82 S.E. 275 | S.C. | 1914
July 4, 1914. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant for $5,000 damages for personal injuries sustained while assisting, as a brakeman, in operating a switch engine in defendant's yard at Greenville, S.C. by attempting to mount said engine when it was in motion. The engine was provided with two steps, sometimes called running boards, at the front, on each side of the drawhead, and two on the rear of the tender, similarly placed. The steps were about 12 inches wide and three feet long, with backstops about six inches high. They extended over the rails and hung about 12 inches above them. They were so placed for the employees to stand upon, as the engine went about its business over the yard, and so that they could conveniently get on and off to throw switches and attend to their other duties. To enable him to better perform his duties, and especially that of giving signals to the engineer, the brakeman was expected to ride on one of the steps at the forward end, that is, the end in the direction in which the engine was moving.
One of defendant's yard conductors, who had been for seven years, and was still at the time of the trial, in defendant's *128 service, testified that he had instructions from the superintendent not to allow any of the employees to attempt to get upon the steps of an approaching engine from the track, presumably because, in such an attempt, to fall or a misstep would throw them directly in front of the approaching engine, and that they were permitted to mount an approaching engine only from the side of the track. This instruction or rule was generally obeyed and enforced. Rule 11 of the company was as follows:
"Every employee must exercise the utmost caution to avoid injury to himself or to his fellows, especially in the switching of cars, and in all movements of trains, in which work each employee must look after and be responsible for his own safety. Jumping on or off trains or engines in motion, getting between cars in motion to couple or uncouple them, and all similar imprudences are dangerous and in violation of duty. All employees are warned that if they commit these imprudences it will be at their own peril and risk."
It will be seen that the rule does not, in so many words, prohibit the practice of jumping on or off moving engines or trains; and, though a prohibition of it may be implied from the warning therein given, the evidence is that, in that respect, the rule has never been observed or enforced. On the contrary, the custom of defendant's servants has been to get on and off moving engines and trains, and this custom has been so general and long continued as to warrant the inference that it obtained with the knowledge and acquiescence of defendant, notwithstanding the rule. The same conductor testified that, during seven years that he had been in the service, the custom had prevailed, and still prevails, and that it was known to and even practiced by the superior officers and agents of defendant. In fact, he said that he did not think it was a violation of the rules.
The night of the accident was dark and rainy. At the place where it occurred there was no light, except that *129 afforded by the switch light and the lantern which plaintiff carried, and the tracks `were on an embankment, which began to slope very close to the end of the crossties, there being just enough room for a person to walk along the roadbed at the ends of the crossties, which were from 8 to 12 inches thick, and extended about that distance outside the rails. The roadbed was not surfaced, nor was there any ballast between the crossties outside the rails.
Plaintiff threw the switch to the track into which he had been ordered to take the engine. As he did so, the engineer, seeing that the switch had been properly set, did not wait for a signal, but immediately reversed his engine and started backwards into that track. Plaintiff was standing by the side of the track, and, as the engine approached him, at a speed from six to eight miles an hour, he attempted to jump upon the step at the end of the tender. His right foot struck the edge of the backstop an inch or two above the step, glanced off, and passed between the back of the step and the wheel. Before he could recover his balance his leg was caught by the wheel and crushed, so that it had to be amputated a few inches below the thigh.
The sole question presented by the appeal is whether the trial Judge erred in refusing defendant's motion for a nonsuit. It is unnecessary to cite authority for the proposition that, on a motion for nonsuit, the testimony and all inferences from it must be taken most strongly against the defendant. It is also well settled that, if there was any testimony tending to prove any one or more of the specifications of negligence, the motion was properly refused. It follows that it is necessary to consider only those allegations of negligence which are found to be supported by the evidence.
