97 Mich. 265 | Mich. | 1893
The plaintiff, a brakeman upon defendant's freight train, obtained judgment in the circuit court for an injury sustained by being run oyer by his train at Durand. Defendant's counsel contend that the judge should have directed a verdict against the plaintiff.
It became necessary to leave a car upon the defendant's side track, and, after setting the switch, the plaintiff signaled to the engineer to back up, which he did, and plaintiff stepped between the car and the tender to uncouple the car. . Having some difficulty, and being near the switch, he stepped out to avoid the danger of walking over the switch bars, entering again after the car had passed them. No one saw the accident, but plaintiff states that he stepped into an unfilled space between the ties, and before he could extricate his foot it was caught by the brake-beam of the tender, at the heel, and his toe dragged along the track. At this time he was inside the main track, and, realizing that he was near the frog, he threw himself over the rail, sacrificing his foot rather than his life.
At the outset a question of variance arises. The first count of the declaration states that defendant permitted a deep hole or rut to exist in its track, into which plaintiff stepped. A second count states it as existing in the side track, between the ties, which space it was defendant's duty to fill with dirt. The alleged variance consists in the failure of the plaintiff to prove the existence of any definite deep hole in the track. He' testifies that he did not see the hole, but that he stepped in one, and was
This case went to the jury upon two possible theories, viz.:
1. That the plaintiff stepped into a hole about eight inches deep in defendant’s track, which track was otherwise smooth and in good condition.
2. That the road-bed was in bad condition for want of ballast, leaving places between the ties, into one of which plaintiff stepped, and that his foot was caught by reason of that fact.
Upon the other theory, there was proof that went so far as to show that the side track upon which the accident happened was not ballasted to the top of the ties for their whole length, but that, while, the dirt covered the tie in the middle of the track, it sloped towards the sides of the track, so that, at the rail, it was from two to four inches below the iron, thus exposing the tie at that point to such depth, and that such was the condition in the vicinity of the accident, and had been since the road was constructed.
This raises the questions:
1. Should the trial court have determined, as matter of law, that this road was in a reasonably good condition?
2. Was the plaintiff in a situation to charge his injury upon defendant? :
Adjudications are not wanting upon the subject of the duties of masters in relation to the machinery and places for work furnished to servants; and while a railroad company is required to provide reasonably safe appliances, and keep them in repair, and provide a reasonably safe place
In the case of Batterson v. Railway Co., 53 Mich. 125, 128, a brakeman was injured while coupling cars at a place where the ties were raised above the surface of the ground. It was held that—
“ The risk of such imperfections was one of the risks of the business. It is not shown or claimed that this track was unsafe for any of the ordinary uses of side tracks, and the accident did not arise from any such defect. The lay of the land was such as to be readily seen by any one who passed along the track at ordinary times. The plaintiff knew that the road-bed there was not ballasted, and was bound to know that there might be irregularities of surface anywhere. The chances of such an accident were not such as to suggest danger as very likely. There was, - of course, a probability that cars . might have to be coupled at one place as well as another, and sometimes when there was not much daylight. But the company had a right to expect that every brakeman would use reasonable care in examining his footings and surroundings, and we think that they cannot be regarded as at fault for not guarding against an occurrence which was as likely to hajjpen in any place where the ground was uneven, and to completely insure against which would require a side track to be as expensively built as a main track. * * * They had*271 a right to rest on the probability that any one would know what was generally to be seen by his oivn observation, or by information from those who were on the spot working with him, and who might fairly be expected to do their duty.”
The opinion concludes with the following significant language:
“There is much reason to regard the accident, from plaintiff’s own testimony, as the immediate consequence of his hand slipping from the car, and of nothing else. But we place no stress upon this, because toe do not think any case, is made out of a violation of duty to the plaintiff on the pari of his employers.”
In that case the Court practically said that a ¡jqry should not be permitted to pass upon the question whether a railroad company owed a duty to its employés to ballast its side track where it bordered a pond, asserting that a brakeman ought to expiect to be upon' his guard against inequalities of surface and uneven places. It will not do to say that this decision was based upon the admitted' knowledge of the plaintiff, for the Court expressly assert that no duty existed to ballast the track, for the reason that the company had a right to suppose that its employés could and would.see the condition of the track, and govern themselves accordingly, entering between the cars only where it was safe.
Gibson v. Railway Co., 63 N. Y. 449, 452, is another case involving the same principle. A conductor of a freight train, climbing up the outside of a car, was drawn against the roof of a depot. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, defendant’s counsel moved for a nonsuit, upon the ground that no actionable negligence 'on the part of the defendant had been shown. The court said:
“When the deceased entered the employment of the defendant, he assumed the usual risks and perils of the service, and also the risks and perils incident to the use of the machinery and property of the defendant as it then*272 was, so far as such risks were apparent. Accepting service with a knowledge of the character and position of the structures from which the employ 6s might be liable to receive injury, he could not call upon the defendant to make alterations to secure greater safety, or, in case of injury from risks which were apparent, he could not call upon his employer for indemnity.”.
