87 Mich. 161 | Mich. | 1891
Defendant owns and operates a flouring mill in the city of Detroit. Plaintiff, who is 50 years of age, had been in defendant’s employ for nearly 8 years. Plaintiff claims to haVe been employed to cooper barrels, fill them, and weigh them, and, when not thus engaged, wait on customers. Occasionally he was asked to deliver flour, but he claims to have objected to that kind of .work, because not employed therefor. He had, however, during the time that he was in defendant’s employ, delivered quite a number of loads of flour, and stated that he objected at least 40 times.
He sets up that defendant had a delivery horse which was balky and fractious; that the horse would start suddenly with a load, and plunge; that atone time while he
It appeared from plaintiff’s own testimony that there were a number of railroad tracks in the vicinity of the place of the injury, and that the track upon which the engine, the steam from which frightened the horse, was moving, was a spur track running parallel with Wood-bridge street; that this engine was engaged in moving a train of freight-cars, and plaintiff was driving west, and within five feet of the train of cars, while the train was moving east, and when the horse reached the engine the
Irrespective of the question of the liability of the defendant as employer under such circumstances, the plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as will defeat a recovery. He knew the character of the horse, and drove him to within five feet of a moving locomotive, from which steam was escaping. It is a matter of common knowledge that steam from a locomotive will frighten a gentle horse at close range. He says he did not see the engine, but he saw the rest of the train. He must have known that it was being moved by the locomotive, and it was his duty, under the -circumstances, to have seen both engine and cars.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to defendant.