Negligence is charged in the failure of defendant to provide handrails or grab irons and steps, or running boards, at the sides of the tender. Plaintiff testified that it would be easier and safer to get on and off a moving engine if the *130
steps were on the sides, and he mentioned two railroad systems which had them so placed. While it is true that the allegation of defendant's negligence is not to be tested conclusively or exclusively by what other well regulated companies did or failed to do, still the testimony had some bearing upon the issue. Lowrimore v. Mfg. Co.,
The learned counsel for appellant admit that, if the testimony warranted the inference that defendant's employees were required to get on and off moving engines and cars, it was the duty of defendant to furnish appliances reasonably safe and suitable for such service. But the duty of the master should not be determined solely with reference to the service required. The measure of the duty also depends somewhat upon the manner in which the service is customarily performed, with the knowledge and acquiescence of the master. The master's duty does not end with the adoption of a proper system and the making and promulgation of suitable rules for the safety of his servants. He is bound also to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that the rules are enforced, and that the instrumentalities furnished are properly used. 3 Labatt, M. S. (2d ed.) secs. 1110, 1120.
While the testimony may not warrant the inference that the employees were actually required to get upon moving engines and cars, it does warrant an inference of an invitation to do so, implied from the custom, and, perhaps, also, *131
that doing the work in the customary way was a condition of remaining in the service. Under such circumstances, the existence of the rule suggests the possibility of its having been made and promulgated for purposes other than the real desire to safeguard the defendant's employees. Under such circumstances, a rule should not be an effective shield from liability. Bussey v. Ry., 78 S.C. 356,
The next specification of negligence which finds support in the evidence is in not providing a safe place to work, in that the rails at the switch were about 18 inches above the roadbed, when they should not have been more than 6 inches, the height of the rails above it. This necessarily involves the allegation that the roadbed at that place should have been surfaced to the level of the top of the crossties. Appellant contends that the only inference from the facts and circumstances is that this defect was not the cause of the accident, because it indisputably appears that the sole cause of the accident was, not that the plaintiff did not jump high enough to catch the footboard, but because his foot struck the backstop instead of the step. This argument is plausible, but it leaves out of view the fact that the necessity of having to make such a high step from the edge of the embankment may have been the cause of plaintiff's miscalculation, not only of the height of the step, but also of its position and of his ability to safely catch it. It is matter of common knowledge and experience that such a feat is more easily and safely accomplished from a level surface. Such an equation is composed of numerous factors of more or less importance; and it may be that one of the most important here involved was the failure of plaintiff's mind to properly and accurately direct his physical energies in the attempt, on account of the situation and circumstances mentioned. In Strauss v. R.Co.,
The next question to be considered is whether the motion should have been granted, because the testimony is susceptible of no other inference than that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. That contention is stated by appellant as follows:
"As the switch engine was backing past the spot where the plaintiff had thrown the switch and where he was standing in a place of perfect safety, the plaintiff attempted to board the switch engine upon the rear footboard of the tender, which was then in front, as the engine was running backwards, in direct violation of the rules of the company, which forbids employees from jumping on engines in motion in the nighttime, incumbered with a lantern in one hand, at a point inadequately lighted for such an attempt, where the distance from the ground to the step was greater than at other points of the yard, and when he knew that a false step or other miscalculation would inevitably throw him directly in the path of the approaching engine, when there were other safe places accessible to him for boarding the same, and when care for his own protection required that he should wait until the engine stopped." *133
The effect of the alleged violation of the rule has already been discussed. It is not contributory negligence to get on or off a moving train unless the situation and circumstances are such as to make the danger of doing so apparent to a man of ordinary prudence, and ordinarily it is a question of fact for the jury. Strauss v. R. Co.,supra, and cases cited. The facts and circumstances of this case were susceptible of more than one inference, and that question was properly sent to the jury.
Under the Constitution of this State, the defense of assumption of risk was not available to defendant.Youngblood v. R. Co.,
These views make it unnecessary to consider the other grounds of nonsuit, or the ground upon which plaintiff asked that the judgment below be sustained, to wit, that the action was under the Federal Employers' Liability Act (Act April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65 [U.S. Comp. St. Supp. 1911, p. 1322]), and the alleged failure of defendant to comply with the Safety Appliance Act of Congress (Act March 2, 1895, c. 196, 27 Stat. 531 [U.S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3174]).
Affirmed.