97 F. 255 | 9th Cir. | 1899
This action was brought in the court below to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by the death of her husband, Charles Slavens, on December 7, 1896, by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant company. Deceased, Slavens, was a section hand in the employ of the railway company; performing the duty, at the time of his death, of track walker and night watchman. One Antrim was the foreman of the section of the road on which the accident which caused Slavens’ death occurred, and, on the evening of the accident, detailed, from the section men under his charge, Slavens and one Hughes to patrol it. Antrim had then had charge of this section for more than five years, and Slavens and Hughes had worked thereon about four years. The night watchmen were usually sent out in pairs. Hughes and Slavens had frequently been companions in the work, and had previously removed slides along different parts of the section. These men were sent out on the road by the foreman in pursuance of general rules of the company, which provide:
“Rule 455. Roadmasters are responsible for the safety of track, good condition of roadbed, fences, right of way, and grounds, and neat and tidy appearance of stations, buildings, and surroundings. They will frequently examine bridges, culverts, water stations, and other structures, and promptly report any defects or failure to superintend.” '
*257 “Enlo 460. Foremen and men in their employ must at all times hold themselves in readiness to aid the passage of trains, and, in ease of accident or delay, will obey the orders of the conductors. (See rule 72.)
"Rule 461. Section foremen must pass over and examine their sections daily, and ascertain that the track, slopes, cuts, bridges, switches, etc., are safe, anti make necessary repairs. This should be done in the morning.
“Rule 462. In ease of extraordinary storms or high water, foremen must be out with iheir men, day and. night, with proper signals, and watch those places most likely to damage, and take every precaution to prevent accident.”
“Rule 472. The rounds of road watchmen or track walkers must bo so arranged as to pass over their section in advance of passenger trains, when practicable. They will carefully examine the roadway, keeping a sharp lookout for broken rails, observe switches, try locks, and see that they are in proper order; see that cars clear the main track; examine buildings and other property, and protect the same from theft Are, or other damage. Should an obstruction or anything occur that would be liable to endanger trains, the watchmen will a.t once, after leaving a red signal in the center of the track where obstruction occurs, proceed in the direction of the first expected train, and place torpedoes on the rail, as provided in rule 133. He will then protect the opposite direction in the same way, and then call his foreman, and send word to the nearest telegraph office.”
“Rule 72. Six long blasts, repeated at intervals, is notice to trackmen and others that the train needs assistance; and all employes within hearing must repair at once to the'engine or train, and render such aid as is in their power.”
Hlavens and Hughes were acting under tliese general rales at the time of the accident, which occurred in the evening of December 7, 1896, about three or four miles south of Castlerock, in the state of Washington, at which point the defendant's road is located between a high bluff and the Cowlitz river. The bank of the road at that place is from 40 to 60 feet high, with a slope of about 4Í5 deg., and is covered with a heavy growth of brush and undergrowth. On the opposite side of the railroad track, and very near it, is the bank of the river. The river at the time of the accident was very high; it hiring the season of rainstorms, and it having then been raining for several days. While Hlavens and Hughes were walking on the track several miles south of Castlerock, a freight train from the north overtook and paseed them. Within a few minutes they heard the whistle of the engine for aid, and at once hurried forward to the assistance of the train. When they arrived they found that the train had been stopped by a slide from the high bank, consisting of soft, mushy ground, brush, and stumps. They at once began to removí; the obstructions; being assisted in the work by the train crew, under the direction of the conductor. While so engaged, a second slide from the same bank occurred, which carried Hlavens and Hughes into the river, resulting in the death of the former.
