65 F. 48 | 8th Cir. | 1894
This case comes on writ of error from the United States court in the Indian Territory. The plaintiff, Jo Jackson, who is the- defendant in error here, brought a suit against
“It is the duty of a railway company to furnish its employés with safe and suitable appliances to do the work they are employed to do, and if you believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant company failed to furnish sufficient light for the doing of that work in which the plaintiff was engaged with safety and security, or that the defendant failed to furnish safe premises where the work was to be done, and that the plaintiff was injured by reason of such failure on the part of the defendant either to furnish lights or safe premises, and would not have been injured but for such failure, and the plaintiff himself was free from negligence, you will find for the plaintiff, unless you find for the defendant under the instructions hereinafter given you.”
In obedience to this instruction, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, on which a final judgment was subsequently entered. To reverse that judgment the defendant company has sued out the present writ of error.
We have only to inquire and to determine whether, in view of the facts disclosed by the present record, the foregoing instruction was applicable to the case, and was properly given. It is doubtless the duty of a master, in very many cases, to exercise ordinary care in providing his servants with a reasonably safe place in which to discharge their several duties. When men are set to work in a building, or on a scaffolding or other structure, which has been provided by the employer for their use, it is the employer’s duty to exercise reasonable diligence in seeing that such building or other
Considering all of the circumstances under which the injuries complained of in the case at bar are said to have been sustained, we think that the case did not warrant an application of the doctrine of “safe place,” as that doctrine is ordinarily applied, and that the trial court erred in the instruction above quoted, in charging the jury, in substance, that the plaintiff might recover if the defendant failed to furnish safe premises where the work was to be done, and if the plaintiff was injured by reason of such failure to furnish safe premises. In our judgment, this portion of the charge made the defendant company responsible for an injury occasioned by an ordinary risk of the particular employment, which was clearly assumed by the employé. As we have heretofore stated, the plaintiff had been sent out in the nighttime, with a large gang of extra section men, to help tear up, remove, and relay a portion of a railroad track that was in imminent danger of being washed into the river by high water. The work on that occasion not only had to be done with great haste, but it was a kind of work which, if done with less haste and in the daytime, would naturally cause the right of way to become incumbered for the) time being by ties, rails, loose earth, and such other obstructions as are ordi
We are also of the opinion that, on the state of facts disclosed by this record, the plaintiff was not entitled to charge the defendant company with responsibility for the injury complained of on the ground that it had failed to furnish sufficient light for the doing of the work in which the plaintiff was engaged. If the light furnished was in fact insufficient to do the work in question with ordinary safety, that was a fact which was as well known to the plaintiff as it was to the defendant’s agent, whose duty it was to supply lamps on such occasions. It is also evident that the plaintiff and the other laborers, who were assisting him to carry away rails as the track was torn up, were better acquainted with the need of more lamps, and with the risks incident to insufficient light, at the particular place where they were working, than any other person or persons in the employ of the defendant company. In short, the defect complained of in the appliances furnished for doing the particular work was a patent and obvious defect, and the risks encountered in consequence of the alleged want of proper appliances for doing the work were better known to the plaintiff and to his immediate associates than to any one else. Moreover, as the work in hand was necessarily undertaken in the nighttime and, as it seems to have been a very dark and cloudy night, the plaintiff and the other members of the gang had every reason to believe when they engaged in the work that they would be hindered to some extent hv the darkness, and that a little more care would have to be exercised in carrying rails or other heavy burdens than if the work had been undertaken by daylight. For these reasons, and because the plaintiff continued at work with full knowledge of the situation, we think that he should be held to have voluntarily assumed whatever increased hazard was due to insufficient light. If the defendant company was guilty of culpable negli