65 N.J.L. 27 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This' was an action to recover damages for injuries sustained by the pLaintiff at the crossing of Mechanic street over the defendant's railroad. In July, 1898, the plaintiff, driving a team, was making a delivery of feed for his employer. In doing this, he had occasion to cross-the tracks of the company at the intersection of Locust and. Mechanic streets. The company had erected gates for the safety of persons having occasion to use the highway in crossing the trades of its railroad. When the plaintiff approached the crossing the gates were down, and when he drove up the-gates were hoisted by a man whom the plaintiff supposed had charge of the gates. The plaintiff then drove on, and before-he got across the tracks the man who was working the gates lowered them and struck him and injured him. The plaintiff had a verdict on which this rule to show cause was granted.
The evidence shows that the person who let down the gates-
Perrine testifies that he neither authorized nor requested Boggs to raise the gates, and the first knowledge he had of the gates being raised was when he heard the crack of the gates breaking. Boggs says he was not requested by Perrine to raise the gates; he says, “Perrine, the gate tender, was behind the tool-house, and I thought, to accommodate him and not to call him, I would raise the gates.” Boggs, in raising the .•gates, was either a trespasser or an interloper. Can the railroad company be held liable for his unauthorized act?
In refusing a motion to nonsuit the learned judge said: ■“Where it is in proof that the appliance of the railroad company guarding a public highway was lowered, that, standing-alone, raises an inference that it was lowered by the servant of the railroad company. Of course, that is a rebuttable inference.” In his instructions to the jury the learned judge said: “The points upon which the plaintiff must satisfy you, in order to recover, are these: That these gates were raised without any invitation by the plaintiff; that he did not ask for them to be raised, and that they were raised by some per•son who was there operating the gates for the company, not
The gravamen of'this suit is negligence on the part of the defendant from which damages resulted, and the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show negligence on the part of the defendant or of its servants. There is no question but what the company would be responsible for the mode in which the gates were operated by the gateman or its servants. Boggs was not in "the employ of the company; it had neither given him authority to do this act, nor had the company done anything to give him the appearance of authority to work the gates. He was, so far as the company was concerned, either a stranger or a trespasser.
Cases which decide that a principal is responsible for the act of a stranger, where his servant employs some third person to perform an act within the scope of a servant’s employment and injury results to another, are inapplicable to this ease. Simons v. Monier, 29 Barb. 419; Althorf v. Wolfe, 22 N. Y. 355; Wood Mast. & S., p. 588. Perrine, the company’s gateman, neither employed Boggs nor knew that he was about to meddle with the gates. In Smith v. N. Y., S. & W. R. R. Co., 17 Vroom 7, 12, the company left a loaded ear coupled with two empty cars standing on a switch which inclined towards their main track,' the same being secured by their brakes and a railroad tie placed under
A duty rested on the railroad company in this instance to protect persons using the highway from injury from passing trains. That duty had been performed by the gate-man in turning down the gates. It is also conceded that, when danger from an approaching train had passed, it was
The rule to show cause should be made absolute.