75 Md. 297 | Md. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought to recover for an injury suffered by the plaintiff, while acting as rear brakeman on a freight train of cars of the defendant, and which injury wag caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the defendant.
It was shown in proof that the plaintiff was in the service of the defendant in 1886, as rear brakeman or flagman, and that, on the night that the accident occurred, the train on which the plaintiff was employed was moving from Delmar, and was approaching Salisbury; that he was in the rear car with the conductor, in the act of cleaning one of his lamps, when the whistle sounded, and the conductor told him he had better go to his brakes;- — one of which was on the top of the car, and the other was on the platform at the end of the car; — and neither of these brakes could be reached except by going from the inside to the top of the car, and then to the one on the platform; that, in ascending the side of the car, where ladder strips were placed to get on top of the car, he was struck by the projecting roof of a freight shed erected on the platform of the
The plaintiff in his testimony referred to the rules of the defendant, furnished to the plaintiff and other employes, for their government in the performance of their duties; and identified the book of rules produced as that with which he had been furnished, and which rules were in force at the time the accident occurred.
Among the rules prescribed for the government of freight conductors, is No. 227, which declares: “They must station the brakemeu at their respective posts on 'their trains, and see that they keep their positions and use the brakes properly, particularly when descending heavy grades.” And among the rules prescribed for the government of brakemen on freight trains are these:
“244. They must not leave their brakes while the train is in motion, nor take any other position on the train-than that assigned them by the conductor.”.
“246. The post of the rear brakeman (or flagman) is on the'last car in the train, which he must not leave except to protect the train. He must he provided with and display the required signals on the rear of the train, and in case of detention or accident, must immediately go back, as per rules Nos. 93 and 95, without waiting for a signal from the engineman, or instruc
In the course of the trial two exceptions were taken by the ’ plaintiff, both from rulings upon questions as to the admissibility of parol evidence offered by him to show in what manner the rules recited had been construed and applied in practice by the employes of the defendant. The Court rejected the proffered evidence as being inadmissible to control the terms of the rules furnished the employes of the defendant for their government while on duty; and in these rulings we perceive no error.
There does not appear to be any ambiguity in the terms of these rules, such as would justify the admissibility of extrinsic evidence to show to what state of case they are applicable, or how they should be applied. They are intended as means to be enforced for the protection of the train, the public, and all those engaged in conducting the movement of the train; and therefore no lax or variable construction of such rules should be allowed. The plaintiff when he entered the service of the defendant, and accepted the book of rules prescribing his duties and the manner of performing them, obligated himself to observe and to conform to such rules, according to -the plain terms thereof, and not according to what may have been a customary practice among other employes, regardless of the express requirements of the rules. By the evidence offered and rejected, it was attempted to be shown that it was customary for the rear brakeman or flagman to ride inside of the rear car; and that since the accident a car or caboose is used by the defendant on this route, so constructed that if the brakeman or flagman should ride on top he would be unable to get to his brakes. This testimony
Judgment affirmed.