122 N.Y. 618 | NY | 1890
This action was brought to recover for injuries sustained by the plaintiff while in defendant's service. The plaintiff alleged, as the basis of defendant's liability, its omission to perform a duty owing to him. November 1, 1883, he was, and for some months prior thereto had been, employed as head brakeman on defendant's freight trains running between *621
Buffalo and Elmira. His place, when not applying brakes on forward cars, was upon the locomotive, and when directed to do so it was his duty to pass off the locomotive over the tender and on to the cars and apply or loosen the brakes. When injured he was attempting to reach the forward car for such purpose, and in passing from the tender stepped with his left foot upon the man-hole cover. As he did so it slipped to the right, turned on its edge, and his foot passed down into the man-hole, bringing his person in contact with the edge of the iron cover in such manner as to occasion him severe injury. The man-hole was 16½ inches in diameter, surrounded by an iron cylinder extending 10 inches above the deck of the watertank and closed by a cover. Through it water is taken into the tank, and for that purpose the cover is removed, and should be replaced when the tank is filled. One of the duties of the head brakeman is to supply the tender with water. The cover was made of boiler iron, to the under side of which was bolted a circular piece of two-inch pine plank, the diameter of which was slightly less than that of the hole, so that when placed in position the aperture was securely closed. The plaintiff asserts that the plank was absent from the cover at this time, and for that reason it was not retained in its place, but slid off, resulting in the injury complained of. Without expressing any opinion upon the question whether the evidence presented permitted the finding that the master had failed in the performance of a duty which he owed to the plaintiff, we will briefly allude to an error in the charge of the court which requires a new trial. The court instructed the jury that "if the lining was entirely off from this cover, and the plaintiff knew that it was off, you are to say whether it was negligence upon his part to step upon it in the manner that he claims to have done, and through which this injury occurred." The defendant excepted, and then made the following request: "Now, as a matter of law, I ask the court to charge that "if the lining was off, and the plaintiff knew it was off, it was negligence upon his part to step upon it under such circumstances.'" The request was denied and *622
an exception taken. If the plaintiff, having knowledge of the condition of the cover, stepped upon it, the defendant is not chargeable with the consequences. (Power v. N.Y.L.E. W.R.R.Co.,
The judgment should be reversed.
All concur except BRADLEY and BROWN, JJ., dissenting, and FOLLETT, Ch. J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed.