117 Tenn. 680 | Tenn. | 1906
delivered the opinion of tbe Court.
Tbe defendant in error was an employee of tbe plaintiff in error, and while engaged in its service in the yards of the company at Shelbyville, Tennessee, in February, 1905, received a serious injury which he alleged resulted from the negligence of his employer. In the present suit, brought hv him to recover damages for this injury, he filed a declaration containing three counts; the last two of these being substantially the same as the first count. In that count it was alleged that he was a brakeman and porter of the railroad company, and that as such it was a part of his duty to assist in switching and placing the cars, as he might he directed by his superiors, on the
The plaintiff below, Sam Hayes, was a brakeman, porter, and switchman on the short branch road of the Nashville, Chattanooga. & St. Louis Eailway Company connecting the towns of Wartrace and Shelbyville. He was a man about sixty years of age, and had been engaged in the service of the company about its yards at these two points, and in running on the trains plying between them, for 80 years, before the accident occurred. At Shelbyville there are branch or spur tracks leading off on the northwest side of the main track toward what is known in the record as the “Frierson warehouse” and the “Shapard warehouse,” through intervening lumber yards. These warehouses and lumber yards were at the right of the main track leading from Shelbyville to War-.
The record shows that near the end of the Shapard warehouse, which this engine and car were approaching, there was placed what is called in the record a “chute,”
As has already been stated, no witness undertook to say when this chute was placed in the position it occupied when the collision ip question occurred. The two Shapards, who were engaged as employees or otherwise in this warehouse, stated that the Saturday immediately preceding this accident, which occurred on Monday, they were in that part of the premises where the chute was, and they did not notice that it was lying across the fence. One of these witnesses states in the course of his examination that he thinks it was taken by some one to him unknown from the place where it was usually kept,
It is true witnesses state that about the lower end of this chute there were bricks piled, and that they were frozen. But we do not think, from this fact alone, the inference could be drawn that the chute had been in that position for any considerable length of time, inasmuch as the record shows that the weather was then cold, and “that it was sleeting and freezing,” so that in a very short time after it had been so placed the brick around the lower end would be naturally covered with ice. In addition, we think it clear that this obstruction could have existed but for a short time, because the defendant in error and the other employees were passing along that track frequently, if not several times every day, and it can hardly be supposed that this obstruction could long have existed without attracting the attention of some one of these parties.
While it is true that the railroad company was under obligation to the defendant in error to exercise ordinary care to see that he was furnished a safe place in which to do his work, yet, upon a record which fails to show that any of its agents had placed the chute in its dangerous position, and whether this obstruction had existed only a few minutes, or an hour, or a day before the accident occurred, upon well-settled legal principles was the verdict of the jury authorized, or can the judgment of the court thereon be sustained? In other words, in
We think the rule to be applied in answering these questions has been recognized by this court in a number of cases, and especially in that of Railroad v. Lindamood, reported at page 462 in 111 Tenn., and at page 100 of 78 S. W. In the opinion in that case it was said that, as between the employer and employee, there is no presumption of negligence on the part of the former in furnishing appliances to the latter arising from the injury itself. Following this statement of the rule, the opinion embodies approvingly the following extract from Mr. Wood’s work on the Law of Master and Servant:
“From the mere fact that an injury results to a servant from a latent defect in machinery or appliances of the business, no presumption of negligence on the master’s part is raised. There must be evidence of negligence connecting him with the injury. . . . The mere fact that the machinery proves defective, and that the injury results therefrom, does not fix the master’s liability. Prima facie, it is presumed that the master has discharged his duty to the servant, and that he was not at fault. Therefore the servant must overcome this presumption by proof of fault on the master’s part, either*690 by showing that be knew or ought to have known of the defects complained of. . . . The burden of proving negligence upon the part of the master is upon the servant, and he is bound to show that the injury arose from the defects known to the master, or which he would have known by the exercise of ordinary care, or that he has failed to observe precautions essential to the protection of servants, which ordinary prudence would have suggested. . . . The servant, seeking recovery for an injury, takes the burden upon himself of establishing negligence upon the part of the master and 'due care on his own part. And he is met by two presumptions, both of which he must overcome in order to entitle him to a recovery: The first, that the master has discharged his duty to him by providing suitable instrumentalities for his business, and in keeping them in condition; and this involves proof of something more than the mere fact that the injury resulted from a defect in the machinery. It imposes upon him the burden of showing that the master had notice of the defect, or in the exercise of that ordinary care which he is bound to observe, he would have known it. When this is established, he is met by another presumption, the force of which must be overcome by him, and that is that he assumed all usual and ordinary hazards.” Sections 368 and 382.
