162 Mass. 549 | Mass. | 1895
The plaintiff, as next of kin, seeks to recover damages under the employers’ liability act, St. 1887, c. 270, for the death of her son, John A. Morris, of whose estate she has been appointed administratrix.
To maintain an action under this statute it is necessary to prove that the employee was in the exercise of due care. He was a brakeman on a freight train of the defendant, and was run over and killed at about four o’clock in the morning of the 9th of March, 1892, by a part of the train on which he was
If we assume in favor of the plaintiff that the separation of the parts of the train was caused by the negligence of the engineers, we find no evidence of due care on the part of Morris. His position immediately before the accident was one calling for great care. He started with his lantern on a dark and foggy night, along the top of a moving train of freight cars, to see if at any point the train had broken apart. As he approached the rear end of each car, he had no means of judging, except as he could see, whether the next car was connected with the one on which he was walking, or was following it at a distance behind. We have nothing but conjecture to guide us in trying to determine what his conduct was from the time he left the engine until he was run over. Perhaps it is a probable inference that he walked or fell off from the end of the last car of the forward part of the train; but there is no ground whatever for any inference other than mere conjecture in regard to the particulars of his conduct immediately before the accident. It would seem that if he had been going carefully, looking out to see whether there was a car behind attached to that on which he was walking, he would not have fallen from the rear of the for
The case differs from those in which the plaintiff is shown to have been in the performance of his duty a short time before the accident, under circumstances which did not call for any positive act of care in reference to the force which caused the accident. Maguire v. Fitchburg Railroad, 146 Mass. 379. Maher v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 158 Mass. 36. In Thyng v. Fitchburg Railroad, 156 Mass. 13, at the moment when the train broke apart the plaintiff was in the performance of his duty at the precise point where it separated, and he had no occasion to take precautions against a danger which he had no reason to anticipate.
Exceptions. overruled.