Jerry Ackley appeals from the district court’s order denying his motion for a new trial after a jury verdict for the defendant railroad. Ackley attacks the court’s jury instructions regarding contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and an employer’s duty under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60 (1982) (FELA), to provide a reasonably safe place to work. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
Facts
On November 30, 1982, Ackley was injured on the job at Chicago and North Western Railroad (Railroad) as he was winterizing windows at the roundhouse in Huron, South Dakota. Ackley and a co-worker, Dean Remington, had placed a scaffold between beams approximately twenty feet above ground in order to reach the windows. The men used a ladder that was actually the top portion of a straight, aluminum extension ladder to reach the scaffold. This section of the extension ladder was not equipped with rubberized safety shoes. Railroad safety rules require straight ladders to be equipped with safety shoes. Ackley’s foreman King knew of this rule yet did not object to the use of the ladder. The bottom portion of the ladder was never located, and there is no evidence indicating when or by whom the bottom portion was removed. Ackley testified that he had used the ladder on numerous occasions and there were no other ladders available for the job except two that were too short to reach the scaffold. Remington testified that he too had used the ladder in other jobs at the roundhouse.
On the day of the accident, Ackley set the ladder upright on the concrete floor and climbed up to the scaffold. Remington held the ladder as Ackley climbed. A rope was attached to the top of the ladder, but Ackley did not lash the ladder to a nearby pipe despite a railroad rule requiring straight ladders to be lashed under certain conditions. 1 The men used the rope to raise supplies and tools to the scaffold. Ackley stepped from the ladder to the scaffold and began working on the windows. Remington then left the room to locate more supplies. In need of more plywood for the job, Ackley climbed down the ladder a few moments later with no one holding it from the bottom. The ladder slipped, and Ackley fell to the concrete floor, sustaining back, hip, and hand injuries.
Ackley sued the Railroad under the FELA, alleging negligence in furnishing unsafe working conditions and equipment that caused his injuries. The Railroad denied any negligence and claimed that Ackley’s contributory negligence caused the accident and the injuries. In a general verdict, the jury found for the defendant, and the court 2 overruled Ackley’s motion for a new trial. He now appeals.
Discussion
Ackley first argues that the court erred in instructing the jury regarding contributory negligence 3 and assumption of risk. We need not consider this claim because, as the Railroad correctly points out, a general verdict entered for the defendant forecloses the possibility that the jury found contributory negligence on Ackley’s part. Any contributory negligence would mitigate, not eliminate, Ackley’s damages. Furthermore, the jury was told that assumption of risk does not bar a plaintiff’s recovery under the FELA. Under these circumstances, the jury verdict must be *266 read as finding no negligence on behalf of the Railroad.
We therefore examine solely Ackley’s claim that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury regarding the Railroad’s duties under the FELA. Ackley maintains that Instruction XVI prejudicially diminished the duty of care that the Railroad owes to its employees under the FELA. Instruction XVI stated: “The Defendant has a right to assume that its employees will exercise reasonable care for their own safety and that they will not disobey safety rules and practices.” Such a general instruction appears innocuous on its face; however, in a FELA action involving the factual claims made here, we find prejudicial error in the instruction.
In
Rogers v. Missouri Pac. R.R.,
The law [FELA] was enacted because the Congress was dissatisfied with the common-law duty of the master to his servant. The statute supplants that duty with the far more drastic duty of paying damages for injury or death at work due in whole or in part to the employer’s negligence. The employer is stripped of his common-law defenses and for practical purposes the inquiry in these cases today rarely presents more than the single question whether negligence of the employer played any part, however small, in the injury or death which is the subject of the suit. The burden of the employee is met, and the obligation of the employer to pay damages arises, when there is proof, even though entirely circumstantial, from which the jury may with reason make that inference. 4
Congress intended the FELA to be a broad, remedial statute, and courts have adopted a standard of liberal construction to facilitate Congress’ objectives.
Urie v. Thompson,
*267
An employer’s duty of care in a FELA action turns in a general sense on the reasonable foreseeability of harm.
Gallick v. Baltimore & O. R.R.,
The Supreme Court has emphasized the jury’s role in determining whether an employer has breached its duties under the FELA.
Rogers,
There is no question that an employee in a FELA action has a duty to use reasonable care in the workplace.
Kurn v. Stanfield,
The right to assume that others will exercise ordinary care derives from the corresponding duty of due care imposed by the law on every person. W. Prosser & W. Keeton, supra, § 1, ch. 1, at 4. It is often said that one may assume that others will act lawfully and carefully, and we accept this as a general principle. But the right to assume another’s lawful or careful behavior sometimes reflects neither reality nor the facts in a case:
As a broad generalization, people probably do obey the law, so that unlawful conduct is more or less deviational and unusual. In many situations, therefore, the assumption mentioned no more than reflects the real factual probabilities as to what another person’s conduct will be. If the assumption is made only in cases where it reflects the facts, it is useful and proper. But in this connection, two things must be noted. The first is that such an assumption does not always correspond to the facts. It does not in situations where a law is generally disobeyed. It does not where the facts in a specific case would show to a reasonable person in the actor’s position that another person will probably disobey the law this time. * * * The second thing to be noted is that the assumption has often been applied rather mechanically, without any real regard to the factual probabilities of the situation. Perhaps the most significant trend that has taken place in this particular field, in *268 recent years, has been the increasing liberalization in allowing the wrongs of other people to be regarded as foreseeable where the facts warrant that conclusion if they are looked at naturally and not through the lens of some artificial archaic notion.
