276 Pa. 319 | Pa. | 1923
Opinion by
Defendants are contractors who were employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to construct a concrete repair pit about ninety feet long and six feet deep in its West Philadelphia engine storage yard; plaintiff is a locomotive engineer employed by the railroad company. Appellee recovered a verdict and judgment against appellants awarding damages to him for personal injuries. The circumstances giving rise to the suit are not substantially disputed; the legal conclusions growing out of them are.
Shortly after midnight, plaintiff left the roundhouse of the railroad and walked across the engine storage yard to the locomotive he was shortly thereafter to take out, which had been placed by a fellow employee on a track alongside the open pit excavated by defendants. It was very dark in the vicinity and plaintiff had no knowledge of the existence of the pit. The only warnings of the excavation displayed were two red lanterns at its ends, about ninety feet apart; the engine was standing midway of this distance. Plaintiff mounted the locomotive on the side away from the pit, and, after procuring some tools and a torch necessary to inspect and oil the engine, proceeded to descend backwards from the cab on the side toward the pit. In the darkness, he was unable to distinguish the hole. He stepped, as he supposed, to the ground, but as the side of the excavation extended within the overhang of the locomotive, his foot went into this void, and he was precipitated into the pit, and seriously injured.
Appellants challenge the recovery against them for these reasons: (1) they are not liable to appellee, an employee of the railroad company, for not properly lighting the pit, because, in their contract with the railroad company, it had undertaken to supply lights for the
An examination of the contract shows defendant's were independent contractors employed by the railroad company to construct the pit. It exercised no control over the means or manner of accomplishing the work; this is the test in determining whether the contract is an independent one: Simonton v. Morton, 275 Pa. 562; Colleoni v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 274 Pa. 319; Kelley v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. R. Co., 270 Pa. 426; Smith v. State Workmen’s Ins. Fund, 262 Pa. 286.
Appellants contend the contract relieved them from the duty of safeguarding the excavation and placed that burden on the contractee, the railroad company, and as a consequence the latter is liable. An examination of the writing shows, however, that it does not shift the responsibility in that way, but on the contrary, places it on appellants. The contract specifies the contractors shall “take, use, provide and make all proper, necessary and sufficient precaution against, accidents, injuries or damages to any person or property during the progress of the construction of the work herein contracted for”; that, while the railroad company might station watchmen where its engineer considered necessary, they were to be regarded as employees of the contractors who were to be liable for damages caused by such persons’ neglect; that “the cost of maintaining all requisite lights, barricades, safeguards, temporary sidewalks and fences for the protection of their work and the safety of the general public and the employees of the company and the contractors,” shall be borne by the latter, and that “the work is entirely at the contractors’ risk until the same is approved and accepted.”
Crane Elevator Co. v. Lippert, 63 Fed. 942, illustrates the principle here applicable; in that case, a contractor, who had been employed to make certain replacements in a building, left materials in a hall without providing lights or suitable safeguards. He relied upon the owner of the building to light the hall in the usual manner. The plaintiff, an employee of one of the tenants in the building, in passing through the hail, which at that time
The evidence on behalf of plaintiff showed that the usual way to safeguard such an excavation as the one we are considering “would be to put lights on each end, red lights showing in each direction, and other heavy oil lights in the base of the pit” which it was testified is the usual method of warning adopted in railroad work. The record establishes that, on the night in question, no such lights in the base of the pit were supplied. One of de
Answering appellants’ first contention, we are compelled, by the fact's here appearing and the authorities, to say a jury was warranted in finding the failure to place lights in the excavation, to warn plaintiff of its presence, was negligence; the court could not declare as matter of law that' two red lights ninety feet apart on such an excavation afforded adequate warning. The circumstance that, during the progress of the work, the railroad company had been accustomed to place lights in and about the pit, did not relieve"defendants from seeing that the warning lights were properly located on the night in question. That the person injured was an employee of the railroad company which had assumed to place the lights, makes no difference, on the question of defendants’ responsibility to him for failure to perform their duty.
Defendants’ second contention, that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence, necessarily was for the jury. Plaintiff testified that, while he descended from the cab of the locomotive backwards, that was the usual and ordinary and indeed only method of making the descent. As he had no knowledge or warning of the excavation, it could not be said he stepped to the ground at his peril. If the record disclosed he knew an excavation was being made in the vicinity of the track on which his engine was standing, there might be merit in appellants’ position that, before alighting from the engine, appellee should have examined the ground with his torch to see what the limits of the excavation were.
Defendants’ third contention that, as the railroad company had assumed to place the lights to guard the excavation, it was a joint tort-feasor with the contractors, and the fact that plaintiff received workmen’s compensation payments from the company, released it, and thereby
Tbe assignments of error are all overruled and tbe judgment is affirmed.