46 A. 684 | N.H. | 1899
The jury were instructed that the defendants were bound to exercise reasonable care to ascertain by proper *127
inspection or examination that the cars were safe for the use which the defendants required their employees to make of them. To this instruction the defendants excepted, and requested an instruction that a shipper is not responsible for the construction of a car received from a railroad company in the ordinary course of business, unless there is a plain defect that could be discovered by reasonable diligence. The question, if raised by the foregoing, whether the rule applicable to railroad companies, requiring inspection of the cars of other companies used for transporting freight, is or not applicable to persons upon whose sidings cars are delivered for loading or unloading, was decided adversely to the plaintiff in McMullen v. Carnegie, 158 Pa. St. 518, while in Spaulding v. Granite Co.,
"As a matter of course there can be no negligence where there is no duty." Shearm. Red. Neg., s. 15. It must appear, to render the defendants liable, that the action or omission to act, of which complaint is made, constituted a breach of a duty owed the plaintiff by the defendants. Conceding that a duty of inspection rested upon the defendants, such duty arises from the familiar principle that the master is bound to exercise due care to furnish the servant with such appliances for his work as are suitable and may be used with safety. Such duty is owed only to the servants required, or permitted, or, in the course of the business, expected to make use of the instrumentalities provided. If the failure of inspection was a breach of duty to the employees at the stone crusher, who were required to move the cars, such failure was no breach of any duty owed by the defendants to a stranger, or to McGill, who "had nothing to do with the work at the crusher." So far as appears, all the appliances furnished McGill for his work were safe and suitable. No harm came to him in his use of such as were furnished him. Neither did the defective brake or the running away of the cars render his place of work unsafe, or put him in danger in going to or returning from his work, or endanger his safety in the course of the employment for which he was hired. He was foreman of the granite shed and yard. Farther up on the siding running through the yard was the stone crusher in charge of another foreman. When McGill observed the cars running away, he was in a place of safety. He was not responsible for the escape of the cars. He was not required by the direction of his employer or the nature of his employment to take any steps in the matter. His subsequent injury, arising from his unauthorized action, without request in fact or by implication *128
from the defendants, and not from any breach of duty owed him by the defendants, does not sustain a charge of negligence against them. Where the servant voluntarily and without directions from his master, and without his acquiescence, goes into hazardous work outside his contract of hiring, he puts himself beyond the protection of the master's undertaking; and if he is injured, he must suffer the consequences. Pittsburg etc. Ry. v. Adams,
In what McGill did in pursuit of the runaway cars, he acted, not as the servant of the defendants in the course of his employment, but as a mere volunteer. One who, without request, of his own motion voluntarily puts himself into a place of danger cannot recover for any injury which may result from his own act. Pike v. Railway, 39 Fed. Rep. 255; Church v. Railway,
After McGill placed himself upon the track in pursuit of the moving car, the defendants were still bound to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring him. They could not without liability carelessly or negligently run upon or injure him. Felch v. Railroad,
Exception sustained: judgment for the defendants.
WALLACE, J., did not sit: the others concurred.