59 Wis. 127 | Wis. | 1883
The plaintiff had been employed by the company to work at repairing cars on two tracks called repair tracks, which were kept locked except when a car had been repaired on one of the tracks and it was unlocked and the car run out. On the day of the accident, while the plaintiff was at work on the regular repair tracks, he, with another» was ordered by the foreman to go a short distance upon a side track to repair a car standing there and detached. He did not know that they were to makeup trains on this track, and apprehended no danger. While he was under the car
Before seeking to apply the well-known principles of law to such a case, it may be well to dispose of the position assumed by the learned counsel of the respondent, that this plaintiff took the chances and hazards of a most dangerous service. Is this so? When a car is standing still and disconnected from any power which could move it, and in a place where there was not the remotest reasonable suspicion or apprehension that it would be moved or at all disturbed, where is the danger? There would be nearly the same danger in degree, and the same in principle, if a person should go under a two-horse wagon in a farmer’s yard, to repair it, without any apprehension that the farmer would hitch to it while he was so under it, and draw it over him. If the rule
There are some presumptions upon which any one connected with the railway service, either as employee or passenger, has a right to rely. They are (1) that the company has provided all necessary and proper means and appliances for his protection; and (2) that the employees themselves will do their duty in such responsible service. In this view, the business of repairing this car by the plaintiff, by going under it, which was necessary, was not dangerous service. The car would not move over him, unless moved by some other force applied by the gross negligence of some one else. The car standing still and disconnected was not dangerous any more than any other inert body, and it was perfectly safe to lie down under its wheels, if necessary, as it could do no harm. The danger of this service consisted in the outrageous carelessness of somebody else in the management of the trains on that track, which he was not only not bound to presume, but he had no right to presume or expect. No! the service was not dangerous in itself, like going between cars, when in motion, to couple or uncouple them, or to go upon cars, when in motion, to set the brakes, or other similar services, concerning which it has been held that the service is dangerous, and the employee takes the chances and hazards thereof.
The conclusion from these presumptions is that the company did not, in this instance, provide a watchman or any other precaution, which they admit in their answer it was their duty to do. Besides, negatively at least, there was proof that no watchman was there. The company sought to show, on cross-examination of the plaintiff, that the person who was working with him under the car, or some one who did not arrive on the ground and who was to assist him in the work, was the watchman; but this is not only denied by the plaintiff, but common sense would indicate that under the car being repaired was no proper place for a watchman to prevent a train of cars, far distant on the track, from running against the one under which he was at work. It may be, if it was in proof that the company employed a watchman at this place who was competent, the company performed its full duty. To this extent, at least, they admit their duty, and that is sufficient for this case. This question is more one of fact than of law in this case, because the defendant company admit the law as claimed on behalf of
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is' reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
In answer to a question from the bench, counsel for the plaintiff frankly admitted, in effect, that if there was any negligence on the part of the defendant it, consisted in the fact that the foreman ordered the plaintiff to do the repairing in question at the place of the injury, without providing a watch or knowing that the watchman was on duty to guard him during the time of such repairing. If counsel was correct in that statement, then I apprehend
The case of L. S. & M. S. R'y Co. v. Lavalley, 36 Ohio St., 226, cited in the opinion of the majority of the court, puts the liability of the company on the ground that the foreman was negligent in directing the plaintiff below to repair the car without either keeping watch himself or requiring some of his other men to keep such watch. That, as I understand, is the very doctrine which this court has expressly refused to adopt; and, in so far as it may have received the sanction of the majority opinion, it is, as it seems to me, in direct conflict with the rule settled by this court as above indicated. Possibly I may- be wrong, but I cannot escape the conviction that if the injury in question was the result of negligence on the part of any one, then it was such negligence as was suggested by plaintiff’s counsel, on the part of the foreman, or, if not him, then the man who had been working with the plaintiff, or the brakeman, or the gang-boss, who seems to have had the immediate charge of the repairing; for there is no evidence that any other person connected with the company had any knowl