84 Va. 642 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of trespass on the case for injuries to the person by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error. The defendant in error was an employee of the plaintiff in error, engaged in uncoupling, weighing, and unloading coal-cars on the coal-pier of the railway company at Rewport Rews. At the trial it was proved, as is shown by the certificate of facts in the case, that the plaintiff, Lee, was engaged on the 3d of May, 1884, about his business, under and in obedience to the orders of his superior, the foreman of the coal pier, when the pier-engine ran the train against the standing cars, from which he was uncoupling a car, knocking a pin which was tight up with another pin, without warning or signal; and he Was thrown down and so hurt that his leg had to be amputated; and that he is still a great sufferer from the injury, besides being no longer able to do work which is remunerative; that Lee saw the engine and engineer every day, and that he had always been engaged about this work since he had been in the company’s employment; that the engine and engineer had been so employed all day long every day, coming backward and forward; that the orders received by Lee on the day of the injury were general orders, in the usual course of affairs; that the engine, with the cars, that hurt him by setting'the standing cars in motion, was stalled on the up grade on the pier with the loaded cars it was bringing up when he got between the cars; that the ears to which the engine was attached were as far from the train he was uncoupling as forty feet, and that Lee saw the engine when he went between the cars, and the engine was behind the cars pushing them up in the usual way; that the coupling-pin in question was tight, and he was delayed in his work of getting it out; that there were several cars standing between him and the train coming up, and that there were not
The error assigned which will be first considered, is the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict of the jury, and grant the defendant a new trial; As we have seen, the plaintiff was an employee of the defendant company, engaged in uncoupling cars loaded with coal, and weighing and emptying them. He was injured while engaged in his usual every-day employment, and his right to recover damages from the defendant company must depend upon the question, whether the
When a servant enters upon an employment, he accepts the service subject to the risks that are incident to it. An employee who contracts for the performance of hazardous duties assumes such risks as are incident to their discharge from causes open and obvious, the dangerous character of which causes he had opportunity to ascertain. If a man chooses to accept employment, or to continue in it, with the knowledge of the danger, he must abide the consequences, so far as any claim against his employer is concerned. It is the duty of the company to exercise all reasonable care, to provide and maintain safe, sound, and suitable machinery, roadway, structures, and instrumentalities, and it must not expose its employees to risks beyond those which are incident to the employment, and were
Judgment reversed.