7 Wash. 275 | Wash. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action for damages brought by the respondent, George A. Jennings, as plaintiff, against the Tacoma Railway and Motor Company, in the city of Tacoma.
Respondent, at the time of the accident which caused his injury, was working for appellant as a conductor. On the 12th day of November, 1891, while engaged in the duty of conductor on what is known as the “dummy” or “grip” car, he went into the power house of the company to push a trail car from the power house out and along the track which went through the doorway. This car, after being pushed out, was to be attached to the dummy car, and run along the line of the cable railway. There was no way to attach the power to the trail car to get it out of the power house, and it had to always be pushed out by hand. According to respondent’s testimony, the track outward was on a slightly upward incline, and it had to be pushed rapidly to force it far enough on the curved track to attach it to the dummy. The doorway was about eight feet one inch in width, and the ear which was pushed out was about seven and one-half feet in width, so that it would be seen that there was only about three and one-half inches on each side between the car and the walls of the doorway, or pier, which was about eight feet wide. There was .an open space under the track so that the car had to be pushed out by taking hold of the side of it, and a plank was run along the side, for the men to stand on while they
For the purpose of this case we need go no further than to examine the testimony of the respondent, for it is a well settled principle of law that negligence is a mixed question of law and fact. There are certain acts which the law declares to be negligent. These are questions of law for the court to pronounce upon. Whether the commission of these certain acts is proven, is a question of fact for the jury to determine; and the same thing may be said of failure to do certain things, or to perform certain duties which the law imposes. Taking the testimony of the respondent to be literally true, we fail to find anything that indicates negligence on the part of the defendant. The
It is claimed by the respondent that the rule that, where a servant enters upon employment, “he assumes the usual risk and perils of the service, ’ ’ as applied to the facts of this case, still gave the respondent the right to assume that the master had furnished him a safe and convenient place in which to perform the services required of him. That proposition is no doubt correct, but the assumption cannot be relied upon after actual knowledge to the contrary is brought home to the mind of the servant. The assumption will control only where the danger is not apparent. No sane man is expected to act on an assumption which he knows to be false. It is a man’s duty to exercise common sense when in the employment of a master, as well as any other time. The master has a right to rely upon the servant doing this. It is contended by the respondent that the company ought to have notified him of this danger. We think the company had a right to presume that no caution was necessary to a person of ordinary prudence and intelligence; that it is not a reasonable supposition that any man of ordinary size will attempt to force himself through a space three and one-half inches in width between a moving car and a brick wall. The company had a right to suppose that the smallest imaginable modicum of prudence would suggest to the man to let go when he came to the wall. If the space had been wider at the entrance and had narrowed as it progressed, or anything about it had been hidden or concealed, it would have been different, but such was not the case. It was in open daylight at noon time; it showed upon its face the utter folly of such an attempt.
The judgment will, therefore, be reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to grant the non-suit asked for by the appellant.
Anders, Hoyt, Scott and Stiles, JJ., concur.