168 Ind. 398 | Ind. | 1906
Lead Opinion
Action for the negligent killing of appellee’s decedent. There was a verdict and judgment for appellee. The testimony showed the following facts: One Bridges was engaged in the shipment, over appellant’s railroad, from the town of Cloverdale, of elm poles of various sizes. Pursuant to his request, appellant placed a flat-car on its siding, just east of its main track, in said town, for use in making one of said shipments. Decedent was a teamster in the employ of Bridges, being hired by the day, and a short time before the accident he drove up to the east side of the car with a load of poles, and, as it was his duty to do, began helping the other men in the work of loading. There were stakes on the west side of the car to keep the poles from rolling off. When the car was about one-half or two-thirds loaded, some one cried: “Elag the train down there” or “Stop the train.” A passenger-train from the south was due, and about that time whistled for the town. When the alarm was given, Bridges and one Akin ran down the track to signal the engineer, while the other men started toward the track to see what was the matter. Decedent and one of his associates went around the north end of the car, and, after passing it, the former took but a step to the south, and, while looking in
No objection is urged to the complaint. The first paragraph seems to be predicated, at least principally, on negligence in the furnishing of a defective car, while the remaining paragraph charges negligence in the failure of the engineer to stop the train after he was signaled.
The principal contention of counsel for appellant is that there was no evidence to support the verdict and that the court erred in refusing certain instructions tendered by appellant, to the effect that there was no liability on account of the furnishing of a defective car, as there was no contract relation between appellant and decedent. In view of the refusal of said instructions, it is necessary to determine the validity of the theory of defense relative to the defective car.
No consideration of the authorities relative to this subject would be at all adequate which did not hark back to Heaven v. Pender (1883), 11 Q. B. D. 503. In that case a dock owner furnished, upon a consideration, a tackle for the painting of a ship, which was moored at its own dock. The plaintiff, who was a workman in the employ of the person who had contracted with the ship owner to paint the ship, was injured by reason of the fact that one of the ropes of the tackle was defective. The majority of the court were of the opinion that the dock owner was liable, on the ground that the plaintiff was injured in a work in which the defendant was interested, since it received compensation for permitting the work to be done at its dock and for furnishing the tackle, and that therefore the plaintiff should be considered as on the premises by invitation. Brett, M. R. (afterwards Lord Esher), was of opinion that the case was one in which a duty should be implied by law, independently of contract. He declared that “whenever one person supplies goods, or machinery, or the like, for the purpose of their being used by another person under such circumstances that every one of ordinary sense would, if he thought, recognize at once that unless he used ordinary care and skill with regard to the condition of the thing supplied or the mode of supplying it, there would be danger of injury to the person or property of him for whose use the thing is supplied, and who is to use it, a duty arises to use ordinary care and skill as to the condition or manner of supplying such thing. And for a neglect of such ordinary care or skill whereby injury happens a legal liability arises to be enforced by an action for negligence. This includes the case of goods, etc., supplied to be used immediately by a particular person or persons or one of a class of persons, where it would be obvious to the person sup
In Elliott v. Hall (1885), 15 Q. B. D. 315, it was held that a colliery owner, who shipped coal by rail, in a car leased by him, to a firm, was liable to a servant of the latter who was injured while unloading the car, owing to the existence of a worn pin, which constituted the fastening of a trap in the bottom of the car. Grove, -I., said: “It was clearly part of the contract for the sale of the coal to the plaintiff’s employers that it should be conveyed in a truck to the buyers, and it must necessarily have been contemplated that, when it arrived at its destination, the truck would be unloaded by the buyers’ servants. I think it is plain that under these circumstances a duty arose on the part of the defendant towards the plaintiff. If vendors of goods forward them to the purchasers, and for that purpose supply a track or other means of conveyance for the carriage of the goods, and the goods are necessarily to be tmloaded from such means of conveyance by the purchasers’ servants, it seems to me perfectly clear that there is a duty on the part of the vendors towards those persons who necessarily will have to unload or otherwise deal with the goods to see that the truck or other means of conveyance is in good condition and repair so as not to be dangerous to such persons.”
In Caledonian R. Co. v. Mulholland [1898], A. C. 216, Lord Shand significantly observed that the case before the court did not. involve a trap, or an invitation to use a trap, or a noxious instrument.
In Roddy v. Missouri Pac. R. Co. (1891), 104 Mo. 234, 15 S. W. 1112, 24 Am. St. 333, 12 L. R. A. 746, it was held that the plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury on the question of the defendant’s negligence, it appearing that
It was held in Skinn v. Reutter (1903), 135 Mich. 57, 97 N. W. 152, 63 L. R. A. 743, 106 Am. St. 384, that the defendants therein were liable where they had knowingly sold hogs afflicted with a dangerous and infectious disease to a live stock dealer, who, without knowledge of such disease, had placed the hogs in a pen with plaintiff’s hogs, which thereby contracted the disease and died.
Mr. Smith, in his work on negligence (Whittaker’s Smith, Negligence [2d Am. ed.], *13), seems to approve of the principle enunciated by the Master of the Rolls in Heaven v. Pender, supra, while Shearman & Redfield characterize his opinion in that case as masterly (1 Shearman & Redfield, Negligence [5th ed.], §116). See, also, 19 Harvard Law Rev., 372. Reading the general propositions which are found in said opinion in connection with the limitations which are found therein, it appears, at least in the main, that the opinion correctly declares the law.
ing to it over to another company for transit, may properly be charged with negligence on account of an injury to a servant of the latter company, irrespective of the question whether the receiving company was guilty of negligence in failing to examine the car. Moon v. Northern Pac. R. Co. (1891), 46 Minn. 106, 48 N. W. 679, 24 Am. St. 194; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Snyder (1896), 55 Ohio St. 342, 45 N. E. 559, 60 Am. St. 700.
As it would have been proper for the master to contract with any of his employes to perform any necessary work about the car, so, in an extraordinary situation, which called for the servant to act on his own initiative, it ought not to be for the company to assert that he was a trespasser merely because he was not at the place of his routine employment, the fact being that he was not beyond such limits as the master might direct him to go.
The fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and fourteenth instructions tendered by appellant related to the conduct of decedent in going where he did, and were to the effect that in the circumstances therein hypothetically stated there should be a verdict for the defendant.
Rehearing
On Petition eor Rehearing.
The earnestness manifested by counsel for appellant in their brief on petition for rehearing seems to call for a further word on our part in disposing of such petition. The cardinal error of counsel lies in the assumption that if decedent was a technical trespasser the company owed him no duty other than not wilfully to injure him. The circumstances being sufficient to apprise the engineer of a peril ahead, which might involve life or limb, we are of opinion that we correctly held that the mere fact that decedent might have been technically a trespasser was not sufficient to debar a