Hall v. Northwestern R. R.

62 S.E. 848, 81 S.C. 522, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 16, 1908
Docket7056
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 848 (Hall v. Northwestern R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Northwestern R. R., 62 S.E. 848, 81 S.C. 522, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 285 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The plaintiff, a freight conductor on the defendant’s railroad, went between- two freight cars for the purpose of coupling* them, was caught between the buffers and received personal injuries. On the allegation that his injuries were due to the negligence of the defendant railroad company, a verdict of fifteen thousand dollars was recovered. The Circuit Judge refused a motion for nonsuit, but granted a conditional order for a new trial. The defendant’s counsel, by their exceptions, submit that the motion for nonsuit should have been granted; that there *525 were errors in the charge to the jury; and that the conditions attached to the order for new trial were not authorized by law.

1 We first consider the refusal to grant a nonsuit. The grounds of the motion were that the plaintiff knew the danger of attempting to make the coupling by going between the cars, and could not recover: (1) Because he assumed the risk of the attempt; and (2) because he was guilty of contributory negligence in taking the risk. This is one of that class of cases where by reason of the allegation that the danger was so obvious and imminent that no prudent servant would have undertaken to make the coupling; the defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk approach so closely to each other that distinction between- them is almost impossible, in the practical application of the law. In Bodie v. C. & W. C. Ry. Co., 61 S. C., 468, 478, the general distinction is thus stated: “ ‘Assumption of risk’ rests in the law of contract, and involves an implied agreement by the employee 'to assume the risks ordinarily incident to his employment, or a waiver, after full knowledge of an extraordinary risk, of his. right to hold the employer for a breach of duty in this regard. * * * ‘Contributory negligence,’ on the other hand, rests in the law of torts, as applied to negligence, and when such defense isi established the plaintiff’s action is defeated, not because of any agreement, express or implied, but because his own misconduct was a proximate cause of the injury.” In further elaboration of the distinction, it is said in Barksdale v. C. & W. C. Ry., 66 S. C., 204, 211, 44 S. E., 743: “Nearly every case of contributory negligence on the part of an employee involves in a general sense some assumption of risk, because, in order to be guilty of contributory negligence, there must be the risk of apparent danger. ' When a servant risks this danger in the discharge of duty imposed on him in the course of usual duty, this would be, in' an exact sense, a case of assumption of risk. But if he improperly *526 risks the danger, which becomes a proximate cause of the injury, ini doing that which is not imposed on him in the course of his usual duty, it would be contributory negligence.” Under the law, as thus laid down, neither the defense of assumption of risk nor contributory negligence was conclusively made out, either by the evidence of the plaintiff or the evidence on both sides taken together.

The testimony tended to show these conditions: Camden and Sumter were the terminal points of the defendant, Northwestern Railroad Company. It is customary for railroads to have car inspetcors at terminal points, charged with the duty of seeing that cars were in fit and safe condition for use; but the defendant failed to provide for such inspector. It was also customary to provide for the crew of a freight train three brakemen — that force being necessary, besides the engineer and conductor; but the plaintiff was allowed only two brakemen on his train, though he had complained to the president of the road that two brakemen were insufficient, and had been promised more men. There were no printed or written' rules of the road furnished to employees; but it was the duty of the plaintiff to shift and move cars at Camden, as ordered by the Camden freight agent, the plaintiff determining for himself the manner of doing the work. On 23d November, 1903, after the plaintiff’s train was made up at Camden1, and was about to depart on' its schedule time, the freight agent directed the plaintiff to place two empty cars on the track, known as the oil mill track. The two1 cars 'to be moved were on the same track, but were not coupled together. The plaintiff, at the rear of the train, signalled the engineer to move the train and make the coupling. Seeing that the train had not been moved against the rear car with sufficient force to make the coupling automatically, plaintiff tried to use the lever provided for coupling cars, without going between- them, but the lever failed to work. He then went between the cars, and, walking with the slowly moving train, undertook to make the *527 coupling with, 'his 'hand1 by lifting, the latch pin. The plaintiff testified he had made couplings this way hundreds of times befóte with safety; but on this occasion he inadvertently went in a little farther than' was necessary, and his left side was caught between1 the buffers. The plaintiff admitted he knew there was danger in going between the cars to couple; but he testified he made the effort because the last car was on a down grade, and he had reason to apprehend that if he did not stop it by coupling it the car would run down the grade and off the track. In addition to this reason for attempting to make the coupling, as the plaintiff testified, a part of his train was on the main line of the Southern Railway Company, and its passenger train being about due, 'and his own train unguarded for lack of a sufficient crew, the plaintiff considered it important to get his train out of the way.

There is force in the argument that the plaintiff voluntarily assumed the risk of the dangers of his employment, due to lack of inspection of the cars, because he had continued in the service of the defendant with full knowledge that the cars were not inspected. Wofford v. Clinton Cotton Mills, 72 S. C., 348, 51 S. E., 918, and cases cited. Decision on the point, 'however, is not necessary in the consideration of the motion for nonsuit, 'because there was evidence to go to the jury on- other issues of negligence and assumption of risk. The evidence is very far from showing that the plaintiff’s contractual relation of service contemplated that, in the usual course of his service, he should assume at his own peril the risk of coupling cars by going in between them and lifting the latch pin with his own hands. Indeed, we do not understand the defendant’s counsel to contend that assumption of risk arose in that way. It is true the plaintiff says he had so made the coupling a thous- and times with safety, but that such a mode of coupling was not to be expected as usual is shown by the fact that the defendant’s cars were equipped with levers to be operated *528 from the side of the car. But there was evidence that it was the duty of the plaintiff, in the course of his usual service, to couple cars, and that the performance of this duty was necessary to the service.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 848, 81 S.C. 522, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-northwestern-r-r-sc-1908.