32 Iowa 357 | Iowa | 1871
I. The point first presented, and mainly insisted upon by appellant, is, that the verdict is not supported by the evidence.
There is but little conflict in the testimony bearing upon the principal points in the case. In discussing the question under consideration we shall regard every material fact affecting the liability of defendant, to which the testimony is directed, as proved. Thus considered, the testimony establishes the following facts :
In December, 1868, Olaus Kroy was head brakeman on a freight train of defendant, in which employment he had been engaged three or four months. His position was in the forward cars, and sometimes, in extremely cold weather, he occupied the engine. Upon the night of the accident, as the westward bound train, consisting of twenty cars, with a caboose on the rear end, approached within a mile and a half of Atalissa station, at the rate of fourteen miles an hour, the deceased, who was riding on the engine, asked the engineer if he should pull the pin attaching the locomotive to the train. The engineer said he thought not; deceased replied that if they did not they would be late getting home; the engineer said that they had better be late getting home than to hinder the passenger train any. After a short time deceased again asked if he should not pull the pin. The engineer directed him to wait till they got around in full view of the station. When the
The engineer refused to permit Kroy to uncouple the
These are the material facts established by the evidence.
At common law, the master is liable to his servant for injuries resulting from his neglect to use ordinary care and diligence to provide sound and safe materials and accommodations, and to employ servants of sufficient care and skill to make it probable that they-will not, by the lack of those qualities, cause injury to each other. But a master is not liable to his servant for the negligence of a fellow servant, while engaged in the same common employment, unless he has been negligent in his selection of the servant in fault, or in retaining him after notice of the incompetency. Sherm. and Bedf. on Negligence, §§ 86, 90, 92, and cases cited. This rule of the common law was modified by section T, chapter 169, Laws Ninth General Assembly, which provides: “ Every railroad compand shall be liable for all damages sustained by any person, including employees of the company, in consequence of any neglect of the agents or by any mismanagement of the engineers or other employees of the corporation to any person sustaining such damage.” This statute received judicial construction in the case of Hunt v. Chicago and North Western R. Co., 26 Iowa, 363, in which it was held that the statute imposes the same liability upon a railroad company for injuries to a servant, resulting from the negli
Another important modification of the liability of a master for an injury to an employee, which is sustained by an almost unbroken current of authority in this country and in England, is, that if a servant knows that a fellow servant is habitually negligent, or that the materials with which he works are defective, and continues his work without objecting, and without being induced by his master to believe that a change will be made, he is deemed to have assumed the risk of such defects. This rule finds its support in the reason that the continuance of the servant in the employment of his master is purely voluntary, and if he so continues without objection, with knowledge of defects in machinery or the incompetency of his co-employees, he is presumed to have waived the right to insist upon indemnity for injuries resulting from such incompetency and defects. Sherm. and Eedf. on Negligence, § 91, and cases cited.
It is scarcely necessary to allude to the elemental doctrine that one cannot recover for an injury which is the proximate result of his own failure to exercise ordinary care. An application of these principles to the facts of the case at bar will, we think, render it apparent that they do not justify the verdict and judgment rendered in the court below. The deceased had been employed upon this train for three or four months, during which time the almost unvarying habit had been to detach the locomotive from the train, at Atalissa station, while in motion. And,
“ But the company would not be liable even in any such case, providing the agent or' employee, with a 'full knowledge of such omission of duty or neglect on the part of the company, waive the matter by continuing in the service of the company, without taking the precaution, or using his exertions, to have the omission or difficulty remedied. Eor if the agent or employee of the company
And in the same ease it is declared to be “ an old and settled rule of the common law, that no one can maintain an action for a wrong where he has consented or contributed to the act which has occasioned it.”
Substantially the same principle is recognized by this court in Greenleaf, admr., v. Illinois Central R. R. Co., 29 Iowa, 14, Western Jurist, vol. 4, p. 284, in which Weight, J., delivering, the opinion of the court, says: “ Then, too, if thus cold, it was no part of his duty to mhintemly undertake to make the switch. In doing so he would be guilty of such negligence or want of care as, ¡prima facie, would defeat a recovery; and especially so in view of the snow and ice on the car.” It does not appear but that this train was properly equipped and furnished with a suitable number of skillful and competent trainmen. Nor does it appear but that all were at their proper places and engaged in the discharge of their appropriate duties. The only negligent act complained of is the permitting of the brakeman to undertake to uncouple the train while the same was in motion.
Now, if this act be conceded to be negligent, the facts clearly show that the custom was established by the cooperation and consent of the deceased, for his own convenience as well as that of the other train men.
Having lent his aid to establish such a course of business, and afterward, without complaint or protest, continued in the defendant’s employ, he must be presumed to have taken upon himself all the risks incident to the conduct of the business in the manner which he assisted to establish. Our attention has been directed to no adjudication in which a recovery has been had under circumstances similar to those of this case. The cases cited by appellee do not
So far is this ease from sustaining the plaintiff’s right of action, that it very strongly supports the view which we. have endeavored to maintain in this opinion. In the case of the Cleveland and Columbus and Cincinnati Railroad Company v. Keay, the plaintiff, a brakeman, was injured, as he proved, through the carelessness and negligence of the conductor, to whose order, by the rules and regulations of the company, he was subject. No contributory negligence was attributed to plaintiff. The only question presented was, whether the company was liable for the negligence of the conductor. The company was held so liable. It is needless to say that that determination does not bear upon the principal question here involved. Our attention is directed to section 96 of Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, in which the authors, commenting on the doctrine of waiver, say: “ It must be admitted that this doctrine has been sometimes pushed too far, and the mere continuance of a servant in his work has been treated as conclusive evidence of his having waived objections to defects in his associates or his materials.” And fbese rulings are characterized as “unjust, because a servant has the same right to complete his contract in reliance upon its original terms that any one else has. It is to be observed that the doctrine here condemned differs essentially from that maintained in the opinion. If a servant, by a mere continuance in the employment of his master, should be held to have conohiswely waived objections to defects in
In reaching this conclusion we do not ignore the provisions of the statute.
If the deceased had not himself contributed to the establisMng of the. custom, and remained in defendant’s employ with knowledge of its existence without complaint or protest, and voluntarily taken upon himself the particular act wMch occasioned his death, our conclusion would be different.
II. The instructions of the court need not be considered in detail. Except in so far as they fail to advise the jury of the effect of Kroy’s contributing to establish the custom of uncoupling the train wMle in motion, and of Ms continuing in the employ of the company for several months, with knowledge of this custom, yielding to its requirements without protest or dissent, they seem to us to present a fair exposition of the law.
For the reasons before assigned the court erred, in our opinion, in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Reversed.