In her complaint, the plaintiff alleged that through its carelessness and negligence, and without the knowledge of the deceased, the defendant allowed the bank to become insecure and dangerous to its employes, including the deceased, who might be ordered or directed to work upon or adjacent to its track at the point in question; that the defendant ordered the deceased and Hughes to remove the obstructions from the railroad track with all possible speed, and carelessly and negligently failed to notify or warn the deceased or Hughes of the dangers incident to or attendant upon the removal of the obstructions; that it was very dark, and that the deceased and Hughes
' There was evidence to the effect that about 17 years prior to the accident a ditch was constructed on and along the bluff above the roadway, at varying distances from the rim of the slope of the bank,
“[ asked him if there was not danger of another slide coming down and putting us all into the river. He said, ‘Yes,’ and kind of laughed, smiled,— kind of joshing, we were. He said, ‘Yes;’ we would expect that at any time; chat he had worked there before, and we could expect that at any time. I said, ‘If that is the case, I guess I will move out of this mud, to where I can have safe footing.’ ”
The witness was then asked, and testified, as follows:
“Q. What did you do? A. I moved out. Q. What did he do? A. He went on working. I had hardly got out of the mud until I heard a crashing and a cracking, and started to run, and the slide passed right between back of myself and my brakeman. The brakeman was near me, — in the same vicinity. The second slide is the one that swept Mr. Slavens and Mr. Hughes into the river.”
The action of the court below in permitting the conductor to testily ro this conversation with Slavens constitutes the first ground relied upon by tbe plaintiff in error for a reversal of tbe judgment. The other grounds relied upon by the plaintiff in error, apart from the contention that the verdict of the jury was unsupported by and contrary to tbe evidence, grew out of the charge of the court to the jury. It was, in part, as follows:
“The degree of care and prudence which an employer owes his employe is that degree of ordinary care and prudence which a person of ordinary intelligence and prudence will naturally, and does usually, exercise for his own safety. II is the duty of an employer to have all the appliances for doing his work inspected, and kept in a. condition fit for use, and so that they can be used with safely. And the place where an employe is set to work should be looked after, and, as far as may be, kept in a condition of safety, so that tbe men can work there with, safety. It is not a rule which requires an employer*260 to do an impossible thing, or to insure the absolute safety of an employó against injury that may happen to him if he is set to work in a dangerous place. It is necessary for employers operating works in mountainous places or near rivers to employ men to do the very work that is necessary to make the places safe to the employós who engage in the service, and the employe who engages in that service assumes certain risks. Now, the risks which an employó does assume himself are of two classes: One class is that of those risks which are ordinarily incident to the employment in which he engages.— the ordinary risks which are incident to the employment the employó takes upon himself. The other class of risks are those which are known to the employe, or which are obvious, or should be known to him if he exercises due care for his own safety. If an employer has allowed his machinery or appliances to get out of repair, so that they are dangerous to handle, or sends an employó into a dangerous place, that might be safe if due care had been exercised, if that is a danger which is out of the ordinary, still the employó assumes that risk, if he voluntarily goes there with the knowledge that the danger exists, or if that danger is so obvious that in the exercise of his faculties lie could know it. So that this defendant is not liable in this case for any result happening to Mr. Slavens for going to work -in a dangerous place, if the evidence shows that the danger was simply the kind of danger that was necessarily incident to his employment, or if it was out of the ordinary; if it was a danger that was actually known to him, or was obvious to him, — that the risk was assumed by him, — and there is no liability of this defendant company in this case to pay damages. If, on the other hand, it appears to you from the evidence in the ease that the defendant railway company was negligent, and that by reason of its negligence a danger existed, which was unknown or was not obvious to Mr. Slavens, and that, by reason of his being engaged in work exposed to that danger, the accident happened as a necessary result of the negligence of the company, so that that negligence can be considered as the proximate cause of the injury, then the defendant company is liable, and the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict at your hands for such damages as in your estimation will be reasonable compensation to her for the loss.
“The only wrongs that are charged on the part of the railway company, which can be considered by you in this case, are the particular wrongs which are mentioned in the complaint. The complaint charges that the railway company was negligent in allowing a bluff along which the track is situated, and along the bank of the Cowlitz river, to become in an unsafe and dangerous condition by reason of neglect on the part of the company, and the evidence in this case is directed to proving that the negligence — üie particular negligence —consists in neglecting to keep open a ditch for drainage of the water out of the hill. That is the question which is submitted to the jury, — whether there was neglect on the part of the railway company in that particular; and, if you find that there was negligence in that particular, then you must go on and consider and determine the question whether or not that negligence was the cause of Mr. Slavens’ death, and m that connection will take into consideration and account the fact that the slide — the landslide that occurred there before Mr. Slavens commenced to work at that place at removing the material from the track — was not the cause of his death. The slide that occurred before he went there is not of itself the cause of his death, and the danger created by reason of that slide was necessarily obvious to him. While he was at work, as the evidence shows, there was a further come-down of material from the bluff, and it was that which carried him out into the river. Now, the question for you to determine is whether the continuation of the sloughing of the bluff was caused directly or proximately by the 'failure of the railway company to keep the ditch open and free, so as to drain the water out of the hill.
