185 N.Y. 276 | NY | 1906
The Appellate Division having denied the plaintiff’s application for leave to appeal, permission was granted by a judge of this court. The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries received in the yard of the defendant company at East Eoehester, on a branch track, which was used for hoeing the ashes out of engines before taking them into the roundhouse for certain purposes. The time of the accident was between sundown and dark on the 10th of July, 1900. The plaintiff entered the employ of the defendant on the 23rd of January, 1900.
It was the custom of the defendant when its engines arrived in the yard at East Eoehester to run them upon a certain track for the purpose of removing therefrom the ashes in the firebox and ashpan; for this purpose two men were employed, a hostler and a lioer; the duty of the hostler was to run the engine as- temporary engineer, to shake down the ashes into the ashpan and to remain in the cab until work was completed; the lioer crawled under the engine with two hoes, one long, the other short, and a lantern.
On the evening of the accident there were three engines on the waiting track, and the hostler said to the .plaintiff that he must “ hurry up, that there was a helper to go out.” The plaintiff testified as follows under cross-examination: “ I got right under the engine and hoed it out. I went in between the pilot wheel and the first driver, then I went back to the front end of the ashpan and that was just back of the axle of the middle driver. The back of the ashpan shows right here. The front of the ashpan comes about here; here is where I get, I get hack here. I get back between the two
It was the practice of the hostlers and lioers to proceed as follows: The hostler, when all the ashes had been shaken down, would indicate that fact by calling out or ringing the bell of the engine; the hoer after finishing his work would crawl from-beneath the engine at the point where he entered, and having reached a place of safety he -would either exhibit himself to the hostler or call out “ all right.”
There is no evidence in this case that the defendant" company established any rule, written or unwritten, in regard to the manner in which this very dangerous work should be 23i'osecuted. It is admitted that the hostler had received no word from .the plaintiff that he had reached a place of safety, but recklessly backed the engine, cutting off the leg of plaintiff.
The counsel for plaintiff rests his claim that the defendant was negligent upon two grounds: (1) “ In its failure to make and promulgate a rule for the safety and protection of the plaintiff in his employment as a hoer of ashes and cinders under the locomotives in the defendant’s yard; ” and (2) “ in its failure to have and maintain ashpits between the rails of the tracks upon which the engines were cleaned out, when the defendant had in use and was maintaining long before and at
In regard to the second ground above stated, the following facts appear: It' was the practice of the defendant, after the work of cleaning the engines was completed, to send men upon the track to shovel the ashes and deposit them on either side of the same. The pile of ashes so deposited was allowed to reach the height of three feet or 'more before they were removed. The plaintiff testified as follows: “ At the time this accident occurred the ashes were about four feet high on the north side of the track and about three feet on the south side; they were piled right up from the rail. They were piled slanting right up from the rail over on each side; a little higher on the north side than it was on the south side. .Ton could not get out at all on the north side, but you could get out on the south side by crawling up hill on this pile of ashes.”
While we are not inclined to rest our opinion of the defendant’s negligence on the second ground as stated, it is evident that these ashes and cinders were allowed to accumulate to an extent that greatly increased the peril to which the plaintiff and other employees were subjected when getting from beneath the engine as described. It may very well be that the existence of ashpits would be the safer mode of conducting the work, yet the evidence is not sufficiently definite to present the question in a satisfactory manner.
This court has had occasion to deal with cases involving the safety of repairers when working under cars upon the repair or ciipple track; also as to the safety of inspectors of cars when engaged in the discharge of their duties in depots, where trains were making temporary stops. It is very apparent from the evidence in this case that the duty of an ashhoer beneath an engine is even more perilous than the employment of inspectors and repairers.
In Abel v. D. & H. C. Co. (103 N. Y. 581) the plaintiff’s testator was a car repairer in the employ of the defendant, and while under one of its cars standing upon a side track engaged in making repairs, its employees, using an engine, carelessly
This case is particularly applicable to the one at bar, in that the company had promulgated no rule for the safety of employees engaged in the occupation of this plaintiff, but that whatever rule or mode of procedure existed among the employees appears to have been a custom or practice adopted by them for their own safety, which necessarily lacks the importance and force of a rule enacted by the defendant, printed among its general rules, and to which implicit obedience would be required.
In Devoe v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (174 N. Y. 1)
Judge Vamt, writing, said: “When the business of a master is such that the safety of one servant depends upon the way in which other servants do their work, it is his duty to make, promulgate and enforce reasonable and sufficient rules for the protection of the servant exposed to danger. * * "x" While the defendant was without any printed rule upon the subject, except the one quoted, which was a dead letter because it was not enforced, its foreman of the car department testified that he, without instructions from the company, or from any superior officer, had established a practice by verbal directions to certain employees which in his opinion afforded ample protection. * * * The duty of a master in making rules is measured by the law of ordinary
As before pointed out, the mode of procedure adopted by the men was that when all the ashes were shaken down the hostler would announce the fact verbally or by ringing the jbell of the engine; thereupon the hoer, after finishing his work, would remove his tools and himself to a place of safety and announce the fact to the hostler by calling out “ all right,” or exhibiting himself in person.
In view of the great peril surrounding- this work, a rule promulgated by the company'might well be printed among its general rules, requiring the hoer to reach a place of safety in sight of the hostler. The confusion and noise existing in a railroad, yard where engines and cars are in almost constant motion and steam escaping to a greater or less extent, renders it hazardous to trust to the calling out of the hoer that he has reached a place of safety; the hostler might be misled by the noise and confusion and mistakenly assume that he had heard the voice of his associate.
- "We are of opinion that it was a question of fact for the jury as to the duty of the defendant to have promulgated a written rule in view of the dangerous surroundings of the work of hoersof ashes and cinders underneath engines, and whether its failure to do so was negligence, rendering it liable to the plaintiff in damages for the injuries he sustained.
The order and judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs to the plaintiff in all the courts to abide the event, and a new trial ordered.
Vann, Werner and Willard Bartlett, JJ., concur; Cullen, Ch. J., O’Brien and Haight, JJ., dissent.
Ordered accordingly.