171 Ky. 510 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Affirming.
The appellant (plaintiff below) is a stone mason by trade, and at the time of the sustaining of the injuries of which he complains in this suit he was in the employ of the appellee (defendant below), and engaged in assisting to construct a stone wall alongside of defendant’s track, between it and Elkhorn Fork of Tug Biver, near Northfolk in West Virginia. This wall was being constructed in order to prevent the water in Elkhorn Fork from washing away the railroad track of defendant, and was being built with large blocks of stone laid in cement. The crude stone from the quarry had been hauled and dumped beside the track at a point about fifty yards from where the wall was being constructed, and from the point where it was dumped "to where the stone was being put into the wall is upgrade. A temporary track had been constructed outside of the wall, and between it and the stream, upon which the blocks of stone, after being dressed and fitted to be put into the wall, were transported, by the use of a flatcar, to where the work on the wall was being carried on.
The plaintiff is some thirty-odd years of age, and had been following the trade of stone mason for many years, and had been engaged in this character of work for a long time, having worked on this particular job for about three months previous to the time of his injury. The specific duties which he was performing were to dress and prepare the blocks of stone ready to be put into the wall, after he had first made or obtained measurements of the size of the piece needed. When he would finish dressing and preparing a block and having it ready to be put into the wall, he would fasten it to the end of a crane which extended out over the end of the car running and being operated on the temporary track, and with some kind of machinery located on this car the stone would be hoisted, and while extending out beyond the end of the car and over the track it would be moved to the wall, and placed therein. The car on the temporary tiack was propelled in some way not altogether explained by a hoisting engine located on it, and which engine also operated the crane or derrick mentioned.
On the occasion in question a piece of stone had been prepared and the grab-hooks attached to the derrick had been hooked thereto, and it had been made to swing
The first ground of negligence insisted on by plaintiff is that it was a part of his duty to get upon the car and to act as brakeman for the trip from the rock pile to the wall, and that there was no safe place for him to mount the car from either side because, as he claims, there was an excavation next to the wall which was filled with water, and which prevented him from boarding the car from that side, and on the other was dirt and rock sufficient to prevent, or at least interfere, with his boarding the car from that side.
The second ground of negligence, that of failing to furnish safe appliances with which to do the work; is attempted to be shown because it is insisted that the car containing the hoisting engine and other appliances was not properly equipped with necessary steps to enable plaintiff to get upon it to perform his duty, as he claims, of brakeman, while the stone was being carried to the wall. The trial court, after the evidence had been completed, sustained the motion of the defendant to instruct the jury to. return a verdict for it, which was accordingly ’done, and from the judgment rendered thereon the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The answer is a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence, and assumption of risk. A question at the threshold is presented as to whether the plaintiff at the time of the sustaining of his injuries was engaged in interstate commerce so as to bring his case within the Federal Statute known as the Employers’ Liability Act,
The record shows that the car on the temporary track, and which the plaintiff attempted to mount when he was' injured, called in the transcript “railroader,” was equipped with metal stirrups at each of its four corners, they being attached to the sides near the corners. On its end sill, where plaintiff attempted to get on it,
Under repeated decisions of this and other courts, as well as the teaching of textwriters, the negligence
“The proximate cause of an accident is the immediate cause, or that without which it would not have happened. It is not the remote cause of the accident, or the occasion of it. In Cooley on Torts,' section 70, the rule is thus stated: ‘If the original wrong only becomes injurious in consequence of the intervention of some distinct wrongful act or omission of another, the injury shall be imputed to the last wrong as the proximate cause, and not to that which was more remote/ See, also, Thompson on Negligence, section 47; Shear-man and Redfield on Negligence, section 31; Setter’s Admr. v. City of Maysville, 114 Ky., 60, 69 S. W. 1074.”
And in the case of Lucas Land and Lumber Co. v. Cook’s Admr. 164 Ky. 481, it is said: “In order to establish the proximate cause it is necessary that a causal connection be shown between the negligent act and the injury. The act must have been the cause which produced the injury. The injury was caused, in tnis case, by the independent and subsequent act of Cook.” See, also, Sublett v. M. & O. R. R. Co., 145 Ky. 707; Hummer’s Ex’x, v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 128 Ky. 486; St. L. I. M. & S. Ry. v. McWhorter, 229 U. S. 265. The rule is so well settled that we do not feel called upon to refer to other authorities substantiating it.
In this case the defective condition of the stirrups at the sides of the car, if they were so defective as to be unsafe, sustained no causal connection whatever with the injury which plaintiff sustained • and for which he sues, and, furthermore, it might be true that at points some obstructions might have been in the way of getting-on the car from the side of the track, yet it is shown that such obstructions, if any, did not on this occasion prevent the plaintiff from getting on the car, because, as we have seen, the stone had been picked up some fifteen or more feet to the side of the track, and at a point from which the plaintiff could have gotten on the car if he had so desired. However this may be, it is sufficient to say that he made no effort to board the car in that manner, and the obstructions, if they existed to such an extent as to prevent him from doing- so, were not the proximate cause of the injury.
Without making excerpts from any of the cases referred to, the rulé announced is that if the defects eonstituting the alleged negligence of the master are known to the servant, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have been known, and the danger incident to performing the work is appreciated by him, then the risk is assumed by the servant. It is extremely doubtful, under the testimony, whether it was a part of'plaintiff’s duty to board the car for the purpose of working the brake, as it is shown by a number of witnesses that another person was at the brake, and there was consequently no necessity, of his getting upon the car. This is not positively denied by him, but he says that if there was anyone at the brake lie did not observe him. Under the rule referred to, however, the plaintiff assumed the risk of at
The defense of assumed risk is available in suits brought under the Employers’ Liability Act, unless the negligence of the carrier consists in a violation of a statute enacted for the safety of employes; such, for instance, as the act known as the Safety Appliance Act. Section 4 of the Liability Act is: “ Such employe shall not be held to have assumed the risks of his employment in any case where the violation by such common carrier of any statute enacted for the safety of employes contributed to the injury or death of such employe.” And in the case óf Seaboard Air Line v. Horton, 233 U. S. 492, in construing the application of Section 4 the court said: “It seems to us that Section 4, ill eliminating the defense of assumption of risk in the cases indicated, quite plainly evidences the legislative intent that in all other cases such assumption shall have its former effect as a complete bar to the action.” To the same effect are that court’s opinions in the cases of Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Co. v. De Atley, 241 U. S. 240. Jacobs v. Southern Railway Co., idem. 229.
“The direct and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury was the piling of too many angle-bars on the truck, and then undertaking to push it after it was heavily loaded, and taking a dangerous position by the side of the truck where the iron in falling would fall upon him. These were plaintiff’s own acts; everything which contributed to his injury was open and visible, and according to the evidence now before us, he must be regarded as being fully cognizant, at the time, of all accidents likely to result from the use of the means and appliances employed in the work at which he was engaged, and to have assumed the risk of such accidents.”
So, whether this case is to be governed by the rule of the Federal Courts, as applied to the Employers’ Liability Act, or by the one prevailing in this State, or under the laws of West Virginia, plaintiff must be found to have assumed the risk of his attempting to board the car under the circumstances as found in this case, and the defendant is therefore not liable for the consequences.
The trial court having so concluded, its judgment is affirmed.