273 Pa. 224 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
Defendant appeals from a judgment, entered on a verdict for plaintiff, in an action of trespass to recover damages for personal injuries.
Plaintiff was an employee of Gall & Company, contractors engaged in construction work for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, adjacent to the plant of defendant. To accomplish the work, Gall & Company, for purposes of their own, about ten days prior to the accident to plaintiff, removed some of the rails on defendant’s narrow-gauge plant track, located on land belonging to it, adjoining the railroad, and, at the same time, removed a permanent bumping block, at the end of this track, substituting therefor ties on the track, piled on top of each other, and deemed, by the person in charge of the work for Gall & Company, adequate and sufficient to serve the purpose formerly filled by the bumper.
On the day of the accident, plaintiff was working near the end of this narrow-gauge track and the ties, when a “dinkey” engine, operating on the track, struck the ties, knocked them against plaintiff, who was standing with his back to the engine, and he received the injuries which led to this suit.
It is difficult to conclude on what theory the trial judge determined defendant’s liability. He submitted to the jury the question whether plaintiff’s injuries were
But there is no evidence in the case to show defendant knew, or had any reason to believe the new bumper was not sufficient for its purpose. The engine when it struck the tires was running up grade. One witness testified it had stalled on the way up the grade, and had to back in order to start over again; three witnesses were of opinion it was running faster than usual; none said it was traveling at an undue rate of speed, considering the use of the engine, the siding and the bumper. Those who said they thought the engine was running
The only evidence which can be educed from the facts as they are shown by the record, is the negligence of Gall & Company, in the way in which the temporary bumper was arranged, or of some undisclosed person in rearranging it shortly before the collision; nothing whatever is apparent which fixes defendant with liability. It matters not how the duty of defendant toward plaintiff be viewed — whether as that owed to a licensee, or that which is always due toward an ordinary person on the land by sufferance, the result is the same, and the court below erred in submitting the case to the jury, no negligence of defendant being shown.
The judgment is reversed and is here entered for the defendant non obstante veredicto.