4 S.D. 433 | S.D. | 1893
This case was decided at a former term, and appears in 2 S. D. 422, 50 N. W. 907. Upon petition of appellant, a rehearing was allowed, and it is now before us upon such reargument. The action was to recover for personal injury to respondent, a brakeman in the employ of appellant, the facts being fully stated in the former opinion. Appellant insists that the record shows the injury resulted from the negligence of the station agent, a coemploye with respondent, and not from the negligence of the appellant. The company having erected upon its right of way the derrick by which the injury was caused, it was charged with the general duty of seeing that it was properly taken care of and used, and properly secured, to avoid injury to others when not in use. Its duty in ■this respect, to the extent of avoiding liability in this case, under our statute, would pi obably be met by placing and keeping the same under the care of a competent person, with proper instructions as to his duty. Appellant contends that, as it will be presumed that the defendant had done its whole duty in the premises, it will be presumed, until the contrary appears, that it had placed the derrick under the charge of a competent person, properly instructed; so that the carelessness, if any, in allowing the arm of the derrick to swing round, and the chain and hook to hang down in dangerous nearness to the train upon which the plaintiff was at work, was the negligence of plaintiff’s fellow servant, and not the negligence of the company. We think the foundation and the occasion fpr such presumption are lacking here. The railroad company had erected on its right of way, and for use in connection with its railroad,
Appellant contends that it devolved upon plaintiff in the first instance, and as a part of his case, to show that defendant had not done this, and that, until he had so shown, he had made no case of negligence against the company. We do not think so. The evidence showed a clear case of negligence in allowing the derrick to be in a dangerous situation with reference to a passing train. It was the company’s derrick, and it was the company’s duty to take care of it. The want of such care constituted the negligence which caused the injury. It was presumptively the negligence of the company. Suppose the accident and injury to this plaintiff had been caused by a . defective bridge; must he be required, to entitle him to recover, to show, not only the defective and unsafe condition of the bridge as the cause of the accident, but to go further, and show • that the company had neglected to put the bridge in charge of -a competent person, and thus show the particular negligence of the company in that respect? The presumption would be no stronger that the company had done its duty in placing a competent man in charge of the derrick than it would be that it had done so in the case of the bridge. No doubt, in either case it could repel the charge of actionable negligence on its part, by showing that what appeared to be its negligence was really the negligence of a fellow servant of the plaintiff. Whether • any or what precautions had been taken by the company to protect its servant against injury by this derrick was peculiarly .within its own knowledge, and it was knowledge which the ser
Appellant, however, further contends that the record does show that this derrick was under the care of another servant of the company, presumably competent and properly instructed, to-wit, the station agent. Appellant says: “It appears that the person who erected the derrick did instruct the agent in regard to the use of the chain, and the fastening of it by means of a pin. * * * It further appears that the agent did occasionally fasten it when the derrick was so out of place. * * * We, therefore, say that it does appear that the derrick had been
But appellant goes further, and insists, that,.even without this or any evidence upon this particular question, the station agent must be presumed to be in charge of all the company’s property at the station, and, in support of this claim, cites