the wreck, plaintiff’s proof tends to show that the car, running at a very high rate of speed, was suddenly checked by an application of the braljge by Crownover, and plaintiff was thrown off in front of the car and received the injuries for which he sues.
The negligence alleged is the excessive speed of the car and the sudden application of the brake.
It is well settled in Tennessee that a railroad section foreman is a superior servant to the laborers in his gang; that he is a vice principal, and the alter ego of the master respecting these laborers. Railroad v. Northington, 91 Tenn., 56, 17 S. W., 880, 16 L. R. A., 268; Elec. Ry. Co. v. Lawson, 101 Tenn., 406, 47 S. W., 489; Gann v. Railroad, 101 Tenn., 380, 47 S. W., 493,
In Gann v. Railroad, supra, it was held, however, that the act of the section foreman in charge of a hand car in applying the brake and suddenly stopping the car so as to throw off and injure one of the laborers was the act of a fellow servant, and that under such circumstances the railroad company would not be liable to the injured employee. To the same effect see Railroad v. Bolton, 99 Tenn., 276, 41 S. W., 442, and the doctrine of both of these cases was reaffirmed in Railroad v. Edwards, 111 Tenn., 31, 76 S. W., 897.
The principle of these decisions is that the superior servant who undertakes to perform the work of a fellow servant is, as to that particular work, a fellow servant, and his negligence in such case is that of a fellow servant and not that of a vice principal, although, generally speaking, he is a vice principal.
The circuit judge thought the cases just referred to controlling, and consequently directed a verdict in favor of the defendants below. We think he was correct.
It should be stated in this connection that this court has at no time, as seems to be intimated on this record, departed from the rule laid down in Gann v. Railroad, supra, but, on the contrary, that case was approved in Railroad v. Edwards, supra, and has been followed in several unreported cases. While Gann v. Railroad is not in harmony with cases in some other jurisdictions, it has always been adhered to by this court, and is in
It is argued that there is proof in the record showing it to have been the duty of this foreman to handle the brake. Suppose that be true. Nevertheless handling the brake was none the less an act of service. There was nothing to submit to the jury. The rule in Tennessee is that:
“The facts being stated, the question of whether a person is a fellow servant or a superior is one of law for the court.” National Fertilizer Company v. Travis, 102 Tenn., 16, 21, 49 S. W., 832, 833.
The foreman testified that he was not specially required to use the brake; that any of the hands on the car might have used it. If he had been directed to handle the brake himself the case would nevertheless fall under Railroad v. Martin, 87 Tenn., 398, 10 S. W., 772, 3 L. R. A., 282, and Hopkins v. Railroad, 96 Tenn., 409, 34 S. W., 1029, 32 L. R. A., 354. In these cases, owing to the absence of conductors, the engineers were left in charge of the trains. It was held in both cases that the masters were not liable for the negligent acts of the engineers causing injuries to brakemen; the engineers not having, in fact, assumed any control over the brakemen, and the injuries having been caused by the negligent performance of service duties imposed upon such engineers by the rules of the railroad companies. In both of these cases brakemen were thrown off the trains by the sudden application of the brakes by the two engineers.
“The most general test is that, in order to be a vice principal, a servant must so far stand in the place of his master as to be charged in the particular matter with the performance of a duty towards the inferior which, under the law, the master owes to such servant.” Railroad v. Edwards, 111 Tenn., 31, 43, 76 S. W., 897, 899.
The court has also pointed out that it is the duty of the master to use ordinary care to construct and pre^ pare the place of work and the instrumentalities for work, and to preserve in safe condition the place of work and the instrumentalities for work. To work at such place, however, and to use the instrumentalities provided, is the duty of the servant. In other words, construction, preparation, and preservation are duties that the law imposes primarily upon the master. Operation is a duty imposed upon the servant.'
“The line of demarcation . . . between the absolute duty of the master and the duty of the servants is the line that separates the work of construction, preparation, and preservation from the work of operation. Is the act in question work required to construct, to prepare, to place in a safe location, or to keep in repair the machinery furnished by the employer? If so, it is his personal duty to exercise ordinary care to perform it. Is the act in question required to properly and safely operate the machinery furnished, or to pre*444 vent the safe place in which, it was furnished from becoming’ dangerous through its negligent operation?1 If so, it is the duty of the servants to perform that act, and they, and not the master, assume the risk of negligence in its performance.” St. Louis, etc., Ry. Co. v. Needham, 63 Fed., 107, 11 C. C. A., 56, 25 L. R. A., 833; Railroad v. Dillard, 114 Tenn., 240, 249, 86 S. W., 313, 69 L. R. A., 746, 108 Am. St. Rep., 894, 4 Ann. Cas., 1028.
Handling the brake on this hand car was merely an incident to the operation of the car. It was the act of a servant. The master, having provided a safe roadbed, a hand car in good condition, and having exercised due care in the selection of servants to operate this instrumentality, was not liable for the negligence of one of these servants in such operation.
It is further insisted that:
“The regulation of the speed of the hand car and the designating of the point at which it would stop were matters of control and direction assumed by Crown-over and properly belonged to him as vice principal.”
■ We find ourselves unable to agree to this contention. The running and stopping of the hand car were mere details of its operation. If the car was allowed to run at an excessive rate of speed, this was simply a matter of negligent handling of a safe instrumentality. The negligence of the foreman in this particular, tested by the rules above stated, was the negligence of a fellow servant.
So we must conclude that the negligence of this foreman in the application of the brake and his negligence in allowing the car to run at an excessive speed amounted to nothing more than the negligent use of a proper appliance furnished by the master. The acts of the foreman were therefore not acts done in the discharge of any duty which the law devolved primarly upon the master. 4 Thompson on Negligence, section 4918.
The case of Railway v. Northington, 91 Tenn., 56, 17 S. W., 880, 16 L. R. A., 268, relied on by plaintiff below, is readily distinguishable from the case under consideration. In Railroad v. Northington, the section boss permitted two boxes to be so placed on a push car ahead of a hand car that the boxes struck the platform of a station as the car passed, and injured one of the workmen riding on it. Such conduct of the foreman was tantamount to putting the section men to work in an unsafe place. Likewise the push car with the boxes so placed thereon was an unsafe appliance. Such negligence was a breach of the master’s duty to use ordinary care in the work of construction or preparation, and the acts of the foreman in this respect were clearly
The judgment of the court of civil appeals is reversed, and that of the circuit court is affirmed.