49 F. 723 | 2d Cir. | 1892
This is a writ of error by the defendant in the original suit to review a judgment for the plaintiff rendered upon a verdict of the jury. The plaintiff, a fireman in the employ of the defendant, while firing the locomotive of an express train on the defendant’s railway on a trip from Jersey City to TIaverstraw, was injured by a collision between his train and some cars upon a side track of the railway. The side track was not disconnected from the main track at the time, and this fact was indicated by a danger signal of a red light, indicating that the switch was open. A white light would have indicated that it was closed. The track was straight for a considerable distance ahead of the switch, The side track was at a station where there is a junction between the tracks of the defendant’s railway and those of another railway. Among the regulations of the defendant, furnished to its engineers, were the following;
“All trains must approach * * * junctions * * * prepared to stop; and must not proceed until the switch or signals are seen to be right, or the track is plainly seen to be clear. *' * * He [the engineer] must always run upon the supposition that at any station lie may And a switch out of place, and he must have his train well in hand, on approaching a switch or station.”
It is not fairly open to discussion that the facts in evidence would authorize a recovery by the plaintiff if he had not been aware of the defective condition of the air-brake, or if the engineer had not been guilty of negligence in running his train in violation of the regulation; especially so when he knew that the brake was out of order. A fireman has no authority to interfere with the engineer in the management of a train, and therefore negligence cannot be imputed to the plaintiff because he did not endeavor to enforce obedience to the regulations upon the engineer. His personal negligence, if there was any, is to be found in his conduct in remaining as a fireman upon a locomotive which was so defectively equipped that it could not be seasonably stopped. It was clear after the accident that the brake was so defective that the train could not be stopped within a distance at which, on a foggy night like the one in question, danger signals could be diso.erned.' But there is nothing in the evidence to indicate that this was manifest to the plaintiff before the accident took place. It was a question for the jury to determine whether the defect was such that a man of ordinary prudence and intelligence would not have remained upon a locomotive as a fireman alter knowledge of it. That the plaintiff knew of the defect in the appliance was not, under the circumstances, and as a matter of law, absolutely conclusive of negligence on his part, even though there had been no assurance from the defendant that it should be repaired. Ford v. Railroad Co., 110 Mass. 240, 261; Laning v. Railroad Co., 49 N. Y.
The judgment is affirmed.