60 Pa. Super. 66 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1915
-Opinion by
The plaintiff was employed for two and one-half days as á laborer in the yards of Joseph Josephs’ Bros.,, loading and unloading scrap iron, from cars placed upon their side tracks. The yard was composed of six separate tracks* converging into one siding at its west end and connected with one of the defendant’s branch lines. The cars upon which the plaintiff was working on the day of the accident were immediately in front of the shear shed, being a house inclosing a large pair of shears used for cutting the scrap iron into lengths. This shed was about - twelve feet from track or siding number five. Engaged with the plaintiff were a number of workmen unloading a car of scrap. About tén o’clock in the morning a rain storm threatened, when the plaintiff, with others, took refuge under one of the cars on which they were working. The plaintiff, after he had stepped from the car, ran up the track a short distance, secured his dinner bucket, and went with it under one of the cars. He was seated between the rails with his back against one of the axles of the car truck, eating a lunch, when the cars were struck by the shifting train. Prior to this the defendant’s shifting crew was engaged in shifting cars in the yard, and, acting under the directions received from the superintendent of the plaintiff’s employer, they moved cars from the storage siding adjoining the siding on which the cars, which plaintiff had taken refuge under, were located. In moving the cars on this siding against the cars under which plaintiff was sitting, the impact caused the cars to be moved from four to eight feet, causing the injuries for which this suit results. . .
■ In a careful review of the facts,; giving the plaintiff the benefit of each inference fairly arising therefrom, notwithstanding the able and ingenious argument of the learned counsel for the appellee, we are led to the conclusion .that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. We are not convinced that any doctrine
Was the negligence of the defendant shown? The defendant was using this particular track of the plaintiff’s employer, through their specific orders, and through a license from them. The uncontradicted evidence shows that the crew used the ordinary precaution observed in similar movements of cars on those. tracks. The scrap was piled between the several tracks in such manner as to prevent observation under the cars, and from the plaintiff’s testimony he could not be seen by persons walking ■ towards the car from the direction in which the train was moving, nor could they see the ■train approaching from where they were sitting. Before .the rain, while the conductor was working on the adjoining track, he noticed these men working on this car. This would not charge him with notice that the men intended to get under the car when the rain came up. The conductor walked between tracks four and five to a point immediately opposite the two cars under one of which the plaintiff was sitting. He looked for the men on "the cars and not seeing any he gave the signal for the train to move back. “A jury cannot be permitted to find • anything negligence which is less than failure to discharge a legal duty:” Politowski v. Burnham, 214 Pa. 165. And it surely was not the duty of the conductor to get down and look under the car to ascertain if there were .men under there before making his coupling. The manner in which the scrap was piled around the cars and between the tracks prevented the conductor from having clear vision on track five. His train would have to come up this track. He walked between tracks four and five, and this iron prevented him from seeing the skids erected on the opposite side, next to the shear house. They did not ring a bell or sound a whistle and under the circumstances they were not required to dó so. The use of these tracks as sidings for the constant moving of cars would not require the bell to be
After carefully considering all of the evidence, the first assignment of error asking for binding instructions in the court below is here sustained, as is also the second assignment of error predicated on the request for binding instructions, wherein the court below is asked to enter a judgment n. o. v. The judgment of the court below is reversed and is here entered for the defendant.