Lead Opinion
Arthur Ingram, a fireman on a Boston & Maine switcher, was billed by a Rutland Railroad switcher in
1. Did the defendant owe Ingram the duty of active care?
2. Was the defendant negligent?
3. Did the рlaintiff sustain the burden of showing that Ingram was in the exercise of due care ?
All these questions, the defendant insists must, on the record now before us, be answered in the negative.
1. When the case was here before we held that Ingram was not a trespasser when killed. The dеfendant seeks to avoid this holding as to Ingram’s standing by the fact now shown by the record that the rights of the Boston & Maine in the yard of the Rut-land at Bellows Falls, were not general, as stated in the declaration, but limited, as shown by the proof. It now appears that the joint usе of the Bellows Falls yard only extended to certain tracks and purposes, and it is urged that this shows that Ingram was, when killed, wholly outside his rights in the yard as a Boston & Maine employee, and was either a trespasser, or, at most, a mere licensee, to whom the Rutland owed no duty of active care.
We are unable to accept this view. The trouble with it is just this: It appears by this record that all that part of the yard in any way involved in this case was subject to the joint use of these companies, so far as the purposes for which the Boston & Maine switcher and crew were then in the yard were concerned. The Boston & Maine engine crossed over into this yard for a legitimate purpose, was all the time where it had a right to be, and as long as its crew were engaged in their dutiеs there they were entitled to the protection which the law, under the arrangement, afforded them. The contrary is not claimed. So Ingram’s standing at the time of the accident is to be determined by what he did after the Boston & Maine switcher came’ to a stoр to allow the Rutland switcher to get out of the way.
We are not disposed to depart from the doctrine of this holding. We are not unmindful of the general rule that puts a servant outside a recovery from his master, where he has, when injured, left his working place and gone elsewhere on some errand of his own. In such a case the relation of master and servant is temporarily suspended and is not restored until the servant’s return. So, if Ingram’s conduct amounts to such a departure from the business of his employer, there can be no recovery here; during his absence from his post the defendant would not owe him the duty of active care, and no actionable negligence would be shown by this record. It is not always neсessary, however, to entitle a servant to recover against his master, that he should be at the moment of injury, actually at work in his proper place and in the business of the master. The law allows him some measure of latitude; and' while there is a sharp conflict in the cases as to the limits of this latitude, and some apply the general rule above referred to with great strictness, there is much to commend in the inclination manifested by some courts toward' a liberal regard for the just interests of the servant in such casеs. Southern Ry. Co. v. Bentley, (Ala.)
2. The yard was unlighted except as the lights at the milk station, the switch lights and the lanterns of the men lighted it. The evidence ivas such that the jury was warranted in finding that none of these lights were of any aid to Ingram as he was hurrying back to his engine. Indeed, it might well be thought that they were worse than no lights at all, so far as he was concerned. The Rutland engine was pushing an unlighted milk car up one of the tracks Ingram had to cross to get to his engine. The Rutland engine had a headlight on eaсh end of it, but this fact would be of smali service to one in Ingram’s position when called upon to judge the approach of the car; the engine was moving rapidly, — ten miles an hour — preparatory to kicking the car on out of the way; there was no man on the milk car to give warning; there was no light on it to show its exact location; the engine was working steam and making much noise. The conditions and operations were those usual in that yard, and it is altogether probable that they were familiar to Ingram. The rules of thе two railroads required nothing more in the way of precautions. But it cannot, be said that no inference of negligence can reasonably be drawn from these facts. We cannot accept the view that the rules, or the practice of that yаrd, or both together, made the question of the defendant’s negligence one for the court. If this method of handling cars was negligent, it was unjustifiable. Boos v. Minneapolis, St. P. & S. S. M. Ry. Co., (Minn.)
3. Did the evidence warrant a finding that Ingram was in the exercise of due сare? A¥e agree with the defendant that we approach this question unaided by any presumption in his favor. Shumm v. Rutland R. Co.,
Judgment affirmed,.
Rehearing
On Motion for Re-argument.
The defendant files a motion for re-argument based wholly upon the assumption that the foregoing opinion, in effect, overrules Shumm v. Rutland R. R. Co.,
That the case in hand is a close one was fully understood when the opinion was prepared. It was carefully considered and thoroughly discussed. As the result announced does not affect the doctrine of the Shumm case, a re-argument urging that it does would serve no useful purpose.
Rehearing denied.
