145 N.Y.S. 1029 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The plaintiff sustained severe and lasting personal injury on the 13th day of April, 19.08. ■ He attributes his injury exclusively to the negligence of the defendant. He asserts the defendant was his master. The physical cause of his injury was an electric shock of sufficient violence to throw him a distance of six or seven feet. The shock was caused by a defective electric light switch attached to a pole on the side of a railroad track. It was the duty of the plaintiff, as a car conductor, to use that switch to indicate, by an electric device, to his fellow-servants in charge of other cars coming from the opposite direction on a single-track street surface railway, that plaintiff’s car had the right of way. The trial court correctly declined to take from the jury the question of the negligence of plaintiff’s master. (Railroad Law [Gen. Laws, chap. 39; Laws of 1890, chap. 565], § 42a, as added by Laws of 1906, chap. 657; now Railroad Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 49; Laws of 1910, chap. 481], § 64.)
At‘the close of the entire case the defendant moved to dismiss upon stated grounds, but the court, after taking the matter under advisement, directed a verdict for the defendant upon the grounds, first, that the defendant ceased to be the plaintiff’s employer on the 31st day of May, 1907, and thereafter and at the time of the accident was not in control of or operating the railroad; and, secondly, that the plaintiff, by continuing to use the switch for a year or more after he knew he was likely to receive an electric shock and after he had repeatedly received such shocks, must be regarded as having assumed the risk. From the judgment entered accordingly the plaintiff appeals.
Upon the question of proper defendant:
The plaintiff began service with the defendant as a conductor in the fall of 1901. He was hired by Charles Singer, who was president of the New York and Stamford Railway Company. He received a badge bearing the name “New York & Stamford Ry. Co.” which he continued to wear until the time of the accident. The car. of which he was in charge bore the name “New York & Stamford.” His copy of the book of rules, issued to him by an official of the defendant and unrecalled at the time of the accident,
For the defendant, evidence was offered to show that the operation and control of the New York and Stamford Railway Company was taken over by the Connecticut Company by a contract, which the defendant calls a lease, alleged to have taken effect on the 31st day of May, 1907, although not attested until the 28th day of June, 1907, nor recorded until the 13th day of July, 1907. Upon its face the contract shows no consideration either for the making of the so-called lease on the part of the New York and Stamford Railway Company, or for the performance of the acts upon the part of the Connecticut Company. It recites that “ The Connecticut Company shall have a right to use the railroad of the New York and Stamford Railway Company within the State of New York, * * * and to demand and receive for its use and benefits all the toils (sic), income and profits to be derived from the operation of said railroad and railway,” but there is no provision for payment to the Connecticut Company for any services to be rendered. Out of the gross earnings it shall pay all the expenses of operating, all sums due as interest on the funded debt of the New York and Stamford Company, and shall pay over the bal
The Connecticut Company paid the taxes of the New York and Stamford Railway Company from May 31,1907, to November 1, 1908.' The New York and Stamford Railway Company “ took back ” the road in November, 1908, and has operated it ever since. In the office of the Secretary of State there is no record of the Connecticut Company’s having designated any person in this State upon whom process might be served. .
The badges, slips, etc., bearing the imprint of the New York and Stamford Railway Company, were changed to “Connecticut Company ” as soon as possible by the Connecticut Company.
From the general manager down there was no change in the officers or employees of the New York and Stamford Railway Company at the time or subsequent to the making of the alleged lease. The certificates of the respective companies attached to the instrument show that one John Gf. Parker was the secretary of each.
The instrument referred to spells nothing but agency, and agency without compensation. All the work is to be done by the agent, and when everything is done, and all debts and fixed charges paid, the balance shall go to the principal. The instrument contains no demising words. It transfers no interest in rolling stock or real estate. The Connecticut Company had the right to use the road and to collect fares for the benefit of the New York and Stamford Company. Control and operation of the road was not necessarily and certainly relinquished by the written instrument, and it and the other evidence adduced by defendant upon the issue of control, considered in connection with the plaintiff’s evidence, presented a question of fact for the jury. We know of no way that the contract relationship of master and servant can be created without the consent or assent of both parties, express or implied. A lawful relationship, once established, is presumed to continue until there is evidence of change, and no clandestine, unilateral manipulation can affect the relation. (Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co. v. Howard, 178 U. S. 153, 159, 161, 162, 163; Gordon v. Ashley, 191 N. Y. 186,193; Jones v. New York Central & H. R. R. R.
As to the question of assumption of risk:
Plaintiff testified that previously he had received shocks at this switch and had complained thereof to the adjusters at the office. He said at the office that it was dangerous to he turning it on and off. Sometimes they laughed it off as a joke, and at other times they said they would have it fixed, and that there would he a double line shortly, obviating the necessity of using the switch, and that until then they would have to do the best they could. They would send men down along the line to make repairs “and you would see them working on it the next time you came along.” He had received shocks before, but not very serious shocks. He had seen motormen shocked at this particular place. Six months before the accident he made a report concerning the condition of the switch. After that, until the accident, he did not receive any shocks. The shocks did not knock him down; he had never been knocked down before. They were serious enough to alarm him. He did not think he was running any risk at all; he did not think the shocks would be serious enough to do him any harm. He had not seen anything to make him believe that that condition .would injure anybody seriously. He never thought he was in danger in using the button that year.
Witness Charles Waterbury received a great many shocks from this switch before the 13th of April, 1908. He received about twenty or thirty shocks before that date. He made many complaints to the officials of the company at the office, and they promised that the matter would be attended to. He continued to use the button without knowing whether it had been repaired or not.
Witness William J. Preston, about a month or two before April thirteenth, received quite a few shocks and made complaint to the adjuster at the office. They said they would have it fixed.
Witness Charles F. Wager received several shocks at this switch prior to April, 1908. He complained to the inspector on the road. He told the inspectors it was “hot.”. They replied that all he got there would not harm him. If it was a wet day they would be sure to get something. He never considered this key a serious - matter. He did not know of anybody else who ever received a serious shock.
Witness Harry Ward received slight shocks, especially if the day was wet. He did not recall receiving any shocks shortly before the 13th of April,' 1908. He made no complaint. “ When you put your hand up to the button, it was just as if something hit your hand and knocked your hand back.”
Witness Harry Turner would get a shock—touched up a little — once in a while. When he got a shock it would make him jump, that was all; it would startle him.
Louis Flood, another witness, received shocks fifteen or twenty times. The shocks would shake him up a little. He made complaint at the office and was told it would be attended to right away.
We think it was for the jury to determine whether the plaintiff acted with reasonable prudence and discretion under all the. circumstances. The danger was not so obvious to a man unskilled in electricity, especially in view of the attitude of defendant after notice of the defect, charged as it was with an affirmative duty to furnish implements without defects. (Hawley v. Northern Central Railway Co., 82 N. Y. 370; Kain v. Smith, 89 id. 375, 385; Lynch v. American Linseed Co., 113 App. Div. 502, 505.)
The learned trial court erred in not sending the case to the jury, and the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jerks, P. J., Burr, Oarr and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.