110 Minn. 74 | Minn. | 1910
Respondent’s intestate, Thomas Wickham, was killed on the twenty-second day of April, 1907, by the falling of the center sills from the framework of a certain freight car while undergoing repairs in appellant’s shop. Appellant’s repair shop at Hudson, Wisconsin, was extensive, and contained thirteen railroad tracks, on which damaged freight cars, cabooses, hand cars, and car trucks were placed for repairs, and about ninety men were engaged in the work. For about a year before his death Wickham had heen employed as a common laborer, a member of a work or cleaning-up gang, whose duty it was to sweep, carry away the debris from dismantled cars, and do odd jobs both outside and in the shop. In the work of repairs, jacks and other appliances used in raising the cars often damaged and broke Foies in the floor between the rails, and about four days prior .to the accident the general foreman told Wickham “to get some plank and patch up the floors through the shop where they were bad.” Wick-ham proceeded as directed, and on the morning of April 22 stopped at track No. 5 to do some work on the floor; but the car carpenter at work on a car on that track told him he would rather not have Fim fix that part of the floor then, as he was engaged in putting some sills on the car, and Wickham went on to track No. 7, and under the south end of a large 34-foot Lackawanna car, which was propped up on tripods at each corner. Two carpenters, Smith and Hanson, were at that time engaged in removing the north end cross-sill. These cross-sills supported the center sills, and upon removing the north end sill the center sills fell and pinned Wickham to the floor, causing Ms death.
Had Wickham been an experienced floor repairer and acting under such general instructions, it would be difficult to avoid the conclusion that in carrying on his work he assumed the risk of going under cars in process of repair. But he was a most ordinary common laborer, and his experience in the work of sweeping, carrying away debris, and other rough work was not calculated to give him knowledge of. the dangers connected with falling sills. So far as the record shows he was given no warning of any danger whatever, and was not requested to make any inquiry from the men at work on the cars. His instructions were such that a person of his intelligence and lack
2. Upon first impression it would seem that a man of ordinary prudence would have made inquiry before going under the car. We must assume that Wickham could have seen the carpenters standing on the floor and working at the north end of the car. The space under it was free from obstructions, and it was light. The repairers testified that he made no inquiry, and that they had no knowledge of his presence. Consequently he must have failed to look, or, if he did, and saw them, he was not impressed with the necessity of inquiring as to the safety of the conditions present. The car was propped up about four feet from the floor by a tripod under each comer. The trucks, rods, and braces had all been removed. To appearances, there was nothing to indicate that the center sills were not properly fastened from- above. They fell because they were not nailed to the floor of the car, and this was an unusual thing, not even anticipated by the carpenters. Why, then, should this common laborer be required to anticipate that there was anything unusual in the condition, and that the sills were liable to fall upon the removal of the truss rods and cross-sills ? We have come to the conclusion that it was a question for the jury whether under the circumstances Wickham assumed the risk of proceeding in the manner in which he did.
3. The court stated to the jury, in the course of the instructions, that the work of taking apart and repairing cars was carried on by sundry skilled mechanics and workmen in the employ of appellant, and that all of the work was conducted under the immediate direction of appellant, its servants and employees, and, later on, that if appellant or his servants knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care
This language was assigned as error, on the ground that it placed the duty on every servant in the shop to exercise ordinary car in keeping a lookout for Wickham, and held appellant responsible for the failure of any of those servants to notify Wickham of his danger. Standing alone, this statement might be misleading; but the undisputed evidence is that Wickham was under the general direction of the foreman of the shop, and the court no doubt had in mind those servants who were charged with the duty of directing Wickham and the other employees as to their duties. It is evident that the court did not misunderstand the propositions of law involved, and did not intend to convey any wrong impression; for later on the jury were specifically told that, if satisfied from the evidence that the death of Wickham was caused solely or proximately as the result of the negligence of his fellow servants, there could be no recovery.
In instructing the jury the court used the term “proximate cause” without defining its meaning. The context clearly indicates that the jury understood the propositions of law then under consideration, and they could not have been misled by this omission. Besides, if counsel was apprehensive that the jury were not fully informed as to the meaning of the term, the attention of the court should then have been called to the matter.
The other assignments of error do not require any special mention, and the order appealed from is affirmed.
On February 28, 1910, the following opinion was filed:
Per Curiam.
The petition for reargument is based in part on the omission of the court to notice in the opinion the assignment of error directed to the refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury to designate which one of appellant’s servants caused the death of Wickham. Section 4179, R. L. 1905.
Petition denied.