112 F. 888 | 6th Cir. | 1902
after making the foregoing statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
1. The whole case of the plaintiff below was founded upon the theory that the deceased had been killed by coming into collision with an overhanging water spout at the Goodwin tank. The case was put to the jury by the trial judge alone upon this theory, for the jury were told that “if he was not struck by the water spout, or the chain depending from it, in such a way as to cause his fall from the car, your verdict should be for the defendant company.” While it cannot be said the evidence demonstrates that the deceased was caused to fall from his post by reason of a collision with the water spout at Goodwin, yet the facts and cirdumstances pointing to that conclusion were quite sufficient to justify a verdict based upon such an assumption. We have reached this conclusion from an attentive examination of the evidence, and are content to state this result without burdening this opinion with the details, or an argument based on facts of interest only to the particular litigants here concerned. So far as the motion for an instruction to find for the plaintiff in error was based upon the supposed insufficiency of the evidence in respect to the operativeness of the water spout as a proximate factor in causing the death of the deceased, it was rightly denied.
2. In respect to the question of the negligence of the railroad company, the court instructed the jury, in regard to the maintenance of a water spout in such a situation as to be liable to strike brakemen in the discharge of their duty, that “it is negligence, of itself, for a railroad to so construct such appliances as that we have before us that they will injure the brakemen at work upon its trains.” This was excepted to, and has been assigned as error. Many requests for charges involving the duty, of the employer to the em-ployé in respect to safety of appliances and places for work were also refused, not because the}1' were not law in the abstract, but because, inconsistent with the instruction in respect td the particular case which had been already given. If, upon all the facts and circumstances in evidence, the jury could not reasonably have come to any other conclusion but that it was negligent to maintain a water spout in such proximity to the track as to endanger employes whose duty required them to be on top of passing trains, the court was justified in' the peremptory instruction given; and it was
In Reed v. Stockmeyer, cited above, the Seventh circuit court of appeals, speaking by Circuit Judge Jenkins, said:
“S:>, also, it is the duty of the master to provide a reasonably safe place in which the servant may perform his work, and to keep it in such suitable condition. This duty is not absolute, but relative. It is measured by the nature and character of the employment, the location of the premises, and their surroundings. There are employments that of themselves are necessarily dangerous, in connection with which no position can be made secure. In such case the law requires of the master that he shall use ordinary care that the dangers of the employment are not unnecessarily enlarged; that he shall take proper care to furnish such safeguards as are customarily employed in the performance of like hazardous service, so that the servant, exercising proper care, may render his service without exposure to dangers that are not within the obvious scope of the employment as usually carried on.”
The conclusive evidence was that such swinging spouts should be so constructed as to clear cars without endangering employés in the discharge of their duties on the roofs of passing, trains. To do this it was, perhaps, not always necessary or customary that the spouts should, when not pulled down, hang in a position absolutely vertical to the tank. But on all of the evidence it was made to appear most conclusively that they should not be placed in such close proximity to the track, or hang, when not in use, at such an angle, as to endanger employés in the proper discharge of their duties on the top of passing trains. It may be that the evidence was conflicting as to whether this particular spout was a peril to brakemen on top of cars of the usual height. But it was in evidence that cars built to carry furniture are somewhat higher above the track and somewhat wider than ordinary freight cars, and that such cars were well known in the traffic, and frequently found in the trains on this railroad. The evidence clearly established that neither necessity nor convenience required that such spouts' should be so constructed as to constitute a dangerous obstruction
“It is so- simple a task, one so devoid of all exigencies of expense, necessity, or convenience, so free of any consideration of skill, except that of the foot rule, and so entirely destitute of any element of choice or selection, ’that not to make such a construction safe for the hrakeman on the trains is a conviction of negligence.”
It was the duty of the company to use ordinary care to see that the dangers incident to the employment were not unnecessarily enlarged, and the servant thereby exposed to perils which could have been guarded against by the exercise of that degree of care due to employés. The unusual and unnecessary projection of buildings, posts, cattle guards, etc./ over a track, or so near as to endanger employés in the -discharge of their duties, has been generally regarded as negligence. Dorsey v. Construction Co., 42 Wis. 583; Colf v. Railroad Co., 87 Wis. 273, 58 N. W. 408; Railroad Co. v. Somers, 78 Tex. 439, 14 S. W. 779; Railroad Co. v. Davis, 92 Ala. 300, 9 South. 252, 25 Am. St. Rep. 47; Scanlon v. Railroad Co., 147 Mass. 484, 18 N. E. 209, 9 Am. St. Rep. 733; Railroad Co. v. Russell, 91 Ill. 298, 33 Am. Rep. 54; Shear. & R. Neg. (5th Ed.) § 201. If it had appeared that there was a uniform custom on well-managed railroads to construct such swinging water spouts in such proximity to passing cars as to endanger employés standing or sitting on the roofs of such cars while in the discharge of their duty, 110 legal imputation of negligence would, perhaps, arise from such a construction, however unnecessary such dangerous proximity might be. But we are not called upon to decide such a question, for the conclusive evidence in this case was that neither necessity nor convenience required the maintenance of such spouts in dangerous proximity to passing cars, and that there was no such custom or usage on well-managed railroads as would justify an unnecessarily dangerous projection of the kind in question. There was on the evidence in this case no error in instructing the jury-that, if the deceased was struck by the tank spout at Goodwin while on.the roof of a passing car, the fact would convict the company of negligence.
, 3.. Sq far as the motion to instruct the jury to find for the defendant was based upon the assumption of the risk incident to this spout by the deceased, or upon the evidence tending to show contributory negligence, the motion was properly denied. McDade was entitled to rely upon the company’s having properly constructed this 3pou,tr .and the danger' from the proximity of this particular spout w^s by no means so obvious, especially in view of McDade’s short experience on this part of the road, as to charge him with having assumed the risk. The questions of assumption of risk and of contributory negligence were properly left to the jury, under a charge quite as favorable as the plaintiff in error could demand. Railway Co. v. Keegan, 31 C. C. A. 255, 87 Fed. 849; Railroad Co. v. O’Brien, 161 U. S. 451, 16 Sup. Ct. 618, 49 L. Ed. 766.
“I shall not comment on the proof, because it is not necessary. But as a precautionary warning it is best to repeat what -was said by the court so often during the progress of the trial,—that you must not imply anything against the defendant company by reason of the fact that after this accident they made a reconstruction of these water-tank appliances. The court kept that fact out of the proof as long as possible. But in trying to decide the conflict of testimony about the measurements by foot and inches, it became necessary to take notice of this change in order to understand the value of the proof as to measurements. The fact of the change has no other bearing on the issue of this case than that, and, for the reason so often explained to you, you should give the fact no other force than that which is necessary for the explanation of the distances.”
We think there was no error.
Many errors have been assigned upon the admission of evidence. None of them are well taken. There was no error in the charge given or charges refused.
Tudgment affirmed.