204 Mass. 141 | Mass. | 1910
The plaintiff’s intestate, James Flynn, was employed by the Standard Oil Company to weigh oil, or perform other light work as he might be directed. In the performance of his duties as weigher, he worked in a building used as a filling or shipping house, which is referred to in the exceptions as “ the platform room or covered platform.” In close proximity to this building, the door of which opened upon it, was a railroad track used to run tank cars to the works, where they were loaded or unloaded as the oil company might direct. Directly opposite to the covered platform was an open platform, upon which movable skids were placed extending across the track to the doorway of the building, affording when the track was not in use a convenient means of communication. Among other duties, the decedent usually removed and replaced the skids, whenever cars were to be run in or out of the yard. By some omission or oversight, the skids had not been removed on the day of the accident, before a train came in, made up of a shifting engine with “ about seven cars.” In coming in, the train broke apart, leaving two cars connected with the engine, while the remaining cars running on a down grade struck the skids with such force as to break and throw them behind the trucks to the ground. The evidence was conflicting, but the jury could have found, that the conductor, who stood on the tank car at the extreme rear, and saw the skids, upon ascertaining that they had been struck and that this part of the train had been stopped by the collision and by the setting of the brakes on the car, called to the decedent, who was in the covered platform, “ to come and pick up the skids.” It appears that the platform of the tank car when the car stopped was not only opposite to the doorway, but extended its entire width, leaving a space of about five inches between the wall and the car. A finding would have been warranted, that the only practicable method of quickly reaching the skids was to pass over the car to the further side of the-track, and the “outside ” platform. It was while Flynn was attempting to cross, and as he stepped on and took hold of the iron railing, that the engineer in obedience to a signal from the brakeman backed down to recouple the detached cars.
But the principal contentions of the defendant are, that Flynn, being either a volunteer or mere temporary servant of the defendant, assumed any risk arising from the negligence of his fellow servants, or that he was a trespasser or at most a licensee. If the call of the conductor “ to come and pick up the skids ” was a command which Flynn recognized as such and obeyed, they became fellow servants. It was, however, a question of fact under suitable instructions, whether there was a temporary change of employers by the voluntary submission of Flynn to the control of the defendant. Bowie v. Coffin Valve Co. 200 Mass. 571, 578. Cain v. Hugh Nawn Contracting Co. 202 Mass.
If, in response to the invitation and through no fault of his own while. there, he was injured by the negligence of the defendant’s servants, the defendant is responsible. Wagner v. Boston Elevated Railway, 188 Mass. 437, 439, and cases cited ; Robertson v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 190 Mass. 108.
We are accordingly of opinion that the case should have been submitted to the jury.
Exceptions sustained.