Booth v. . Boston and Albany R.R. Co.

73 N.Y. 38, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 578
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 73 N.Y. 38 (Booth v. . Boston and Albany R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booth v. . Boston and Albany R.R. Co., 73 N.Y. 38, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 578 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

*40 Andrews, J.

It is no answer to an action by a servant against the master, for an injury caused, by the master’s negligence, that the negligence occurred in the course and conduct of the business in which the servant was employed. For his own negligence the master is responsible to his servant equally as to any other person. The servant on entering the employment of the master does not assume the risks of the master’s negligence. He assumes the risk of the negligence of a co-servant; but the reason of the rule, which exempts the master from liability to one servant for the negligence of another ceases, and has no application when the master’s own negligence caused the injury.

The rule that the master is not liable for the negligence of a.co-servant does not, however, go to the extent of exempting him from liability in every case, when it appears that he did not himself do or direct the doing of the negligent act; or even when the immediate negligence is that of a person who in some sense was the co-servant of the person injured. There are certain duties which concern the safety of the servant which belong to the master to perform, and he cannot rid himself of responsibility to his servant for not performing them, by showing that he delegated the performance to another servant, who neglected to follow his instructions, or omitted to do the duty intrusted to him.

The duty of the master to select competent servants and to provide safe implements and machinery for the use of his servants belongs to this class. The rule that the servant takes the risks of the service “ supposes,” says Lord Cranworth, “ that the master has secured proper servants and proper machinery for the conduct of the work” (Bartonsldll Coal Company v. Reid, 3 Macq., 275.) From the nature and extent of the particular business, or the fact that the principal is a corporation and can only act through agents, it may be necessary for the master to commit the selection of servants, and the purchase and providing of machinery to servants and agents ; but the duty to use reasonable care in performing these acts always remains the duty of the master, *41 and negligence in performing it is his negligence, whether he acted himself or by others. If the immediate negligence in these cases is that of an agent or servant, and a co-servant is injured thereby, the law imputes the negligence to the master and the master is liable the same as if the injury had been sustained by a stranger. The case of Flike, Admin'r, v. The Boston and Albany R. R. Co. (53 N. Y., 550), was decided upon an application of the principle that the master is liable to the servant for an injury caused by his own negligence. The difficulty in that case was in determining whether the act of sending out the first train with an insufficient number of brakemen was the act of the defendant. If it was, then upon the facts found by the jury, the verdict was right. There was wrong, injury and damage which sustained the action. The duty of dispatching trains and manning them was confided, as the evidence then appeared, to Rockefeller, and it was made Ms duty to see that they were sup- ' plied with a sufficient number of brakemen. The negligence shown did not consist in any omission by the company to provide, by proper rules and regulations for the proper equipment of the train; but in the failure of Rockefeller to do his duty, and the negligent oversleeping of Loftus, who was designated by Rockefeller to go upon it. The court therefore were called upon to decide whether the negligence of Rockefeller and Loftus was the negligence of co-servants, so as to bring the case within the general rule absolving the master from responsibility to one servant for the negligence of another ; or whether the case was within the exception to the rule, and whether the duty to see that a sufficient number of brakemen wore upon the train when it started upon its trip, was not like the duty to furnish competent servants and proper machinery, a duty at all times resting upon the company, which it was bound to discharge for the protection of all persons, its servants as well as others, and which if neglected, and injury to a servant resulted from the neglect, gave aright of action notwithstanding the fact that the immediate negligence was that of co-servants mtrusted with its perform *42 anee. The court distinctly held that negligence in starting the train without sufficient brakemen was the negligence of the company. The chief justice, in pronouncing the opinion of the majority of the court, said: “ The true rule, I apprehend, is to hold the corporation hable for negligence or want of proper care in respect to such acts and duties as it is required to perform and discharge, as master and principal, without regard to the rank or title of the agent intrusted with the performance ; ” and again : “It was negligent for the company to start the train without sufficient help.”

The present case arose out of the same accident as the Flike Case, and the principle there decided must be applied in its determination. The decision in the Flike Oase was followed on the trial of this case. The judge submitted to the jury to find upon the evidence whether two brakemen were sufficient on the first train, and whether three brakemen were necessary for its proper management; and if they should find that three brakemen were necessary, he submitted to them the further question, whether the absence of the third brakeman caused the injury, and charged them that if both facts were found for the plaintiff (no contributory negligence being claimed) he was entitled to recover. There was no error in the general view taken by the court in disposing of the case, and it remains to consider whether there are any valid exceptions to the charge, or to refusals to charge, as to these exceptions only our attention is called.

The court was requested to charge that if three brakemen had been provided to go with Hughes’ train, and that to start with two was negligence, still if the jury believed from the evidence that the conductor was instructed to report the failure of any brakeman to appear to Rockefeller, before starting, and he did not do so,' but started the train with but two brakemen, this act was the negligence of the conductor, and the plaintiff cannot recover. The court properly refused this instruction, for the reason already stated, viz., that no matter whose immediate negligence it was to start the train without sufficient brakemen, it was in law the negligence of *43 the defendant for which it is responsible to persons sustaining injury therefrom, whether servants or third persons.

The request to charge that if the jury believed that if there had been three brakemen on the train when it started, all but the rear brakeman would have left the train when it stopped at Chatham, or that the third brakeman would not have been on the eleven detached cars, the plaintiff cannot recover, was properly refused. The defendant’s counsel, before the court ruled upon the request, stated in substance, that the proposition was, that if the jury believed the third brakeman would not have been at his post, the plaintiff could not recover. The court in denying the request properly stated that it could not be assumed that if a third brakeman had been sent he would not have performed Ms duty.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. 38, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-boston-and-albany-rr-co-ny-1878.