14 N.Y.S. 26 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The action was for the loss of life of the plaintiff’s intestate, occasioned, as alleged, by the failure of the defendant to establish certain reasonable and necessary rules for the government of its servants. The deceased, Edward Berrigan, was in the employ of the defendant as rear brakeman on a way freight train, which was made up at Corning, and ran to Rochester. The train was made up on siding No. 2 in the Corning yard, at an early hour in the morning, which, at the season when the accident occurred, was before daylight. On that morning several cars belonging to the “Rochester way freight,” including the caboose, were standing, without an engine, on the west end of siding No. 2, and two or three cars, which were to be attached to an east-bound freight train, stood on the same siding, further east. At this time it became the duty of the deceased to couple the caboose of his train to the ear which preceded it, and it was while he was in the performance of that duty that he received the injury which resulted in his death. An engine which was engaged in making up the other train came on to the siding at the east end to draw out the cars which stood east of the caboose, but was run against them with such force as to drive them back against the
The rules of the defendant were introduced in evidence and are before us. There is no rule which covers or refers to the situation in question. The rule most nearly analogous to that suggested is one which prescribes the exibition of a red light by night or a red flag by day upon a crippled or disabled car, to indicate that it is not to be moved or collided with. One reason given for this rule is that men engaged in repairing such a car may be under or about it in such a position as to be helpless to save themselves if the car were moved. We think the analogy is close enough to suggest the propriety of a similar rule for the case in hand. Indeed, the cases are so far similar that counsel for the defendant are disposed to argue that the deceased was negligent of his own safety in not applying the existing rule to the actual case, and protecting himself by displaying a red light on the end of his caboose. But it is very clear that he was not at liberty, even if he had been aware of the danger which threatened him, to make such use of the signal mentioned. The rule is specific, and confines itself to the case of a disabled car set aside for repairs.
Another ground for the charge of contributory negligence was more nearly tenable. A rule of the defendant requires brakemen to supply themselves with coupling sticks, and to use them in all cases of single coupling, viz., by link and pin. The office of that implement seems to be, in effect, to add to the length of the brakeman’s arm, and enable him to reach the coupling from a standing place along-side the car, and raise or lower the free end of the link, so that it may enter the draw-head, and to cause the pin to drop into its place, without going between the cars as they approach each other. In this case the evidence shows that the deceased did not have a coupling-stick with him, although there were some in the caboose. And the court charged the jury, in effect, that if the accident resulted from the attempt to make the coupling without the use of the stick, there could be no recovery in the action. We think the evidence on this branch of the case justified the submission of that question to the jury. There was evidence tending to show' that when the deceased set about making the coupling he discovered that the link was missing, and that the two draw-heads, or bumpers, of the two cars were in contact with each other; that this made it necessary to separate the cars far enough to insert a link; that, there being no engine attached, he proceeded by means of a “pinch-bar, ” or lever, applied to the wheels of the caboose, to move that car back the requisite distance, and, having procured a link, went between the two cars to insert it into one of the bumpers; that this could have been done in no other way; that the stick would have been of no use for that purpose; and that it was while he was necessarily between the cars to
All concur.