93 Mich. 414 | Mich. | 1892
This case was in this Court on appeal from the order of the court below sustaining a demurrer to the declaration, and is reported in 83 Mich. 281. It was there said:
“If it is true that the plaintiff, while acting under the foreman or boss, ivas ordered by him to pull the coupling-pin and jump across to the other car, and, without any notice to the plaintiff, the foreman let off the brake, which suddenly accelerated the speed of the car and widened the distance which plaintiff was to jump, and the plaintiff had no knowledge or information that the brake was to be let off, and by that means the plaintiff was injured, without any fault or negligence on his part, he certainly would have the right to recover. These are questions for the jury.”
On the trial the defendant contended, and contends here, that there is a variance between the proofs and the declaration, and that the court below should have directed the verdict in favor of the defendant for that reason. This claim is based upon thé proposition that plaintiff’s proofs tended to show that the duties pertaining to a brakeman had nothing to do with his injuries, which, if they resulted as claimed, were owing to a subsequent and distinct order, given after the duties of brakeman were discharged, while the allegation in the declaration is that the plaintiff, being a common laborer, whose duty it was to shovel gravel, was sent to perform the duties of a brakeman, and pull a pin between two cars, and assist in separating them, and to jump from one car to another,, the distance between which was rapidly increasing by reason of the letting off of the brake by the foreman without plaintiff’s knowledge'; the real point of the claim being that the plaintiff had safely performed the work of pulling the pin, at which time his duties as brakeman ended, ■and when he jumped his duties as a common laborer had commenced. It must be confessed that this reasoning is altogether too subtle to have much weight. It is asking the court to determine as matter of law upon the facts found that up to the instant the pin was pulled plaintiff was acting in the capacity of brakeman, when at that identical moment that duty ceased, and his duty as a common laborer commenced, so that as a brakeman he pulled the pin, but in the act of jumping he was a loader of gravel.
The plain facts are that, defendant’s foreman, Moleski, had full charge of this gravel train, and complete control over every one employed working under him. He had
It is also contended that Moleski, in directing the plaintiff to make the jump by which he was injured, was a fellow-servant. This question was settled in Harrison v. Railroad Co., 79 Mich. 409, and we must hold Moleski as standing in the place of the master, and not as a fellow-servant.
Complaint is made of the ruling of the trial judge while plaintiff was upon the witness-stand. He had been examined through an interpreter up to the noon recess of the court, and had been questioned relative to the order given him by Moleski to pull the pin and jump from one caito another, and had testified that the brake was open before he pulled the pin or was ordered to jump, and which state of facts, it is claimed, he had testified to on
These are the principal objections argued orally before this Court. An examination of the brief of defendant's counsel shows several other objections which are argued there, all of which have been carefully examined, so that we do not think it necessary to speak of them here; and they must be overruled in view of the answers returned by the jury to the special questions propounded ‘ by defendant's counsel, as follows:
“1. Was the brake on the empty cars open before plaintiff attempted to jump?
Was the danger of plaintiff's attempting to jump from ■one car to the other such as threatened immediate injury when he started to jump?
“ 3. Was the danger of jumping from one car to the other at the time in question plain to be seen?
“4. Was the danger of being injured by attempting to jump as plain to be seen by Erickson, the plaintiff, as it was by Moleski?
“ 5. Could the danger of jumping be plainly seen by Andrew Erickson at the time he attempted to jump?”
These questions were all answered in the negative,' and 'we think determined the question that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence, as claimed.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.