“Another wrong that is charged in this complaint against the railway company is in not having a sufficient force of men at work in removing the earth and material from the track at that place, and to keep watch of coming danger to the men that were at work. Now, I instruct you, as a matter of law, in this case, the railway company is not liable for that neglect, and for this reason: Mr. Slavens necessarily had knowledge of any lack of a sufficient force of men to work, or of watchmen to give warning, at the time he went*261 to work, and Ilion* is no evidence that there was any such coercion exerted upon him that lie ivas compelled to go there. He must bo understood to have gone to work at that place, at that time voluntarily, and with full knowledge on his part oí any neglect of the company in not having a sufficient force of men there at that time, if, indeed, there was any such neglect, so that he must be understood as having assumed that risk. That, is one of the risks or dangers that was known to him.
“Another charge against the company of wrong is in the failure to give Sir. Slavcns warning of that danger. In the argument to the jury in this case, counsel have charged Mr. Cochran, the conductor of the freight train, with culpability in not warning Mr. Slavens that there was danger in working in that place. Now, it is clear that Mr. Slavens himself was as well informed, if not better informed, in regard to that danger, as was Mr. Cochran, the conductor who run the train. Also, the contention is made Unit for tine time being, in the work of removing the material and earth from the track, he was the foreman of that work, and the representative of the railway company, and acting in the capacity of a vice principal. There is no more reason for supposing' that he had knowledge of the condition of things oil the bank above, that were out of view from the track, or that he know of the existence of any basin or gathering oC water upon the hill above, or of there being an insufficient drain, than that the trackmen who walked the track had such knowledge. That ground for charging the railway company with neglect (that is, failure on the part of Mr. Cochran to warn him of any danger) is not sufficient. The question that is submitted to you goes back of that, and it is lor you to consider whether there was any neglect on the part of the railway company to have in a superintending position a man competent to keep watch of the condition of the right of way, and to give warning of any known dangerous condition by reason of a lack of proper drainage, and whether there was on the part of the defendant any failure to properly inform the men Who were required to go to work, when suddenly called upon in the nighttime, of any peculiar or unusual condition of things that would bo liable to result in an injury to them. If the rules of the company had made it the duty of the ron-dntaster or foreman of the section gang', and either one of those officers neglected that duty, you may consider that as a question to be decided in this cast!. — 'whether or not there was in that particular a failure to give warning which would amount to a breach of duty on the part of the railway company to exercise ordinary care and prudence in warning its employes against dangers that were unknown to them.”
The conversa (ion between the conductor and the deceased was objected to on two grounds: First, because of statutory incompetency; and, secondly, because of irrelevancy and immateriality.
By section 858, Bev. St., it is provided that:
“In the courts of the United States, no witness shall be excluded in any action on account of color, or in any civil action because he is a party to, or interested in the issue tried: provided, that in actions by or against executors, administrators, or guardians, in which judgment may bo rendered for or against thorn, neither party shall be allowed to testify against the other as to any transaction with, or sfatement by, the testator, intestate, or ward, unless called to testify thereto by the opposite party, or required to testify thereto by the court. In all other respects the laws of the state in which the court is held shall be the rules of decision as to the competency of witnesses in the courts of the United States, in trials at common law, and in equity and admiralty.”
A statute of the state of Washington provides that:
“No person offered as a witness shall be excluded from giving evidence by reason of his interest in the event of the action as a partv thereto, or otherwise: but such interest may be shown to affect his credibility; provided, however, that in an action or proceeding where the adverse party sues or defends as executor, or administrator, or legal representative of any deceased person, or as deriving- right or title by, through, or from any deceased person,*262 or as the guardian or conservator of the estate of any insane person, or of any minor under the age of fourteen years, then a party in interest, or to the record, shall not be admitted to testify in his own behalf as to any transaction had by him with, or any statement made to him by any such deceased or insane person, or by any such minor under the age of fourteen years.” 2 Hill’s Code,' § 1646.
