91 Mich. 379 | Mich. | 1892
This is an action for injuries received by a brakeman of a freight train while switching some cars at a way station, by reason of the defective condition of the road-bed of the side track.
Defendant demurred generally to plaintiff’s declaration, ;and the demurrer was overruled. The declaration sets
The defendant contends that a railroad company owes no duty to its employés to make its side tracks perfect; that the risk of such imperfections was one of the risks of the business; that it was the duty of the plaintiff to-take notice of imperfections; and that, the defect in the road-bed having existed for some time, it must have been frequently seen, and could have been readily observed if plaintiff had used care.
Employés may be chargeable with knowledge that sidetracks are not always perfect; that they are sometimes constructed over ditches or gullies, and are not always ballasted with the same care that main tracks usually are; but railroad companies owe it to their employés to protect them from unnecessary and dangerous pitfalls- and unusual conditions. The injury here occurred at a way station. It does not appear how long plaintiff had been in defendant’s employ, or that he ever saw the station, track, or side track before that time. It was-his duty to use care, and to exercise a higher degree of care if the place was strange, or if upon a side track; but it is not the rule that a railroad company owes no-duty to its employés respecting the road-bed of its sidetracks, nor is a dangerous hole in the bed of a side track necessarily a risk which employés assume.
The judgment is affirmed, and the record remanded for further proceedings, with costs of this Court to» plaintiff.