55 Vt. 84 | Vt. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff’s intestate, a locomotive fireman in the employment of the defendant was killed Dee. 10, 1878, while discharging his duties in such employment. This action is brought to recover damages sustained by the widow and next of kin from the death of the intestate. The declaration charges that, on thé above named day, the defendant was operating the Rutland Railroad as lessee ; that the intestate was in its service as locomotive fireman on its passenger trains passing over the railroad; that thereupon it became and was the duty of the defendant to keep and maintain a sufficient and safe road-bed and track, and to use due and proper skill and care in furnishing and maintaining a suitable and sufficient roadway for the passage of its passenger
The doctrine now established by the United States Supreme, Court, and by most of the courts of last resort in the several States, holds the master liable to his workman for injuries sustained from the negligent performance of duties which rest, by the relation upon the master, whether the master perform such duties personally or through an agent or servant. Says Mr. Wharton in his work on Agency, s. 232: “ It is important . . to remember that the master is liable, where the negligence*of the offending servant was as to a duty assumed by the master as to worlsing place and machinery. A master, as we have already seen, is bound when employing a servant to provide for the servant a safe working-place and machinery. It may be that the persons by whom buildings and machinery are constructed are servants of the common master, but this does not relieve him from his obligation to make
Says Mr. Pierce in his work on Railroads, p. 370 : “ The company, like any master, is under an obligation to its servants to use reasonable care to provide and maintain a safe road-bed and suitable machinery, engines, cars, and other appointments of the railroad, and is liable to them for injuries resulting from defects which it knew, or ought to have known,- and could have prevented by the exercise of such care ; and it is under the same duty and liability to maintain these instrumentalities in proper condition. The servant assumes the natural risks of his employment, but not those which the wrongful act of the employer has added.”
The same- doctrine was held by the United States Supreme Court in Hough v. Railway Co., 100 U. S. 213, in which Mr. Justice Harlan reviews the authorities. In a note the reporter has cited a long list of cases sustaining the doctrine. Holden v. Fitchburg R. R. Co., 129 Mass. 268, also found in 2 Am. & Eng. R. R. Cases, 94, is a recent case on this subject, in which the then Ch. J. Gray of Massachusetts, ably reviews the cases, and states the same doctrine. The editor of the latter report has in a note to this case collected a large number of American cases
Nor do we think that the evidence showed that the freshet which washed out the embankment was so extraordinary as to excuse the defendant from liability. It showed that the culvert was sufficient in capacity and construction, if it had not been for the improper construction of the stockade to have discharged all the water that flowed in the brook on that occasion. Under the evidence it was clearly the duty of the court to submit that question as it did to the determination of the jury. Hence, the defendant’s request asking the court to hold that the defendant was not liable on this account was properly refused.
The judgment of the County Court is affirmed.