117 Tenn. 257 | Tenn. | 1906
delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court. .
Dock Holland was killed while riding upon and operating a railway velocipede on the main track of the defendant’s road between Boyce station and Chattanooga. He was an employee of the road, and his duties were to attend to the switch and signal lights and to switch the mail from the defendant’s mail train to those of the Western & Atlantic Railroad at Boyce. He must, necessarily, have passed over the road to attend to his duties.
On the morning of his death Holland had changed the mail from one train to the other at Boyce, and, putting a velocipede on the track, he mounted and followed the first section of the defendant’s fast passenger train, No. 3, in the direction of Chattanooga. The train was being run in two sections, and Holland, being between the two, was run down and killed by the last section, which was running at sixty miles an hour, or more, when he was stricken.
Without going into all the features of the case, it is sufficient to say that it is assigned as error that there is no evidence to support the verdict of the jury.
It is insisted upon the part of the railroad company that the statutory precautions were observed; but this is denied by the plaintiff, and there is some evidence to
Conceding, therefore, that the statutory precautions were not observed, we think the crucial question is whether or not this was a case which required the observance of the statutory precautions.
We think there is ample evidence .to show that the plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of the grossest contributory negligence in attempting to operate a velocipede upon the railroad track between the two sections of a train which were runnig at the rate of sixty miles an hour. He was entirely familiar with the schedule of the trains. He knew that the first section had passed Boyce going in the direction of Chattanooga, and that the second section would immediately follow after; and yet he placed himself upon this velocipede in front of the rear section, and attempted to go down the road between the two sections, his rate of speed being about ten miles per hour.
It is not shown that he was authorized to use a velocipede, or that it was done with the consent of the railroad company, nor that it was necessary in the discharge of his duty; but, on the contrary, it is charged, and, we think, clearly appears, that he was using it for his own convenience and without the consent of the defendant.
If the rule of common-law liability is applied, we think it clear that, because of his negligence, and we may say recklessness, he would not be entitled to any recovery; and, if he is entitled to any recovery, it must be solely on the ground that the company failed to observe the
We are of opinion that the principles laid down in the cases of Railroad v. Burke, 6 Cold., 45; Railroad v. Rush, 15 Lea, 145; Railroad v. Robertson, 9 Heisk., 276, and Railroad Co. v. Hicks, 89 Tenn., 301, 17 S. W., 1036, should govern and control in the determination of this suit.
In the last case, Railroad Co. v. Hicks, 89 Tenn., 301, 17 S. W., 1036, the'plaintiff was using a velocipede on the track rightfully. It was completely under his- control, and could be easily removed from and replaced upon the track. On a trial the circuit judge charged that the statutory precautions Avere applicable; but this court held that the application of the rule to employees upon the track, even in the discharge of their duties, Avould necessitate the stopping of all trains whenever they came in sight of section hands upon the road, although it Avas altogether reasonable that such hands would get out of the Avay Avithout making it necessary to stop at all, and that a proper charge would have been that the road, when it sees an employee on the track in peril of being-run over, must do all in its poAver to avert a collision, and prevent an 'injury, Avhich is, in effect applying the rule of the common Low.
In the case of Railroad v. Rush, 15 Lea, 145, a brake
Judge Cooper states that this latter clause in the Coldwell Case strikes the true note: “The statute was intended for the benefit of the general public, not for the servants of the company, and clearly not for a servant whose negligence caused, or contributed to cause, the accident. The legislature surely never intended that a railroad company by a mere noncompliance with certain forms made obligatory as to a stranger, whether their observance would have prevented the act or not, should become liable to an employee whose plain dereliction of duty caused the accident.”
In the language of Judge McFarland in Railroad v. Robertson, 9 Heisk., 276: “The liability of the company to its agent for injuries resulting from the misconduct or negligence of that agent must be determined, not by the statute, but by the common-law principles.”
The appellee will pay the costs of the appeal.