3 F. Harper, F. James Jr. & O. Gray,
The Law of Torts,
§ 16.12, at 495-96 (2d ed. 1986) (footnotes omitted) (emphasis supplied);
see also
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 302A and comment c (1965). As the risk of harm becomes more foreseeable, the duty to foresee that risk increases and the right to assume due care correspondingly decreases. What the Railroad is entitled to assume about its employees’ behavior, therefore, bears directly on the question of its own duties.
See Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. v. Seamas,
Instruction XVI is particularly prejudicial under the facts of this case because it negates the Railroad’s duty reasonably to foresee that Ackley would perform his tasks under unsafe conditions.
8
This is graphically demonstrated in the present case because the instruction charges that the Railroad has the right to assume that Ackley would not violate safety rules. We have held that a railroad has the duty to promulgate and enforce safety rules, and evidence of its failure to do so may be considered by the jury in assessing the employer’s negligence in a FELA action.
Ybarra v. Burlington N, Inc.,
The record reveals that the ladder Ackley used was furnished by the Railroad and was the only ladder available that was long enough to reach the scaffold. Ackley’s supervisor knew of the condition of the ladder and knew Ackley and others had been using it but took no steps to procure another, safe ladder, nor did he instruct Ackley or others to refrain from using the ladder. The Railroad cannot claim a right to assume Ackley’s safe behavior by closing its eyes to the condition of the ladder and to its knowledge that Ackley and others were using it. Despite its awareness of the situation, the Railroad did nothing to remedy a potentially unsafe working condition. Given these facts, we conclude that *269 the Railroad could reasonably foresee that Ackley would use the ladder in its unsafe condition.
An employer sued under the FELA may not assume away its nondelegable duties. The principles of the FELA must be expressed in instructions setting out the parties’ respective duties without reference to any right to assume certain behavior. 9 Instruction XVI reflects neither the law nor the facts in this action. Because the instruction prejudicially diminished the Railroad’s foreseeable duty under the statute, we reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the district court for a new trial.
Notes
. There was a dispute whether the ladder was a "straight ladder" requiring safety shoes or lashing.
. The Honorable Andrew W. Bogue, United States District Court for the District of South Dakota, presiding.
. The court instructed that contributory negligence is not a complete bar to recovery under the FELA but that a finding of some negligence on Ackley’s part would mitigate any damages he might recover.
. Under the FELA, Congress has created a statutory means for employees in certain industries, most notably the railroad industry, to obtain relief for injuries caused by their employers' negligence. In his concurrence in
Witkerson v. McCarthy,
The Federal Employers’ Liability Act was designed to put on the railroad industry some of the cost for the legs, eyes, arms, and lives which it consumed in its operations. Not all these costs were imposed, for the Act did not make the employer an insurer. The liability which it imposed was the liability for negligence. * * * The purpose of the Act was to change [an employee’s] strict rule of liability, to lift from employees the "prodigious burden" of personal injuries which [the] system had placed upon them, and to relieve men “who by the exigencies and necessities of life are bound to labor" from the risks and hazards that could be avoided or lessened "by the exercise of proper care on the part of the employer in providing safe and proper machinery and equipment with which the employee does his work.”
. Although specific standards of care are not stated in the statute, certain employer duties have become integral parts of the FELA.
Ragsdell v. Southern Pac. Transp.,
. Heightened standards of care are common in the law. They may arise out of a contract, express or implied, from a special relationship between the parties, or because the defendant is in the position to prevent or lessen the harm. W. Prosser & W. Keeton, The Law of Torts, § 33, ch. 5, at 201-03 (5th ed. 1984). Examples of these special duties can be found in the relationship between carrier and passenger, innkeeper and guest, invitor and business invitee, landlord and tenant, school and pupil, and employer and employee. They may also result from a legislative determination that certain parties are in the best position to bear the risk of harm.
. In
Seamas,
the trial court instructed the jury that an
employee,
when given either an express or implied order by a foreman, “has the right to assume in the absence of warning or notice to the contrary, that he would not thereby be subjected to injury.”
. Neither party has directed us to a case where a court in a FELA case has approved an instruction like Instruction XVI, nor have we located such precedent. The Second Circuit found in
Renaldi v. New York, N.H. & H. R.R.,
. Our holding in no way vitiates an employee’s general duty of reasonable care in the workplace, nor does it affect an employer’s right to show that the employee's negligence contributed to the injury or that it was the sole cause of the injury.