And in the case of Hayden v. Manufacturing Co., 29 Conn. 548, 558, Ellsworth, J., says:
“Every manufacturer has a right to choose the machinery to be used in his business, and to conduct that business in the manner most agreeable to himself, provided he does not thereby violate the law of the land. He may select his appliances, and run his mill with old or new machinery, just as he may ride in an old or new carriage, or navigate an old or new vessel. * * * The employe having knowledge of the circumstances, and entering his service for the stipulated reward, cannot complain of the peculiar taste and habits of his employer, nor sue him for damages 'sustained in and resulting from that peculiar service.”
In DeForest v. Jewett, 88 N. Y. 264, a .yard in which the deceased worked was drained by some open ditches running across the road between the ties. He should have seen them and known about them, and it was held that plaintiff could not recover. See, also, Sweeney v. Envelope Co., 101 N. Y. 520.
The case of Gibson v. Railway Co., cited above, has a parallel in the case of Illick v. Railroad Co., 67 Mich. 632. This case is even stronger in its support of defendant's contention. A brakeman was climbing a ladder on the car to set a brake, which had been called for by the engineer. He was in the line of his dutyl He was drawn against a bridge, and killed. It was shown that this bridge was narrower than the standard width of bridges in use at the time. The Court held as follows:
“The bridge was sound, and safe for the passage of trains, without defect, and in good repair. 'Whether it was 14 or 24 feet wide was a matter of no concern to the*273 brakeman, so long as lie was not required to occupy a place of danger in tbe discharge of his duties while passing over it, and this he was not required to do. * * * Railroad companies must be allowed to use their own discretion as to the kind of bridges they .will use, and when and under what circumstances they will remove or replace them, while they are safe. Any other rule would be both unjust and oppressive. As between the employers and employed, it is unquestionably the duty of a railroad company to provide a track and equipments which shall be reasonably safe; but this does not oblige the company to make use of the latest improvements, or to change the structures upon its road so as to conform to the most recent or advanced improvements and ideas upon such subjects; neither does good railroading require any such thing. * * * I do not think the record discloses any fault or negligence on the part of the defendant."
Mr. Justice Cooley states the doctrine thus:
“The terms in which the proposition lias been stated will exempt the master from responsibility in all cases where the risks were apparent, and were voluntarily assumed by a person capable of understanding and appreciating them. No employer, by any implied contract, undertakes that his buildings are safe beyond a contingency, or even that they are as safe as those of his neighbors,. or that accidents shall not result to those in his service from risks which, perhaps, others would guard against more effectually than it is done by him. Neither can a duty rest upon any one which can bind him to so extensive a responsibility. There are degrees of safety in buildings which differ in age, construction, and state of repair, as there are also in the different methods of conducting business, and these, not the servant only, but any person doing business with the proprietor, is supposed to inform himself about and keep in mind when he enters upon the premises." Cooley, Torts, 551.
It would seem that ive may, from these authorities, deduce the principle that obvious imperfections in methods or machinery, existing at the time of the employment, cannot be made the basis of a liability in favor of .an omployé who suffers an injury in the course of hia
Upon the theory of this case which we are now discussing, we think there was a failure to show negligence on the part of the défendant. The plaintiff was, or ought to have been, familiar with the side track, and, if he was not, common prudence dictated that he should not venture between the moving car and engine without first looking under the car to examine the character of the road-bed, all of which defendant had a right to expect of him. See Gardner v. Railroad Co., 58 Mich. 591; Grand v. Railroad Co., 83 Id. 571.
'Inseparably connected with this question of negligence is the doctrine that “the employé assumes the ordinary risks and perils incident to his employment.” It has been impossible to avoid some discussion of it in the foregoing pages. It is a doctrine as well established as any in the books, that an employé may contract to use defective machinery, and where he knows of the defect, and uses the machinery voluntarily, the law warrants the inference' that he assumes the incident risks. It must not be assumed that this doctrine gives unlimited immunity to the master. The doctrine is shaded down to cases where the want of knowledge precludes the inference, and makes the master liable. But this doctrine does not justify carelessness upon the part of the servant. The master has a right to expect him to be alert to inform himself of existing conditions, and he cannot attack the master from the shelter of unjustifiable ignorance of the business, machinery, and methods which he is employed to use. Actual ignorance will not alone suffice to charge a master; the ignorance must also be excusable.
The jury should have been directed to find a verdict for the defendant.
The judgment will be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
This case was once before the Court on demurrer to the declaration, and is reported in 91 Mich. 379. It was held on demurrer that while “employés may be chargeable with knowledge that side tracks 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,” — yet “ railroad companies owe it to their employés to protect them from unnecessary and dangerous pitfalls and unusual conditions.”.
The averment in this declaration was that the railway company permitted a dangerous hole to exist in its track.