58 Mo. App. 281 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
Mrs. McIntosh sued the defendant railway company for damages resulting to her by reason of the death of her son, John McIntosh, who was killed in the defendant’s freight yards at Kansas City, Octo
In our opinion the case should have been taken from the jury and the plaintiff nonsuited. Mrs. McIntosh can have no greater right to recover than would her son if he had survived the injury. And he would have had no cause to complain, for the manifest reason that he was injured through no fault of the defendant; or, to put it in another way, the misfortune occurred through and by means of the ordinary hazards attached to his employment. The case of Jackson v. Railroad, 104 Mo. 448, lately decided by the supreme court, covers every substantial feature of this and is controlling. The evidence here, as there, shows, that it was a matter of almost daily occurrence at the defendant’s freight yards at Kansas City, to receive and transfer cars loaded with building materials and railroad irons, which, on account of their length, would project over the ends of the cars. Indeed, this is a matter of such common occurrence as to be within the knowledge of everyone. “The business of the brakeman,” says the court in the Jackson case, “is beset with many dangers which are incident to his business, and these risks arising from oars loaded with projecting timbers and rails,
'When, then, John McIntosh entered the employment of the defendant to switch cars in its yards, there was an implied undertaking on his part to take the chances of being injured by means of the usual and ordinary business there conducted. This was a part of his contract. He had at least constructive knowledge of the dangers attending this hazardous business. The evidence, however, fully justifies the conclusion that he was not ignorant of the kind of work he was undertaking. He had been engaged'in and about this yard* for more than a year, and at this particular business of switching cars from six weeks to two months. In the absence of any contrary showing we are right in assuming that he was ordinarily observant of what was there transpiring, and that he saw continuously cars loaded aS was this one, and that he fully understood the perils of the occupation.
Plaintiff’s counsel have much to say as to the age and alleged inexperience of McIntosh; that because of his alleged youth and inexperience the same degree of care and caution ought not to be expected on his part as if he had been of more mature years. We hardly think that this unfortunate young man could be considered within the age of irresponsibility, such as to exempt him from that duty of care and self protection expected of ordinary workmen; that he was not yet
From all that appears from the testimony in.this case we discover no reason for relaxing the rule that the complaining party must, himself, at the time, have been in the exercise of ordinary care. McIntosh was clearly of sufficient age and experience to fully understand the dangers of his employment, and knew, too, what was necessary to be done to avoid the perils besetting him. He had been at work in the yards, where hundreds of cars were being daily switched, for more than a year before the accident, and he must have seen cars loaded just as was this one. The witnesses all agree that with the exercise of care, stooping the head as the ear approached, the coupling could have been safely made. And it is clear that McIntosh
But even admit that the deceased exercised ordinary care, and yet there is no case against the defendant for the reason already stated that the risk of being injured by these projecting rails was one which McIntosh assumed when he undertook that character of work. Regardless, then, of the question of contributory negligence on the part of the injured man, there was nothing in the case to justify a recovery. Northern Central R’y Co. v. Husson, 101 Pa. St. 17.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed.