32 S.E. 550 | N.C. | 1899
This is the same action in which there was a former trial and appeal, reported in
In the light of the former trial his Honor declined to submit an issue as to whether the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of a fellow-servant, informed the jury that this Court had decided that railroad companies should use automatic couplers or other safe coupling appliances in general use, and that the true question was whether the plaintiff was injured by the defective appliances with which the coupling of the cars was to be made — the use of such as were defective and dangerous would be negligence in the company, it being their duty to furnish safe appliances to their employees.
The defendant excepted to the refusal of his Honor to submit the issue as to the negligence of a fellow-servant, and to the charge relating to negligence of the defendant. There was verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Appeal by defendant. *146 The plaintiff was injured in attempting to couple cars of the defendant on which there were no automatic car-couplers, but in lieu thereof skeleton draw-heads of unequal height. The court below held that the absence of automatic couplers, in general use, was negligence, per se, and refused to submit an issue whether the injury was not caused by the negligence of a fellow-servant, and refused to instruct the jury, as prayed, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence if he could by proper care have coupled the cars by hand without accident.
The duty to furnish proper and safe appliances is that of the common master, and injury caused by their absence cannot be attributed to the negligence of a fellow-servant. Troxler v. R. R.,
In the Twelfth Annual Report of the Interstate Commerce Commission (1898), published by authority of the United States Government, upon returns made by the railroad companies themselves, it is stated (at p. 88): "Since the enactment of the law in 1893 (requiring automatic couplers) there has been a decreasing number of casualties. There were 1,034 fewer employees killed and 14,062 fewer injured during the year ending 30 June, 1897, than during the same period in 1893. The importance of this subject will be realized when the yearly casualties to railway employees are compared with those which occurred during the recent war. In the Spanish-American War there were 298 killed and 1,645 wounded. In 1897 there were 1,693 men killed and 27,667 injured from all causes in railway service. From coupling and uncoupling cars alone 219 less were killed and 4,994 less were injured in 1897 than in 1893, when the law was enacted. The number of such employees killed has been reduced one-half, and the number of injured also practically reduced one-half. The reduction in the number of accidents from all causes largely exceeded (by nearly three to one) in a single year the entire casualties resulting from the prosecution of the late war."
Thus in four years — from 1893 to 1897 — notwithstanding (193) the increase of thousands of miles of railways, and many thousands of employees, and the further fact that the railroad corporations have been able to procure from the Interstate Commerce Commission an extension of the time at which the law of Congress, imposing a penalty for operating any cars without self-couplers, will come into force, the shadow of the law has procured so general an attachment of these self-couplers, that 5,213 fewer employees were killed and wounded in coupling and uncoupling cars in 1897 than in 1893. Can it, therefore, be seriously contended that the absence of such safety appliances is not negligence per se, rendering the railroad company liable for damages? As these appliances have been patented, and more or less in use for over thirty years, it should not have required an act of Congress to enforce their universal adoption. Failure to adopt them, after being so long and widely known and used, was negligence in the defendant, upon the principles of the common law. Witsell's case,supra. The act of Congress imposing a penalty for failure to add the appliances after 1 January, 1898, in no wise affected the right of any employee to recover for damages, sustained by the negligence of any railroad company to attach them. The action of the Interstate Commerce Commission, in extending the date at which such act should come into force (by virtue of authority given in the act) could not set aside the principle of law that failure to adopt such appliances was negligence per se, nor have any other effect than to postpone the date at which the United States Government would impose the prescribed penalty upon all railroads engaged in interstate commerce *148 failing to equip all their cars with automatic couplers, a penalty which is imposed irrespective whether any accidents occur from such failure or not.
(194) The indifference of railroad companies shown in not adopting these life and limb-saving appliances is all the greater, since their cost is comparatively small. Indeed, the Interstate Commerce Commission, in the above-cited report (page 89), states that, considering the less expense required in repairs, they are an actual saving. They say: "Figures submitted by one of the leading railroad companies indicate that the adoption of the automatic coupler will result in saving a very large sum annually, in comparison with the expense incurred in former years, in applying and maintaining the link-and-pin type; and this does not take into account the reduced cost to the roads, which must result from fewer suits for damages by injured employees. And further, that there being too much slack in the old pin-and-link for the brake to act economically or successfully, the automatic coupler makes the requirements of railroad operation better, as well as minimizes the danger to employees."
In Witsell v. R. R.,
With such an array as above of the terrible cost of life and limb by failure to use appliances to avoid coupling and uncoupling cars by hand (in doing which the plaintiff was injured), and the small (195) expense, nay actual economy of adopting them and the ample means the defendant possesses, we cannot reverse our ruling inGreenlee's case, that it is negligence per se in any railroad company to cause one of its employees to risk his life or limb in making couplings which can be made automatically without risk.
This matter of requiring these great corporations to protect the traveling public, and their employees as well, by the adoption of all safety appliances which have come into general use, is so important that we have gone into the subject at this length. Ordinarily owned by great syndicates out of the State in which they operate, and their management *149 at all events removed from subjection to that sound public opinion which is so great a check upon the conduct of individuals and of government itself, the sole protection left to the traveler and the employee alike is the application of that law which is administered impartially, and which can lay its hand fearlessly upon the most powerful combination and protect with its care the humblest individual in the land.
The subject is one of transcendent importance, for notwithstanding the partial adoption of these appliances and consequent reduction in casualties, the Twelfth Interstate Commerce Commission shows (p. 77) that for the year ending 30 June, 1897, on the railroads engaged in interstate commerce (which alone report to that commission), there were still 43, 168 casualties, of which 6,437 resulted in death. Of these 1,693 killed and 27,667 wounded, were railroad employees, among whom 214 were killed and 6,283 wounded in coupling or uncoupling cars. In our own State, the Report of the North Carolina Railroad Commission for 1898 (p. 250-1) shows that for the year ending 30 June, 1898, the railroads reported 879 persons killed and wounded (of whom 99 were killed) and of these, 23 of the killed and 599 of the wounded (196) were employees: total, 622. As, of the 9,000 employees reported in this State, 4,000 (according to the usual ratio) were employees engaged in the actual operation of the trains, it follows that in this State one such employee in every 6 1/2 was in that year injured or killed. In view of such mortality, rivaling that of the bloodiest wars, this Court cannot reverse its declaration heretofore, which is sustained by every sentiment of justice and humanity, that where a life and limb saving appliance, like automatic car-couplers, has come into general use, and its partial adoption has in four years, notwithstanding the increase in railroad mileage and employees, decreased the injuries and deaths from coupling cars one-half, that the failure to adopt and use it is negligence per se.
Considering the economy in money of using such appliances, as well as the ample revenues of the defendant, it is passing strange that it (or any other railroad company) should have delayed till now, or even till 1895, to protect the lives and limbs of their employees in this particular, or that there should have been need of an act of Congress or the verdict of a jury to stimulate considerations of humanity towards their patrons and their employees.
Counsel for defendant read, as part of his argument, a clipping from a newspaper, and repeats in his brief, that a noble English Lord who was a railroad manager as well as an hereditary member of Parliament, had changed his party affiliations because the one to which he had belonged had advocated the enforced adoption of self-couplers upon English railways. That simply shows that one such manager at least *150 possesses a lordly disregard for the thousands of deaths and injuries of employees yearly, caused by the lack of safety appliances, and, it may be, there are others who entertain sentiments of higher allegiance (197) to the net earnings of the syndicates that employ them than to those great principles which every political party professes to advocate, as being for the best interests of the public. But the hostility of one or more railway managers towards the matter cannot affect the impartial enforcement of the sound legal principle, that employees and the traveling public alike have a right to be protected against any dangers which can be avoided by the adoption of safety appliances which have been tested by experience and which have come into general use.
In the present case, the defendant has the less excuse because there was uncontradicted testimony not only that automatic car-couplers were in general use at the time of the injury (March, 1895), but that the skeleton draw-heads, in attempting to make a coupling with which the plaintiff was injured, were defective in that they were of different heights from the ground and evidence that the cars could not have been coupled with a stick or in any other manner, except by hand.
NO ERROR
Cited: Lloyd v. Haynes,