41 N.Y.S. 927 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
The plaintiff’s intestate was in the employ of the defendant as a laborer on its railroad on the 13th of January, 1894. When his work for the day was finished he got on one of the defendant’s cars with several of his fellow-workmen to be transported home. The foreman of the men made out a pass for eight men and gave it to the conductor. There is no evidence that plaintiff’s intestate knew that such a pass had been presented to the conductor by Hogan (the foreman), or that he (the intestate) was at all a party to the transaction. It may, however, be assumed that plaintiff’s intestate understood that the railroad would carry him from his place of work to his residence, but that is the extent to which we are justified in assuming that plaintiff’s intestate had any knowledge of the pass in question. Shortly after the car started the plaintiff’s intestate was thrown off, the evidence being that a gate near which plaintiff’s intestate was standing was out of order; so bent that it was impossible to securely fasten it in place, and that it was in consequence of this insecurely fastened gate giving way that plaintiff’s intestate fell. He received in juries which resulted in his death, and this action is brought to recover the damages sustained by his next of kin in consequence thereof.
Several defenses were interposed by the defendant. The first one that requires notice is that the plaintiff’s intestate was riding upon a free pass under a special contract between himself and the railroad company, or its agents; that while riding upon such pass he waived all right of action against the railroad company in case of injury. We think, however, that the evidence was insufficient to establish that any such contract or understanding between the railroad company and the plaintiff’s intestate existed. The proof of such a contract depends solely upon the testimony of Hogan (the foreman), who swears that at former times, when he had given a pass to plaintiff’s intestate, he had informed him “ that he had to ride at his own risk; that the company was entirely blameless.” Hogan expressly testified that he did not give a pass to the plaintiff’s intestate on the day in question, and that no statement was then made to the plaintiff’s intestate as to what effect riding upon such a pass as he gave the conductor would have. He only testifies that on prior occasions
As we think that there was no evidence here that would justify a finding of the jury that such a contract between the plaintiff’s intestate and the defendant, as to the effect of his riding upon a pass on the night in question, was made, it is not necessary to examine the objections taken by the defendant to the admission of evidence as to the pass in question, or as to the terms and condition upon which other passes had been issued by the railroad company.
The defendant also claims that the negligence of the defendant in regard to the proper fastening of this gate was the negligence of the conductor; that the plaintiff’s intestate being in the employ of the railroad company, the conductor was a fellow-servant, and that the negligence was, therefore, that of a fellow-servant with the person injured, and for that the defendant is not liable. It appears, however, from the testimony of Hogan, that at the time that Pendergast got upon this car to go home he had finished his day’s work; that at the time he was on his way home from work. Assuming, without deciding, that plaintiff’s intestate was, notwithstanding that he had finished his day’s work, still in the employ of the defendant, and that he was a fellow-workman with the conductor, it was clearly the duty of the railroad company to furnish him with a safe and proper place to do his work, or to ride to and from his work if they assumed so to convey him. That was clearly a duty that the
"Where two persons are engaged in the performance of a common work for a master, and one of them is negligent in the performance of that work, and thus occasions injury to another workman engaged in the performance of the same work, the master is not liable ; but where the duty is upon the master to furnish a proper and safe place for an employee to worlc_ and to furnish the employee with proper tools to do the work required by the master, and he delegates that duty to another, it is entirely clear that such other, in the performance of the delegated duty, is not a fellow-workman with one who is injured because of the failure of the master or his delegated agent properly to perform the duty imposed upon him.
The other questions presented by the appellant upon this appeal hardly require extended notice. An examination of the testimony has satisfied us that the verdict of the jury that the defendant was
Several exceptions were taken to the admission of evidence and to the charge of the court. None of them, we think, require that
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.