St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. v. Shackelford

42 Ark. 417 | Ark. | 1883

SMITH, J.

Shackelford was in the employment of the railway company as a laborer upon a construction train. At the time the injury was received, for which he sued, he was specially engaged in moving heavy iron rails from one flat car to another. While he and his co-laborers had a bar of iron in their hands, and were in the act of shifting it from one car to another, the train was pat in motion without warning of any kind. This caused the men to drop the iron, which rolling over and catching the thumb of plaintiff’s right hand, crushed it. The answer denied that the injury was the result of the defendant’s negligence. A jury trial resulted in a verdict of $1,250 damages for the plaintiif.

The verdict was assailed, in the motion for a new trial, as being without evidence to support it.

The material facts are not in dispute. The train was standing at a station. All of the hands upon it, conductor, engineer, brakemen, and laborers, were under the control, and subject to the orders of the foreman, Price. And all were engaged in the same common pursuit, viz., in repairing the defendant’s track from the effect of a recent washout. At the time of the accident Price was in the depot building. He had just before given directions for the unloading of the iron, and as soon as it was unloaded that the train should be cut into two separate parts, and one car be placed on the side track.

The men were in the act of handling the last bar of the iron and the proximate cause of the injury was their carelessness in dropping it, or the carelessness of the engineer in starting the train without a signal.

Now it is unimportant whether it was the negligence of the conductor or of the engineer, or of his immediate co-laborers that produced the injury. They were one and all fellow servants, within the meaning of the rule which exempts the master from responsibility for such accideuts. The plaintiff, when he engaged to do construction work on a railway, undertook to run all the risks incident to the service, including the risk of negligence on the part of his fellow workmen. He must have known that he was liable to be injured by their want of care, and that against such hazards his employer was powerless to protect him. The implied contract of the company did not extend to indemnify him against the negligence of any one but the company itself. Cooley on Torts, 542, and cases cited; Wood on Master and Servant, sec. 428; Bartonhill Coal Co. v. Ried, 3 Macq., 266; Farwell v. B. & W. R. Corp., 4 Met., 49.

In the case last cited, a locomotive engineer was injured through the carelessness of a switchman.

In Hodgkins v. Eastern R. Co., 119 Mass., 419, a brakeman sustained injury by reason of the making up of the train of cars with platforms of unequal height by the ordinary servants of the company.

In Rohback v. Pacific R. Co., 43 Mo., 187, a track man was injured through the carelessness of an engineer in backing a train of ears, without ringing the bell or sounding the whistle, on to the plaintiff who was at work, with his face from the train.

And in all these cases it was decided that the master could not be held to respond in damages; the difference in the grade of the servants being of no consequence, so long as both serve and are paid by the same master, work under the same control, and are engaged in the same general business.

There is no proof that the conductor, engineer, or other servants employed by the company, were incompetent by reason of want of skill or prudence, for the business intrusted to them; nor, with the exception of the foreman, that any one of them had any control over the others. Pi'ice, if any one, occupied the position of superintendent of this work, yet there is no pretense that he was guilty of such negligent conduct as to render the principal chargeable as for its own personal fault.

Errors in the charge of the court wrerealso complained of. After laying down the law correctly in the second insruction given at the instance of the defendant, the court practically nullified its direction by telling the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff if any of the defendants “ caused the cars to move up whilst the workmen were at work, without notice to the plaintiff, whereby plaintiff’s thumb was mashed.”

The court, also, of its own motion, gave the following: “If the jury find from the evidence that the injury complained of was the result of the negligence of an employé of the defendant, 'who was at the time performing master duties of the defendant, they will find for the plaintiff'.”

There is no evidence in the record upon which to base such directions.

Reversed for a new trial.