94 Ala. 277 | Ala. | 1891
— Appellant was plaintiff below. He received personal injuries while in the service of the appellee as head or front brakeman on a freight train, and brought this action to recover damages therefor. The trial was had upon the general issue and several special pleas, each averring plaintiff’s contributory negligence. No evidence was adduced except on the part of the plaintiff; and upon this the court gave the general affirmative charge in favor of the defendant, on the theory that his own evidence was free from conflict, and all contrary inferences, to the proof of negligence on his part which proximately contributed to the injury sustained by him. This evidence showed that the train on which plaintiff was employed was a regular cross-country freight train of the defendant company. Its run was over the line between Bessemer and Boyle’s Station, a distance of seventeen rniles^ between which points were four other stations from one to seven miles apart. The business of this train was to receive and deliver, at these intermediate and terminal stations, cars laden with ore, pig-iron and the like, and also general freight; and in doing the 'work assigned to it, it was necessary to do more or less switching, and setting in upon,
There being thus no donbt that plaintiff’s presence on the-pilot contributed proximately to the injuries he sustained, the main question in the case is whether his being there at the time of the accident was negligence in se on his part, and to ■ be so declared by the court as a matter of law. The authorities are believed to be uniform to the support of the affirmative of this inquiry; the investigations of the court and counsel have failed to disclose a single adj udged case to the contrary, while many courts are upon record as holding,, either by analogy or directly, that to ride upon the pilot or-cross-beam in front of an engine, while proceeding on its way along the line of its track, without justifying necessity therefor, involves per se such negligence as will defeat an action counting upon injuries received while so riding, and which, would not have been received but for the plaintiff’s being there. Even the assumption of less dangerous, but, at the same time,, improper positions on moving trains, voluntarily and unnecessarily, has been many times held to be contributory negli- ■
A leading case on the point is that of Railroad Co. v. Jones, 95 U. S. 439. There, the plaintiff was one of a party of men employed by a railroad company in constructing and repairing its road-way. They were usually conveyed to and from their place of labor by the company, and a box-car drawn by an engine was used for this purpose. The plaintiff, although forbidden on several occasions to do so, and warned of the danger, on returning from work one evening, rode on the pilot or bumper of the locomotive, and was injured from a collision with some cars standing on the track in a tunnel. There was room for him in the box-car, as there was room for the plaintiff here on the train; and none of those in the boxcar were hurt, as here all who remained on the cars escaped injury. It was held that, as the plaintiff would not have been inj ured had he used ordinary care, he was not entitled to re
In the case of Kresanowski v. No. Pac. Railway Co., 18 Fed. Rep. 229, the facts were, that the plaintiff, an employé of the defendant railroad company, while being transported to the place where his services were required along with other employés on an engine provided by the company, sat, with one or two others, on the front of the engine, with his feet hanging over the pilot, and was injured by a collision with another engine. It was held, on a motion to instruct 'the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, (1) that the plaintiff himself so far contributed to his injury by his own negligence in placing himself in such a dangerous position that he could not recover, and (2), there being evidence that there was no room for the plaintiff on the tender, and that he had in effect been authorized or invited by the company; to ride over the pilot, that the plaintiff being of age, and able* to see and know the risks of the position, even the fact of such invitation and authorization would not justify him in placing himself in a position of obviously great risk and danger.
But the strongest support of this doctrine is found in the circumstances of a Michigan case, and the several decisions’ which were made in different actions which grew out of it. The facts were, that a switchman in the employ of a railway company was killed. The engine upon which he was employed, and which was at the time engaged in switching cars about the yard of the company, ran into a truck owned by the defendant, an individual having no connection with the railway company, and driven by his teamster. The result of the collision was the death of the switchman, injury to defendant’s teamster, and destruction of the truck and team. The switch-man at the time of the collision was sitting on the cross-beam of the pilot, with his feet hanging down over the “cow-catcher.” He had no duties to perform while on the engine. His duty was to attend to the switching of tracks in front of the engine, getting off and on the cars for that purpose. It is to be noted that, while this case is strikingly like the one at bar in most of its features, it is yet different from it in that the party injured there was a switchman having no duties to perform on the cars,-and the engine was being run in the railroad yard,, and only for the purposes of switching, while here plaintiff’s duties while the train was in motion were all on top of the cars, and at the time of the accident the train was running across couivry, and not engaged in switching at all; and was
The exigencies of the case at bar do not require that we should go to the full length of the opinion in Glover v. Scotten, and hold that for a switchman to sit upon the pilot or cross-beam of a road-engine being moved about in the yards of a railroad while performing the functions of a regular switch-engine, would 'be negligence per se. It may be that the true doctrine in such case is that declared by the Supreme Court of Kansas in Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. v. McCally, 21 Pac. Rep. 574, where it is held, the company having failed to provide a switch-engine, and having always required switching to be done with an ordinary freight-engine, there being
Nor do we conceive that the court committed error in refusing to receive opinion evidence, to the effect that it was not more dangerous to ride on the front of the engine than on the top of the cars. The general rule is well establisned, that such evidence is not competent, where all the facts upo*n which the opinion is founded can be ascertained and made in
We discover no error in the record, and the judgment of the City Court is affirmed.