77 A.D. 505 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
We held on the first appeal (46 App. Div. 201) that the fault of the defendant, if any, was failure to promulgate proper rules for the management and conduct of the movement of its cars and to direct that proper warnings be given. We held on the second appeal (58 App. Div. 606) that the court erred in its refusal to charge that the jury were not authorized to find a rule necessary or proper for the management in question unless there was proof of such- a rule in force' on some other roads, or that it was practicable and reasonable to provide against such an accident by a rule, or unless the - propriety and necessity of that particular rule were so obvious as to make it a question of common experience and knowledge, citing Berrigan v. N. Y., L. E. & W. Railroad Co. (131 N. Y. 582). It is now contended that the case is cured of former defects, and that it presented a question for the jury.
The learned counsel for the appellant states that the record does not show that on the previous appeals Doing v. N. Y., O. & W. R. Co. (151 N. Y. 579) was called to our attention. This statement must be inadvertent, for I find that Woodward, J., who then wrote for the court, names and distinguishes that case in his opinion (58 App. Div. 606, 608). It is further urged that the Doi/ng case holds that the “ kicking ” óf cars is of itself a' dangerous and negligent practice. I think that the case does not go so far. In Dowd v. N. Y., O. & W. R. Co. (170 N. Y. 459) the court, per Vann, J., say: “ The practice of kicking cars from one track to another, upon which men are at work and so situated that they cannot see the approaching danger, was recently condemned by us as dangerous and reckless. (Doing v. N. Y, Ont. & W. R. Co., 151 N. Y. 579, 583.) ” The learned counsel loses sight of the qualifying phrase “ and so situated that they cannot see the approaching danger,” which discriminates this case from the Doing and Dowd cases. Doing was at work in a repair shop, which afforded no view of the
It is urged that the proof showed that a rule should have required the foreman to keep guard over his men, to give them personal warning, and if called away to put another in his stead. The witness Cogins, a “ laborer at railroading generally,” testified that he had worked in other yards, that the foreman naturally stood and watched the green men, and if he went away with a part of the gang, there is “ some man got power to protect the men.” This was testimony as to a practice, but when he was questioned as to any rule for such practice elsewhere, he said that the rule of the New York Central was that “handcar men in all cases, the boss of that gang should protect himself and his men.” Such a rule obviously would have no application to an employee sweeping snow off a switch in the railroad yard. On the other hand, I think it •cannot be said that the necessity and propriety of making a rule
The testimony of Cox, a foreman of the West Shore railroad, is to the same effect as that of Cogins, namely, that if he were out with a gang he made it a business to watch the men and to have his men watch the cars at the same time. But he did not show that, previous to the accident or at the time thereof, there was any rule extant which might, if adopted by the defendant, have pre
I think that the plaintiff’s proof ‘did not meet the standard, and that the court, "Wilmot M. Smith, J., properly nonsuited the plaintiff.
J udgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.