98 Cal. 19 | Cal. | 1893
The action is brought by the widow and minor daughter of James Daves, deceased, to recover damages for loss suffered by his death through the alleged negligence of the defendants.
The case was tried by a jury, and a general verdict rendered against the defendants, the Southern Pacific Company and Bresnahan, for nine thousand dollars. It was also specially found by the jury that the defendant, Bresnahan, did not close the switch after he opened it to let the hand-car upon the sidetrack.
This appeal is taken by both defendants from the judgment and the order denying their motion for a new trial.
It appears that the corporate defendant owns and operates a line of railroad between the cities of Los Angeles and Colton, in this state; that the defendant, Bresnahan, was its section foreman, and, as such, had charge of a portion of its track, with power to employ and discharge the men employed to work under him; that James Daves, the deceased, was a section hand employed by Bresnahan to work under him, and was engaged in the performance of his duty as such at the time of the acci
Whether the switch was closed after it was opened by Bresnahan was a controverted point at the trial and was submitted specially to the jury. The jury found that he did not close the switch, and as there is evidence to support the verdict, it follows that the accident was caused by the negligence of Bresnalian, and the verdict against him cannot be disturbed.
As to whether the verdict will be permitted to stand as to the defendant corporation depends upon whether Bresnahan and Daves were fellow-servants within the meaning of section 1970 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “An employer is not bound to indemnify his employee for losses suffered by the latter in consequence of the ordinary risks of the business in which he is employed, nor in consequence of the negligence of another person employed by the same employer in the same general business, unless he has neglected to use ordinary care in the selection of the culpable employee.” This section was construed by this court in Collier v. Sleinhart, 51 Cal. 116, and in McLean v. Blue Point Gravel Min. Co51 Cal. 255. In the latter case it appears that the defendant was engaged in blasting rock on its mine. Plaintiff was in its employ as a workman, and one Kegan was its “ foreman of all work,” with authority to employ and discharge the men working under him. Plaintiff was injured while at work by being struck with a rock thrown from a blast, through Kegan’s negligence in failing to notify him that the blast was to be fired. The court, iu the application of this section to these facts, say: “ The iuj ury to
In Congrave v. S. P. P. R. Co., 88 Cal. 360, it was said by Justice McFarland, that section 1970 “not only restates the rule first established by judicial decision as to injury received through the negligence of a fellow-servant, but it clears away to a great extent the difficulties which may have existed as to the meaning of ‘fellow-servants.’ It declares them to be those employed ‘in the same general business.’” And in citing with approval McLean v. Blue Point Gravel Min. Ca., 51 Cal. 255, he uses the following language: “ It is clear that in deciding this case the court determined that the code swept away the distinctions which appear in some of the ‘adjudged cases’ on the subject of fellow-servants. Collier v.. Steinhart, 51 Cal. 116, referred to in the opinion, is still stronger to the point decided. Both of these cases were approved in McDonald v. Hazeltine, 53 Cal. 35, which was also a case where an employee was injured
In the Fagundes Case, just cited, plaintiff’s intestate was a laborer employed by the defendant to work on its track. The offending servants were, respectively, the conductor of a train and a track-walker, whose duty it was “to see that the track was clear of obstructions and to signal when they existed.” The deceased lost his life through the track-walker’s negligent interference with a switch, and the conductor’s negligence “in not being sufficiently on the alert to prevent” such interference. In that case the court held that as “there is nothing in the evidence tending to show any negligence on the part of the defendant in the selection of the employees whose carelessness caused the casualty,” it could not be held responsible.
The principle declared in the section of the code referred to, and upon which the decisions in the foregoing cases rested, was settled by the highest judicial authority in this country long before the adoption of the code; but the remarkable contrariety of judicial decisions upon the subject in other states has arisen out of the great difficulty met with in the application of it to the facts of the particular case to be decided. But in the consideration and application of this principle to the case before us, we do not propose to enter into a discussion of the relation which the section foreman of a railroad corporation sustains toward his employer with respect to the duties pertaining to his employment, except in so far as the subject of such relation is necessary to be considered in connection with the character of the particular act itself by which the accident was caused, for the purpose of determining whether such act was a personal duty which the defendant corporation owed to the deceased as its employee,
The duties which a railroad corporation owes to its servants, and which it is required to" perform, are to furnish suitable machinery and appliances by which the service is to be performed, and to keep them in repair and order; to exercise ordinary care in the selection and retention of sufficient and competent servants to properly conduct the business in which the servant is employed, and to make such provisions for the safety of employees as will reasonably protect them against fclie, dangers incident to their employment. The performance of these duties cannot be shifted by it to a servant so as to avoid responsibility for injury caused to another servant by its omission; nor is their negligent performance one of the ordinary risks of the service impliedly assumed by the employee by his contract of employment.
Was then the act or omission which caused the injury a personal duty which the defendant corporation owed to the deceased while he was engaged in the performance of his duties as its employee? If it was, and the deceased was not at. fault, then the corporate defendant is liable, otherwise not.
It appears that Bresnahan, through whose negligence it is clear that Daves was killed, was the section foreman of the defendant corporation, and, as such, had charge of' about eight miles of its track, including that portion of it where the accident occurred. It was his duty to keep the track and switches in repair and order, and free from obstructions, so as to practically insure the safety of trains passing over it. He had undisputed
It is not claimed that the corporation did not exercise ordinary care in the selection of Bresnahan as foreman, or that the switch, which he negligently left open, and by which the loss was suffered, was unsuitable or defective. But it is insisted that the corporate defendant violated a duty which it owed to Daves by not providing him with a reasonably safe place to perform his work. That the place was not safe because “a train was coming when the switch was open,” in consequence of which he lost his life.
The place, as we have seen, where the accident occurred, was the side-track on which the hand-car had been run from the main track to avoid the passenger train, then almost due, and in sight. The place was, of itselfj in the first instance, a reasonably safe one, and was resorted to, under the circumstances, for that very reason. The track and switches on Bresnahan’s section, in so far as anything appears to the contrary, were in good condition, and so was the hand-car, with the exception of some disarrangement in the brake, which, however, had nothing to do with the injury. The servants were sufficient in number and competent for the purposes of the employment. It is plain, therefore, that the death of Daves was not caused by the violation of any duty which the master owed to him, but by the negligent act of Bresnahan, who with respect to the performance- of that particular act, was the fellow-servant of Daves. If a brakemau or trainman, who it appears were intrusted with keys to the switch, or one of the section men had been guilty of the negligent act complained of, we do not think that it would be seriously contended here that such act was the act of the master; and such would undoubtedly be the case if a switchman had been regularly employed to attend that switch, and he negligently performed the act referred to instead of Bresnahan; for a switchman in using and operating a switch is
From these views, it is clear that the negligence of Bresnahan in leaving the switch open in the manner and with the unfortunate result indicated, was, notwithstanding his superior rank, the negligence of a fellow-servant within the meaning of section 1970 of the Civil Code, therefore a risk impliedly assumed by Daves when he took the employment, for which the corporate defendant cannot be held responsible.
As this disposes of the controlling question in the case, the others discussed in relation to the instructions are not necessary to be considered.
Let the judgment and order be affirmed as to the defendant
De Haven, J., McFarland, J., Harrison, J., Gaeoutte, J., Paterson, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.