21 S.E. 554 | N.C. | 1895
A more experienced brakeman proposed to go in and make the coupling between a car standing on the track and the rear car of the train, to which the engine was attached, but the conductor, with an oath, ordered him back and said, "No, let Shadd (the plaintiff) make it; how will he ever know anything if you never let him do anything?" The plaintiff then "signed the engineer down," and stepping in front of the stationary car began to strike a link that had "gotten crossways," with a pin which he carried in one hand, while (970) he held his lamp in the other. The two cars at this moment were eight or ten feet apart, when the conductor, moving from the side on which he and his two brakemen were standing when the order was given, crossed between them to the opposite side of the track and waved to the engineer to back his train. When the brakeman was striking the link to get it into its place, the conductor was saying to him, "Don't miss the coupling, as I want to get away some time to *570 night." As the pin was brought by a second blow into its proper place, the conductor again said in a loud tone of voice, "Don't miss the coupling." While these urgent commands were being given, the train was all the while moving back, in obedience to the signal of Reid, towards the new employee, who had gone between the cars under his express order and was then exposed to peril that was becoming every moment more imminent as the train approached the stationary car. The engineer's movements were regulated in direction, if not speed, by the conductor's lamp until plaintiff's hand was caught between the drawhead of the front car and the link he had been adjusting on the drawhead of the rear car (he could not say confidently which) and was badly injured.
It is a settled law in this State that a conductor is, in his relation to those subject to his orders on the train in his charge, a vice-principal acting for the company. Mason v. R. R.,
New Trial.
Cited: Turner v. Lumber Co.,