159 F. 893 | 2d Cir. | 1908
This was an action to recover damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff, an employé of the defendant, through its alleged negligence. The plaintiff having recovered judgment in the court below, the defendant has brought this writ of error. We may conveniently consider the questions raised in the order of the points in the defendant’s brief.
The defendant’s first point is that a verdict in its favor should have been directed, because the plaintiff assumed the risk. The inquiry under this point necessarily involves an examination of the facts from a viewpoint most favorable to the plaintiff. We may therefore state the following as facts which the jury were warranted in finding from the evidence.
These facts fall short of showing that the plaintiff was assuming the risk at the time of the accident. Even if his knowledge of the defect amounted to knowledge of the danger, so that he once had assumed the risk, his position was changed by the defefadant’s promise to repair. The jury were warranted in finding that after this promise was made the plaintiff continued in his employment relying upon it, and not taking upon himself the risk. This he had a right to do. He was justified in remaining a reasonable time for the promised repairs to be made. If he knew that they were not made within such time, he took his chances if he remained longer. But such knowledge is not shown. As we have seen, it does not appear that the plaintiff, when he returned to work upon the engine immediately before the accident, knew that the defendant had failed to keep its promise to repair. There can be no inference that the plaintiff did not rely upon the performance of the promise, and assumed the risk, unless he knew that the promise had not been fulfilled.
The defendant’s second point is that the trial court erred in refusing to charge, as requested, that:
“If the plaintiff knew that the pole was but of order, and if more than a rea sonable time to repair it had elapsed after he notified the defendant before, the accident, and no repairs were made, he assumed- the risk therefrom by remaining in the service.”
In its,third point the defendant claims that the trial court erred in permitting the plaintiff to prove that the defendant promised to repair, in the absence of any allegation to that effect in the pleadings. The complaint charges that the defendant failed in its duty as an employer and furnished unsafe appliances. The defendant, without pleading it, was permitted to offer evidence to show that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the dangerous appliance. Whether this practice was correct we need not now determine. But certainly the plaintiff then, without specific pleading, had the right to show that the defendant promised to repair. This was in no sense a promise which the plaintiff was seeking to enforce. It merely negatived the assumption of the risk. It showed that the plaintiff in continuing to work did not intentionally take upon himself the danger, but relied upon the defendant’s promise to repair. The plaintiff in his complaint was not obliged to show that he did not assume the risk. A fortiori he was not bound to show why he did not assume the risk.
The defendant’s fourth point is that a verdict should have been directed in its favor because it fulfilled its entire duty as master. The duty of the defendant was to use reasonable care to furnish the plaintiff safe appliances with which to work. The jury were warranted in finding from the evidence that the push pole furnished by the defendant was unfit for use and that the defendant knew of it. The fact that an extra push pole was at the yard did not meet the defendant’s obligations. It was its duty, and not the plaintiff’s, to install it upon the engine. Moreover, it does not clearly appear that the spare pole itself was in good condition.
The fifth point urged by the defendant is that the court erred in submitting to the jury the question whether the accident was caused by the slipping of the collar upon the push pole. There was, however, testimony that the collar slipped just before the accident and allowed the pole to swing. With this evidence in the case, the question whether such slipping caused the injury was most properly submitted to the jury.
The defendant’s sixth point is that the verdict should have been directed in its favor because the true explanation of the accident was the gross negligence of the plaintiff and his fellow servants. The true explanation of the accident was for the jury to find. We cannot say from the testimony that they were bound to find contributory negligence or the negligence of co-employés. It is true that the plaintiff directed the placing of the car which the pole struck on No. 3 track. But it does not appear that he designated its precise location, nor that its location was dangerous, had the pole not swung. So it does not appear that the plaintiff, when riding upon the engine, could in any
In its seventh point the defendant claims that the court erred in refusing to charge that there was no duty upon the defendant to inspect the push pole. As a general rule it is the duty of a master to properly inspect the appliances used by his servants for the purpose of discovering defects. An exception to this rule exists in the case of appliances, not of a permanent nature, which require constant renewal and adjustment on account of daily wear and tear. There the master does his duty when he furnishes a supply of these appliances and the means by which the servants may adjust and repair them. But this was not a case of a simple appliance not of a permanent nature. The push pole was a heavy appliance of wood and iron, secured to the engine by bolts and supports, as well as by chains attached to the collar; and the slipping collar required more than a mere ordinary adjustment, which the plaintiff or his fellow servants were bound to make. In fact, the plaifttiff tried without avail to fix it, and the defendant’s agent promised to send it away for repairs. The trial court correctly refused to charge that the defendant owed no duty of inspection.
There is no error, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.