The rule stated by this author, which measures the quantum of evidence which the employee must furnish in order to maintain his action for an injury received in his master’s service upon the ground of actionable neg
It is evident that the rule which would require that the switchman whose duty it was to couple and uncouple the cars in the yards of a railroad company, and who, while discharging that duty, was injured by reason of a defect in the spring or appurtenances connected with the drawbar of a passenger coach, and sought to recover damages for the injury, not only to prove such defect, but also that the railroad company had notice of the defect, or that by the exercise of reasonable or ordinary care it could have obtained such notice (Atchison, etc., R. R. v. Wagner, 33 Kan., 660, 7 Pac., 204), or would -impose the same burden in a case like that of Lindamood v. Railroad, supra, can equally be invoked when an employee injured, as was the defendant in error, by coming in contact with an obstruction on or near the track when riding upon one of its cars in the discharge of his duty, seeks to recover from the employer on the ground of negligence.
We think, in view of this rule of law, that the assignment of error that there is no material evidence to support this verdict is well taken; and it is sustained. But
It is true, as urged by counsel of defendant in error, that he was a negro; and possibly of no superior intelligence, yet he is necessarily bound, as is every litigant,
As said by Mr. Thompson, in his work on Negligence (section 4416): “An employee cannot recover damages from an employer for an injury proceeding from a defect in something for the safe condition of which the employee himself was responsible. This rule applies where the servant himself undertakes with the master to see to the safety of the premises or appliances about which or with which he works. . . .”
To the same effect is Labatt on Master and Servant, section 416.
This principle, the mere statement of which carries conviction, and which would seem to need no citation of authority in support, will be found illustrated in many reported cases, among which are the following: Chicago, etc., R. R. Co. v. Driscoll (Ill.), 52 N. E., 921; N. W. R. Co. v. Emmert, 83 Va., 640, 3 S. E., 145; Peppett v. Mich., etc., R. Co., 119 Mich., 640, 78 N. W., 900.
It was one of the contentions of the defendaut below that the plaintiff below was guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to his injuries, and that this
Again, on this point it was said that this spur track was placed so near the Shapard warehouse that, even without the existence of this obstruction, it was dangerous for one to ride upon the side of a car next to the warehouse; that, hanging to the ladder on that side of the car, one was put in peril of being injured by collision with the warehouse itself; and plaintiff, knowing fully these physical conditions, was guilty of gross negligence in placing himself in that position on this moving car, when the record shows that there was a ladder on the other side of the car on which he could have stood in perfect security, and from which he could have gone and discharged the duty of coupling and uncoupling these cars with perfect ease. In view of the evidence that was
It is insisted that the trial judge was in error in failing to grant the motion made by defendant below for peremptory instructions to the jury to return a verdict in its favor. The record, however, is in no condition for this court to grant the plaintiff in error the benefit of this assignment. The motion, though made, as shown bj the bill of exceptions, was not pressed by the counsel to a ruling by the circuit judge. It is contended, however, that the necessary inference is that the motion was overruled by him, from the fact that trial judge, immediately following this motion, gave the case in a general charge to the jury. However ingenious this view is, yet it cannot be maintained, so as to put the trial judge in error, in the absence of affirmative action on his part. What is here urged might be equally so in a case brought from a lower court, the consideration of which by this court depended upon the making and overruling of a motion for a new trial. In such a case, the record show
It follows, from what has been said, that the judgment of the lower court must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.