Kilkin v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

76 A.D. 529
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 A.D. 529 (Kilkin v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilkin v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 76 A.D. 529 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.:

, Plaintiff, while engaged in his duties as a freight brakeman, slip- . ped upon some snow and ice upon the top of one of defendant’s. .• freight cars. and fell and was injured. He recovered a verdict against-defendant for such injuries upon the theory that the latter "was negligent in riot inspecting the tops of its; cars for snow and ice- and in not. removing the same therefrom before .sending them out..

. We think that he did.not establish a cause of action, and that the * judgment and order appealed from should be reversed. ■

' Plaintiff met with his accident while he was engaged in the line óf his duty upon the night of January 17, 1900. He was at that time..engaged in running as such brakeman upon one of the defendant’s lines, extending between Syracuse and Watertown. He hád been working lipón this same route as such brakeman from September,1898, to thé timé of the accident. He had also been engaged .in,the same position on. the same line from March to September in, the year 1891: or 1892. At the expiration Of said last period he; ¿was off for a coriple of'months, and was then etogaged as a passenger brakeman until he entered upon the last period of employment in. September, 1898. The evidence fairly permitted the jury to find 3,that, .upon the night. in question he was engaged with his fellow-employees in making up. a. freight train in the yard in Syracuse, and that at about halt-past seven in the evening he started north '"with the train; that he proceeded past the station of Brewerton,. and tbpn,. while .engaged,in trying the brakes,, went upon the car in question and slipped and fell to the ground; also that.he had not. actually seen, before he fell, the snow or ice -which was on the top. [531]*531of the ear; also that the car in question came into defendant’s yard in Syracuse upon the evening of January sixteeenth with the snow and ice then upon it whereon plaintiff is alleged to have slipped.

Except as hereinafter stated defendant never upon any of the routes covered by plaintiff established the practice of, or promulgated rules for, inspecting the tops of its freight cars for snow and ice, or for removing the same therefrom before starting out.

There was evidence that several years before the date of this accident, in a yard at Buffalo occupied in part by defendant, it was customary for inspectors to examine the tops of freight cars with reference to such matters. Such inspection, however, seems to have been more or less incidental to the more common and thorough examination of such cars and their appliances with reference to other things. Plaintiff, moreover, never ran into said yard, and at no time in the yards in which he worked was it customary for independent inspectors to examine cars in this regard. We think that the evidence permits of no question upon this point, or upon the other proposition, that plaintiff must be charged with knowledge of defendant’s system and practice upon this subject.

Upon the trial defendant gave evidence of rules theretofore promulgated by it which, it is claimed, imposed this duty of inspection upon plaintiff himself and his fellow-brakemen. These rules provided, in substance, that employees, thereby including freight brakemen, were required to inform themselves as to the condition of equipment and track; also were required to know that all brake wheels, dogs, grab irons, hand poles, steps and other appliances used in the line of their duty were secure and in safe condition before using the same. Said rules also required freight brakemen to look , over the train carefully and know that all couplings, brakes and running gears were in good order, and to inspect the train as often as possible during a trip.

The learned trial justice in substance charged that these rules -were applicable to plaintiff, and covered the examination of the top of a freight car in his train for snow and ice. He also held, as a ' matter of law, that if he had examined the roof of the car in question before it started out he Would have learned of the condition which resulted in his accident. But plaintiff having testified that ie did not examine the car therefor, or know of the existence of [532]*532' said ice, said trial justice ruled that it was for the jury to say whether he had reasonable time and opportunity, in the midst of his other duties, for such examination and inspection before starting out. It also appeared that sometimes employees upon a train sprinkled salt or ashes upon the snow or ice which had accumulated upon the cars, and, so far as is disclosed, this was all that was ever done to guard against the same when discovered.

We do not regard it necessary or desirable to entér upon, a discussion and determination of the general proposition whether a railroad company should be required to extend to the tops of its cars a system of independent inspection and examination such as is commonly applied to various other appliances upon, and parts of, its cars and trains.

Keeping in mind some of the rulings applied by the trial' justice, .as above stated, to the submission of this case, and accepting certain facts, which are either established beyond dispute by the evidence before us, or are matters of . ordinary observation and experience, we are led to the determination that plaintiff in this action Was not in a position to recover a verdict.

Independent of the evidence given upon that subject, in view of his extended experience, it must have been a matter of observation and knowledge by plaintiff that snow and ice were liable to accumulate upon the tops of freight cars. These cars ordinarily were not housed but stood outdoors. While pains were taken to explain that -ordinary snow would fly from the top of a car while in motion, it could not be otherwise than that, in the climatic changes in the country where plaintiff was working, there would be constantly recurring periods of freezing and thawing which would form ice or packed snow upon the tops of exposed cars. Plaintiff himself, at various points in his evidence, tells of the manner in which he was accustomed to avoid cars which had thus become slippery and dangerous, As already indicated, plaintiff must be charged with knowledge at the time of the accident that defendant was not accustomed to guard against such accumulation of ice and snow through inspection and removal thereof by independent and especially employed inspectors. He must be charged with having known that the regular car inspectors did not examine the tops of cars for these alleged defects and that nothing was ever done to protect against them, [533]*533except that casually or occasionally the employees of a train scattered salt or ashes thereon. Neither are we able, after adopting the ruling made upon the trial, as we are bound to in considering this appeal, that plaintiff was required, under defendant’s rules above mentioned, to examine for. ;snow and ■ ice, to agree with the learned trial justice that he was relieved from the performance of such duty through lack of opportunity to make such examination. We think that the evidence fairly discloses that the movement of the cars, while the train was being made up and started, was so far under the control of the plaintiff and his fellow-brakemen that, they would have had an opportunity, if they desired, to examine the tops of cars for ice. Such examination would have required a very brief time and would not have occupied so long a period as was consumed in certain other examinations and inspections which they made and for which, under their signals, the starting of the train was delayed.-

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.D. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilkin-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nyappdiv-1902.