Bradburn v. Wabash Railroad

96 N.W. 929, 134 Mich. 575, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 681
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1903
DocketDocket No. 34
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 96 N.W. 929 (Bradburn v. Wabash Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradburn v. Wabash Railroad, 96 N.W. 929, 134 Mich. 575, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 681 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

Plaintiff sustained personal injuries while in the employ of the Union Terminal Association, a co-partnership composed of the two defendants. He brought this suit for compensation, and recovered a verdict and judgment in the court below.

Plaintiff received his injuries early in the morning of August 26, 1901, on a track known as the “Parker Siding,” in the city of Detroit. He was then, and had been for about two years, employed in defendants’ yard at Detroit, in charge of a switching train. This Parker siding was situated on the ground of private individuals, adjoining defendants’ tracks on the north. It formed a junction with defendants’ tracks at the property of the Detroit Gas Company. It ran in a westerly direction through the property of said company, and through some adjacent lumber yards, a distance of 377 feet, nearly parallel with defendants’ tracks. On the morning in question, plaintiff had occasion to take out of said siding four empty cars, which were located near the western end of the siding. After attaching these cars to the engine, plaintiff ordered [577]*577the engineer to move said train to defendants’ main track. When he gave this order, plaintiff stood on the north side of the siding, about 15 feet from the rear'end of the rear car. (This rear car was a Hocking Valley gondola car — so described — of extra width.) He jumped on the moving car as it passed him, and stood in the stirrup that hung underneath its side, near its rear end. He then undertook to swing himself around the corner of the car to the brake-beam which hung underneath its rear end, in order that he might not, as we infer, be injured by collision with a coal chute standing on the gas-works property, which came within six or eight inches of the track. Before he had completed this change in his position, his left foot, which he had not yet removed from the stirrup on the side, was caught and crushed between said car and a pile of lumber situated about 25 feet beyond the property of the gas company.

This pile of lumber was in the lumber yard, and situated very close to the track.' It was about three feet in height. It had been there from 60 to 90 days. Before plaintiff’s injury, defendants had notified the proprietor of the lumber yard, “to move the piles of lumber along said track.” We think this testimony warrants the inference that the existence and situation of the particular pile of lumber under consideration was known to defendants, for it certainly interfered with their business as much or more than any other pile of lumber in said yard. Plaintiff testifies that it was so dark at the time of his injury that he could not see the pile (though he made a vigilant use of his eyes), and that he had no prior knowledge of its existence. He explains this ignorance by testifying that he had never been on the siding before, that the lumber pile could not be seen from the main track because the view of it was hidden by other piles, and that he made his entrance into the siding on the occasion of his injury, not by passing up the siding, but by walking through the lumber yard from a point on the main track to a point near.the end of the siding. He also testifies that, when [578]*578he reached the siding, he noticed that lumber was piled all along the south side (except at intervals left for passageways) close to the track, while, so far as he could see, the north side was clear. Plaintiff also testifies that it is customary in lumber yards to pile lumber four or five feet from the track, so as to leave “room enough for a man to walk alongside and do his work.” He also testifies that, where platforms are found on one side of the track, “the other side is always clear.” Other witnesses testified that there was a custom in lumber yards to pile lumber close to the track only on one side, so as “ to leave one side open for the shoving in and out of lumber out of a car door.” There was evidence that plaintiff was notified in writing of certain points of danger in defendants’ yard. This notice,, as we shall point out later in this opinion, in our judgment had no material bearing on the case.

It is contended by defendants that a verdict should have been directed in their favor, because: First, plaintiff’s injury resulted from an assumed risk; second, there was no evidence of defendants’ negligence; third, plaintiff was, as a matter of law, guilty of contributory negligence. It is also contended that the court erred in his charge to the jury respecting the construction of the notice served upon plaintiff.

1. Did plaintiff’s injury result from an assumed risk ? The principle which prevents recovery when an emplojm has assumed the risk should not be confounded — though it sometimes is — with the principle which prevents recovery when he himself is negligent, or when his employer is free from negligence. If the principle of assumed risk — as many seem to suppose — has application only to cases in which the employer would be held free from liability either on the ground that he has not been negligent or on the ground that the employe has been guilty of contributory negiigence, it must be confessed that it is a principle of no great importance. While it must be conceded that the principle of assumed risk does sometimes furnish an additional ground for declaring the [579]*579employer free from liability in cases where he is free from negligence and in cases where the employé is guilty of contributory negligence, that principle is nevertheless a distinct principle, and may be applied in cases in which the employer is negligent and the employé free from contributory negligence. The fact that the principle of assumed risk is sometimes applicable in cases where the employer is free from negligence and sometimes where the employé is guilty of contributory negligence only proves that the three principles — negligence, contributory negligence, and assumed risk — are consistent. It by no means proves their identity.

The principle of assumed risk rests upon the ground that it is an implied contract between the employer and the employé that the employé shall assume the risk of all dangers obviously incident to his employment. See Bauer v. American Car & Foundry Co., 132 Mich. 537 (94 N. W. 9). The employé assumes the risk of all dangers obviously incident to his employment, whether the employer is negligent or free from negligence in exposing him to those dangers. If the employer is not negligent in exposing the employé to those dangers, he is not liable for any injury resulting, for two reasons: (a) He himself is free from negligence; and (6) the employé has assumed the risk. When, however, the injury to the employé results from an assumed risk to which an ordinarily prudent employer would not have exposed him, there can be no recovery; not because the employer was not negligent, for he was negligent, but because the employé assumed the risk. It is equally clear that the principle of assumed risk is not confined in its application to cases in which the employé is guilty of contributory negligence. Cases, of course, often arise in which the employé has assumed a risk which an ordinarily prudent person would not assume; and these, of course, may be disposed of on the double ground of assumed risk and contributory negligence. Cases also arise where the employé has assumed a risk which it was not negligent to assume, [580]*580and these must be disposed of, not on the ground of contributory negligence, but on the ground of assumed risk.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.W. 929, 134 Mich. 575, 1903 Mich. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradburn-v-wabash-railroad-mich-1903.