29 N.Y.S. 533 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The action was to recover damages for a bodily injury sustained by the plaintiff while employed by the defendant, as a laborer, in unloading cars of coal, on its coal trestle in the city of Buffalo. The injury was the crushing of the plaintiff’s leg by the wheels of a car which unexpectedly followed the movement of the car in front of it, which latter the plaintiff was assisting to set in motion by pushing behind.
The first and leading specification in the complaint—of negligence on the part of the defendant causing or contributing to the accident in question—is as follows:
“That said defendant allowed one of the train of cars to stand alone upon said trestle uncoupled, and without being braked, and that, on account of such neglect in not coupling said car to the other cars upon said trestle, said car came down upon said plaintiff, and inflicted the injuries hereinbefore set forth.”
It is very plain, we suppose, that this specification states no cause of action against the defendant, but would, of itself, have been bad on demurrer. The necessary coupling and braking of cars are so-manifestly mere details of work which must be intrusted to servants that negligence of the master cannot be predicated upon error or omission in their performance; and this, we think, is substantially all there is of the case before us. It was, as alleged in the specification quoted, precisely because the second of the two cars mentioned was not held by a brake, as it should have been, that it followed the other, and injured the plaintiff.
The narrative of the occurrence is as follows: The loaded cars were, as was customary, taken up the trestle, in pairs, beyond the coal pockets where they were to be discharged, and from the place where they stood one car at a time was moved down by its own weight to the particular pocket which was to receive its load. It was not customary to couple each pair of cars to the other pairs, and to have done so would not have been useful in holding them in their place on the trestle. That part of the trestle where the cars stood and where the pockets opened was slightly inclined, so as to facilitate the movement of the single cars down to the pockets, but not so much inclined but that the cars might be held securely in place by their brakes while standing either at the pockets or above them. The evidence is undisputed that the two cars in question were pushed up the trestle together, in the usual manner; that the brakes were set on the lowermost of the two, and a brakeman or car handler was in his place on the other car for the purpose of setting the brakes on it. If he did not set them, it was his
There are in the complaint two other specifications of negligence . on the part of the defendant. They are to the effect: (1) That the defendant neglected to make and promulgate proper rules for braking and coupling its cars while on the trestle; (2) that the trestle itself was not properly and safely constructed, and was out of repair. In regard to the first of these charges it is to be said that no particular rule on the subject mentioned was shown to be either useful or practicable, while the evidence was undisputed that the rule which was in force and was perfectly understood by all concerned, viz. which required the brakes to be securely set upon all cars standing on the trestle, was entirely adequate to accomplish the purpose so far as a rule could do so, and that, if it had been observed in this case, the accident could not have occurred. The plaintiff himself testified that, if the brake had been set, the car could not have moved. The charge of negligence for not making rules is avoided by the proof of a rule and practice actually in force which rendered any other rule apparently unnecessary. Morgan v. Iron Co., 133 N. Y. 668, 31 N. E. 234; Berrigan v. Railroad Co., 131 N. Y. 584, 30 N. E. 57. In respect to the third specification, viz. “of negligence in the construction and repair of the trestle,” the allegation is undoubtedly sufficient; the failure is in the proof.In this respect three things were required to be shown: (1) That the trestle was improperly constructed or out of repair; (2) that the* defect so existing caused or contributed to cause the accident complained of; and (3) that the defect was one which, in the exercise’ of reasonable care on the part of the defendant, could have been remedied. We doubt if a case was made under either of these1 requirements which warranted a submission of the question to the-jury. There was, it is true, some evidence that the grade of the1 track was not absolutely uniform, and the fact that the first of the two cars required something more than the ordinary effort to move it may have been accounted for by the fact that the track upon which one or the other of its trucks stood was somewhat depressed; but there was no evidence that the defect extended to the track under the second car, or that there was anything in its condition' which caused that car to move when it ought to have stood still.Indeed, the whole of this branch of the case is answered, as we1 think, by the fact that the trestle was purposely constructed with a slope to enable the loaded cars to be moved to the pockets without the application of power, and that it was well understood by all engaged in the work that the brakes alone were relied upon to hold-