63 F. 228 | 4th Cir. | 1894
(after stating the facts). The question in this case is, was the plaintiff below guilty of contributory
“If you believe tbat tbe engineer bad charge of the movements and management of tbe cars with the assent or knowledge of the temporary conductor, the conductor being absent, then he had the authority of a conductor in giving directions to subordinate employés, and could waive the general rules and contracts of the company; and if you are satisfied from the evidence that the engineer directed plaintiff to go between the cars, and to place a bent link in position for coupling, which could not be done with the coupling stick, and he exercised ordinary care in doing as he was directed, then he is entitled to recover compensatory damage for the injuries sustained.”
We are of the opinion that this was error. There is too great a tendency to clothe subordinate employés with the power and duty of vice principals, and then to conclude that they represent the master in every respect, and as fully as if he were present. We have alluded to this in Thom v. Pittard (decided at our last term) 62 Fed. 232. Be this as it may, whatever may be the authority of a person, himself an employé on a train, over other coemployés on the same train, he and they are bound to respect and obey the general rules and regulations of their common master, whose orders press equally upon each of them, coming with the highest sanction, and each of them must know that the other cannot rescind them. The learned judge has invested the substitute of a substituted conductor with all the powers held by the highest officer of the railroad system. If this engineer, accidentally and temporarily in charge of a train, could rescind or waive or suspend a fixed rule, of the company, a rule impressed in the most formal way upon a very large class of employés,—the class engaged, or likely to he called upon to engage, in coupling cars,—as a part of the contract and a condition precedent to their employment, he could revoke all rules, and govern himself and control his train at his own will, and at the risk and responsibility of his employers. Granting that within the scope of his agency he represents his employer, it can scarcely be supposed that it is within the scope of the agency of an engineer, or even of a conductor, to rescind the standing rules of the company, or to cancel a contract made by his employer with one of his servants antecedent to and as a condition for his employment. When the plaintiff in the action below followed the suggestion of the engineer, he knew the risk he was taking, knew that he had contracted not to take it under any circumstances, knew that the engineer could not make him take it, and he assumed the risk himself. He was injured 14th May, 1890. He had been in this same service from 12th October. 1889. When he entered it, he fully understood that the rules of the company positively forbade brakemen, and Mm among them, from coupling and uncoupling cars except with a stick; that not only brakemen, but all other persons, must not go between cars under any circumstances for the purpose of coupling, uncoupling, or for adjusting pins, etc., when an engine is attached to such cars or train. In consideration that the company would employ and would continue to employ him, he bound himself to obey this rule, and assumed all results, not only of disobedience,'but also of the
There is another viewT of this matter. Construing the terms of plaintiff's employment with ¡he defendant railroad company by the paper quoted above, he was engaged as a^brakeman. with the distinct agreement that he was not, to couple cars except with a stick, and was under no circumstances to go'between the cars of a part of a train with an engine attached. Tins, then, comes within that class of cases in which an employe is direct ed to assume a risk not in his regular employment. See cast's collected in 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 859, note 1. A railroad employé of mature years and experience, who is injured while coupling cars in obedience to the orders of his immediate superior, cannot recover merely because; that duty is outside the scope of his employment, when he makes no objection to performing if. and there is no threat of dismissal in case of refusal. Hogan v. Railroad Co., 53 Fed. 519. In Leary v. Railroad Co., 139 Mass. 580, 2 N. E. 115:
"If a servant of full age and ordinary intelligence, upon being required by Ms master to perform other duties more dangerous and complicated than those embraced in his original hiring:, undertakes the same, knowing their dangerous character, although unwillingly and from fear of losing his employment, and he is injured, lie cannot maintain an action for the injury.”
If the duty was not within his original employment, he could refuse it; and, if discharged, could recover on his contract of service. If, instead of refusing, he concludes to obey, he accepts the risk.