Even if the exception to the general rule'declared in the United States statute above quoted could be extended by any act of a state,— which cannot be done (Potter v. Bank, 102 U. S. 163; King v. Worthington, 104 U. S. 44; Goodwin v. Fox, 129 U. S. 601, 630, 631, 9 Sup. Ct. 367), — still the statute of the state of Washington did not render the witness incompetent, for the simple reason that the conductor was not a party to the record, nor, in any legal sense, interested in the case. The conversation testified to by him was clearly a part of the res gestae, and both material and relevant. “Declarations which are the natural emanations or outgrowths of the act or occurrence in litigation,” said the court in the case of Railway Co. v. Buck (Ind. Sup.) 19 N. E. 453, “although not precisely concurrent in point of time, if they were yet voluntarily and spontaneously made so nearly contemporaneous as to be in the presence of the transaction which they illustrate and explain, and were made under such circumstances as necessarily to exclude the idea of design or deliberation, must, upon the clearest principles of justice, be admissible as' part of the act or transaction itself.” The declarations of the deceased, as testified to by the conductor, tended to show that he was apprised of the dangerous position in which he was working. But it is contended on the part of the plaintiff in error that the conductor ordered the deceased into this place of danger, and in doing so stood in the place of the railroad company, that there was a hidden danger in the bank, and that as it would have been the duty of the master to have warned the deceased of such hidden danger, if personally present, directing the work, it was equally the duty of the conductor. This contention is based on rule 160 of the defendant company, which declares, as has been seen, that “foremen, and men in their employ, must at all times hold themselves in readiness to aid the passage of trains, and, in case of accident or delay, will obey the orders of the conductor.” This rule provides for emergencies. It was no part of the duty of the conductor to know anything about the ditch on the bluff, or the condition of the bank. In the nature of things, he could not know as much about their safety as the deceased, to whom, in part, their care was expressly committed by the company’s rules under which he was working. By rules 155, 161, and 172, the duty of keeping in order the road, right of way, etc., was imposed upon the roadmaster and section men, each of whom was a fellow servant of the deceased, and for whose neglect the company was not answerable. At most, the conductor, in the matter in question, was a mere temporary boss; and even if it be conceded that it was his duty to have gone upon the bank and bluff, and reported their condition to the deceased, his failure to do so would likewise be 'the negligence of a fellow servant, for which the common employer is not responsible. Mining Co. v. Whelan, 168
It is also contended on the part of the plaintiff in error that the court below erred in instructing the jury that the defendant company was not liable for ils alleged failure to have a sufficient force of men to remove the obstruction from its track, and to keep watch of danger to the men that were at work. There was no evidence of any failure on the part of the company to furnish all the men that were needed for the proper operation and protection of the road, including the proper protection and preservation of the bank. On the contrary, the testimony of the foreman of the section on which the accident occurred was to the effect that he was given as many laborers to perform section duty as he required; that on the night of file accident he sent out the number of men he thought necessary to perform the requisite duty, which they were doing in the ordinary and customary way at the time the slide in question occurred, it was usual, according to the evidence in the case, for the foreman to send out the track walkers in pairs, which was done on that occasion. Klavens and Hughes knew that they constituted the usual force, and when they were called to the assistance of the train, and found it impeded by a slide, it was their duty to inquire into their surroundings, and they must be held to have assumed the risk of the situation in which they voluntarily placed themselves. Tuttle v. Railway Co., 122 U. S. 189, 7 Sup. Ct. 1166; Southern Pac. Co. v. Seley, 152 U. S. 145, 14 Sup. Ct. 530; Railway Co. v. Jackson, 12 C. C. A. 507, 65 Fed. 48, and cases there cited.
We would not be justified in holding the verdict contrary to the evidence, and are of ihe opinion that the plaintiff in error has uo just ground to complain of the instructions of the court below. The judgment is affirmed.