188 A.D. 341 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
By stipulation this case comes under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (35 U. S. Stat. at Large, 65, chap. 149, as amd. by 36 id. 291, chap. 143); and the plaintiff’s intestate met his death at Bath, on the 28th day of June, 1918, while working as a trainman for the defendant, on a train known as the local freight and pick-up. This train ran from Groveland to Elmira, on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad, and its purpose was to distribute and pick up local freight which either had been or was designed to be placed in through trains for larger transportation. This train usually found an hour or more of work to be done at Bath, and the decedent had, off and on, worked on this train for a considerable period prior to the accident in question. The defendant’s railroad passes through Bath from east to west. The freight station is south of the main tracks. There are three tracks to the north of this station. The extreme north track is the west-bound main track. The middle track is the east-bound main track, and the third is what is known as the freight-house siding. A freight house, with a projecting canopy, stands by the side of the freight-house siding, and to the west of the freight house is a platform, covered by a canopy which reaches to within a few inches of the line of the eaves of freight cars standing upon this siding, and from twelve to twenty-four inches higher than the roof of the car, depending upon its particular model. The result of this structure is, as it was obviously designed to be, that when a freight car is placed along this platform there is a practical shelter for the workmen and the goods to be handled thereon; the storm is shut out from the south by the car itself, and from overhead by the canopy, and while there, is some suggestion in the case that if the canopy had been higher this particular accident could not
The distinction is not quite so obvious in the case of Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. Swearingen (196 U. S. 51) where the injury resulted from contact with a scale box in the yard where the plaintiff was discharging his duty, but it is entirely clear that the case, which was a close one, turned upon the fact that the scale box was a comparatively small structure, which would not necessarily come within the observation of an employee whose attention had not been specially called to
The discussion so far has proceeded upon the assumption that the canopy-covered freight platform was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s intestate; that in passing along this freight siding the intestate came in contact with the canopy top and was thrown to the platform and thence to the ground, sustaining injuries producing his death, and it seems to us that were this in fact true; it would not involve the defendant in liability, for the reasons already suggested. The danger to be apprehended along this freight siding was entirely open and obvious, and it existed in connection with a necessary provision for the expeditious and proper handling of the traffic at this point, and it was a danger which could not be encountered except in extraordinary circumstances, necessarily involving carelessness on the part of one familiar with the situation and intelligently making use of his eyes. At the time of this accident the defendant was moving a single freight car, attached to an engine. The engine was backing to the eastward, drawing the freight car upon which the intestate was located in the discharge of his duty. George McGrain, who was the only eye-witness, and whose testimony is not discredited, had charge of the engine. Between him and the freight car was the tender, and the plaintiff’s witness, Pelone, claims to have been standing upon the bumper of this
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed on law and facts, and new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. The court disapproves of the finding that the defendant was guilty of negligence.