161 Mass. 353 | Mass. | 1894
The plaintiff, an engineer employed oy the defendant, was injured while on duty by being carried against a wooden post standing four feet from the track and two feet from the tender beam, where the plaintiff was at the time. The post had been put up as a temporary support to Hogg Bridge, Roxbury, about a week before, and the plaintiff testified that he did not know of it. The question is whether the judge was right in taking the case from the jury.
It is necessary for railroad companies to put up structures near enough to their tracks for it to be possible for persons on the trains to come in contact with them. Parallel tracks usually must be laid near enough to each other to create a similar danger between trains moving in opposite directions. A company is not bound to give warning of every such structure to every person employed upon its trains. There must be some point within the limit which it is possible for a man on a train to reach at which the railroad company has a right to build without notice, and to assume that those on the trains will keep out of the way. Every one knows that there is danger as soon as he gets outside of the line of the train when it is in motion. The plaintiff admitted it, and on that ground it is held that a passenger puts any part of his person beyond that line at his peril. Todd v. Old Colony & Fall River Railroad, 3 Allen, 18.
A rule of the defendant forbidding the piling of obstructions within six feet of the. track, if proved, would not affect