Anderson v. Erie Railroad

68 N.J.L. 647 | N.J. | 1903

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dixon, J.

The plaintiff, a brakeman in the employ of the defendant, fell and was injured while descending from a box car in the defendant’s yard at Weehawken. The cause of his fall was that the fastening of the grab-iron on top of the car gave away as he threw his weight upon it. The evidence tended to show two defects in the fastening—one, the use of a screw running less than an inch into the wooden roof, instead of a larger screw or a bolt running entirely through the roof and held by a nut underneath; the other, deterioration of the wood through which the screw ran, indicated b3r the fibers adhering to the thread of the screw after it was wrenched away.

*648It was proved that the ear did not belong to the defendant, but was the property of the Chicago- and Erie Railway Com-pany, an Indiana corporation, owning and operating a railroad from Hammond, Indiana, to Marion, Ohio ; that at ten minutes past twelve in the morning on June 2d, 1901, the car arrived loaded at Port Jervis, coming in a train of sixty freight cars from the west over the Delaware division of the defendant's road; that it was there inspected by the defendant's inspectors, found satisfactory, and made up by the defendant in another train, which 1-eft Port Jervis at nine thirty that evening and reached the Weehawken yard at ten fifty-five the next morning. The accident happened about noon the same day.

There is no direct testimony in the case as to where or by whom the car was loaded, but we think the only legitimate inference is that it came loaded into the possession of the defendant for transportation by it as a common carrier. The fact that it was the property of another owner rebuts any presumption, which might arise from possession, that it was used by the defendant in its own business, and this rebuttal is strengthened by the further fact that, when it first appears in the defendant's possession, it was fully loaded, and was after-wards handled bjr the defendant merely for transportation.

The general principles of the law cast upon the plaintiff the burden of proving the duty of the defendant, and we think he sustained this burden only to the extent of such duty as rests upon a railroad company which receives a loaded car of another owner, to be hauled by the company to- the place of destination.

The nature of that duty has been the subject of considerable judicial comment. 20 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (2d ed.) 80. All authorities agree that it requires the exercise of reasonable care for the safety of employes, but they are not all agreed as to the nature of the care demanded. Sometimes it has been held that the duty was co-extensive with the duty of the company respecting its own cars. O’Neil v. St. Louis, &c., Railway Co., 9 Fed. Rep. 337; Felton v. Bullard, 94 Id. 781; Jones v. New Haven and Hartford Railroad Co., 20 R. I. 210. *649In Massachusetts the rule is said to require only the employment of competent inspectors, who- are to be deemed fellow-servants of tiróse managing tire train, and for Whose neglect therefore the company is not responsible to its employes. Mackin v. Boston and Albany Railroad Co., 135 Mass. 301; Bowers v. Connecticut River Railroad Co., 163 Id. 313.

We think, however, that the weight of reason and authority is in favor of these propositions:

First. That, on receiving a car for transportation, the company is entitled to assume that the car had been properly constructed of suitable materials, for all the purposes for which the owner intended it to be used. Ballou v. Chicago, &c., Railroad Co., 54 Wis. 257; Gutridge v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 94 Mo. 468.

Second. That, on receiving the car, the company is bound to make such examination as would be likely to discover conditions rendering a car, so constructed, unfit for safe transportation on the company’s line. This examination has been called a cursory examination—an examination not of a very minute character (Richardson v. Great Eastern Railway Co., 1 C. P. Div. 343); an inspection for defects visible or discernible by ordinary examination. Eaton v. New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Co., 163 N. Y. 391; Gottlieb v. New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Co., 100 Id. 463; Dooner v. Delaware and Hudson Canal Co., 164 Pa. St. 17; Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Co. v. Machen, 157 U. S. 72.

Third. That, at convenient places during the journey, the company is bound to make the same inspection and tests of such a car as it should make of its own car, for the purposes of discovering defects likely to occur in the course of transportation.

Under these rules we are unable to discern any evidence of fault in the defendant contributing to the plaintiff’s accident.

The defect of which he complains respecting the screw used to fasten the grab-iron was one in construction, which the defendant had a right to assume did not exist; and the same statement is probably true regarding the unsoundness of the *650wood. Neither of these defects was discoverable by ordinary inspection or by anything short of a very minute examination, and neither of them could occur in the course of transportation.

We therefore conclude that the motion to direct a verdict for the defendant should have been granted, and- because of its refusal the judgment of the plaintiff must be reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.

For affirmance—None. For reversal—This Chancellor, Chief Justice, Van Syckel, Dixon, Garrison, Fort, Garretson, Hendrickson, Pitney, Bogert, Vredenburgi-i, Vooriiees, Vroom. 13. .
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