47 F. 687 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1891
The only charge of wrong on the part of the defendant upon which the claim for damages in this case rests is in this: that the engine with which the plaintiff was required to work in performing his duties as a switchman was improperly constructed, and unsuitable for use as a switch-engine, the draw-head being so short that a coupling could not be effected without bringing the tender and the car to be coupled so near together as to leave but an insufficient space for a person to operate safely in coupling them. The plaintiff, in accepting employment from the defendant as a switchman in the yard in which this engine was used, must be held to have assumed the risk of all injuries to himself ordinarily incidental to that situation, including such as were liable to occur in consequence of any visible defect in the machinery and appliances supplied for use in connection with his work. The alleged defect in this engine was visible, and should have been, if it was not in fact, known to the plaintiff before he suffered the injury described in this complaint. He cannot be heard to say that he did not know of the existence of the defect, or that he could not discover it, for he must be regarded as having guarantied to the defendant his own competency for the situation in which he was employed, which necessarily required the possession on his part of sufficient knowledge of locomotive engines, draw-heads, and coupling apparatus to be able to recognize, upon seeing it, a dangerous defect of the character described. One of the rules of the company, forming part of the contract which he entered into upon entering its service, required the plaintiff to inspect and take notice of the style, construction, and condition of the draw-heads, links, and pins to be used in coupling engines and cars. The plaintiff could not, therefore, have failed to see the draw-head which he claims was defective and unsuitable in time to have avoided the injury without being guilty of gross negligence and breach of duty. He controlled the engineer in moving the locomotive towards the car which was to have been coupled, and he alone, if any one, was to blame for the sudden coming together of the two, whereby he was caught between them and crushed. To me it is too plain to admit of any doubt that, by the plaintiff’s showing, it appears that the defendant could not have caused his injury in the manner alleged without such contributory negligence on his part as to preclude a recovery by him of any damages therefor, and it would be error for me to refuse to grant the present motion.