In July, 1916, thеre was a strike of motormen and conductors on the street railroad operated by the defendant in the city of New York. The Washington Deteсtive Bureau undertook to furnish other motormen and conductors, and also guards or watchmen to protect the passengers and cars from violence. One of these guards was the plaintiff. He was injured in a collision as the result of the defendant’s negligence. The question is whether his relation to the defendant at the time of the collision was that of an employеe to an employer, either general or special
(Matter of De Noyer
v.
Cavanaugh,
Beyond doubt, the detective bureau was the рlaintiff’s general employer. (Matter of De Noyer v. Cavanaugh supra.) It hired him and paid him and had the power to disсharge him. He was not told by the men who hired him, of the nature of the arrangement between the bureau and the railroad. All that he was told was that they were sending him to guard cars, just as they had sent him on other occasions to guard factories or offices. On his arrival at the barn, he found one of the employees of the bureau giving orders to the watchmen, and assigning them to duty. Under orders thus given, he went upon a car, and, while guarding it, was injured.
We see nothing in these facts which was equivalent as matter of law to the acceptance of a change of masters. We do not doubt that the same man mаy be in the general employment of one master and the special
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employment of another
(Matter of Schweitzer
v.
Thompson & Norris Co., supra; McNamara
v.
Leipzig,
If understanding оf a new relation may be imputed to the plaintiff, it is at most an inferencе of fact to be drawn by a jury. Nothing in the situation as he knew it made the inference inevitable. He is not chargeable with the legal consequences of the arrangement between the bureau and the railroad as actually made. He is chargeable only with the legal consequences оf the arrangement as known and approved. Knowledge and apрroval may be inferred where the servant, continuing in the service, takes his orders from some one other than the hirer or the hirer’s representativе. Here the hirer’s representative was, or seemed to be, in continuоus authority. A detective agency may undertake to guard the propеrty of another with its own men and in its own way
(Standard Oil Co.
v.
Anderson,
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and that of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
His cock, Ch. J., Chase, Collin, Pound, Crane and Andrews, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.
