89 N.J.L. 629 | N.J. | 1916
The opinion of the court- was delivered by
This action wás instituted against the Erie Railroad Company and the Wells-Fargo & Company to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate. The liability of the Wells-Fargo & Company is rested on the federal statute entitled “An act relating to the liability of common carriers to their employes in certain cases,” approved April 22d, 1908, and that of the railroad company on the negligent operation of one of its engines. The trial court di-i rected a nonsuit as to each defendant from which the plaintiff appeals. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the following facts were established: The Wells-Fargo & Company was engaged in what is usually called an express business, receiving, transporting and delivering articles of merchandise for hire, and in conducting this business used, among others, the railway facilities of the defendant company, and employed a number of persons, of whom the deceased was one, to load and unload the merchandise at the railroad company’s terminal in Jersey City, and in doing this it was necessary to use
In either case the track must have been very near the edge
The law is well settled in this, state that where a person places himself so near the edge of a railroad platform as to be within, the line of the ordinary overhang of a properly-constructed platform and engine he contributes to the'injury, and the company is not liable for the injuries he may suffea’ from such negligent exposure to danger. Dotson v. Erie Railroad Co., 68 N. J. L. 679. In this case we have this condition: The deceased was employed in a terminal station, where he must have known from ordinary observation that engines were passing constantly along the station platform; that they were being run both forward and backward,' and that they overlapped the platform in an ordinary manner, still, with this knowledge, he drew the truck so near* the edge of the platform as .to be within the range of the overlap. If he had been walking along the platform with his back to the engine, so near the edge as to have been struck by the overlap, the case would be precisely that shown in Dotson v. Erie Railroad Co., supra, in which this court held that plaintiff could not recover, and clearly, the rule is not affected because the deceased, instead of standing in a place which common knowledge teaches is dangerous, places a truck which he is drawing in a like position, and which if struck by a passing train will probably injure him. The negligence of the defendant’s servant does not excuse the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. • .
The judgment appealed from is affirmed, with costs.
For reversal—Mjnturn, Kalisch, Gardner, JJ. 3.