1. Among other acts of negligence alleged in the declaration was that stated in the first head-note. After a careful and laborí o as examination of the evidence as contained in the record, we have been unable to find any proof sustaining this charge, and have ruled accordingly.
2. The purpose for which an ordinary brake is attached to a railroad car is to afford a means of readily stopping it, or cheeking its speed, when the ear is in motion, by turning a wheel at the top of a brake-rod. If such a brake was so constructed that it would not properly perform this work when thus operated, and as a consequence of its defective construction an employee of the company should be injured while attempting to operate it in this manner, he being himself free from negligence, the company would be liable; but where, by reason of a defect in the brake, an accidental injury occurs, but it is one which could not reasonably have been anticipated in the usual working of the brake as a probable consequence of such defect, the company should not be held liable.
The plaintiff in this case, for the purpose of stopping
3, 4. The evidence was quite voluminous, but the most material facts are about as follows: The plaintiff", together with several other employees of the company,
