Lane v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

107 A.D. 166, 94 N.Y.S. 988

This text of 107 A.D. 166 (Lane 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
Lane v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 107 A.D. 166, 94 N.Y.S. 988 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.:

While the plaintiff was in the employ of defendant on a night in December, 1900, and engaged at night under one of its locomotives in hoeing out the ashpan thereof, somebody improperly started the locomotive and caused serious injuries to him. He seeks to maintain this action upon the ground that defendant was guilty of negligence in not prescribing some rule which would have prevented the locomotive from being put in motion while he was at work under it.

The case once before has been in this court upon an appeal by the defendant from a judgment which had been obtained against it, and which judgment we reversed upon the grounds that improper evidence had been received as to the necessity of rules, and that the trial judge' had committed error in his charge or refusal to charge in connection therewith. A majority of this court did not express any opinion upon the merits of the action.

In our opinion the present appeal is well taken and the judgment must be reversed. It is not claimed that the facts were materially changed upon the second trial and they are so familiar that we may content ourselves with a brief and general statement of them.

Defendant had a specified track at Watertown upon which it was accustomed to place engines for the purpose of cleaning out their ashpans. There was no pit in this track as in similar tracks at other places. Plaintiff had been engaged in this and other work for [168]*168the defendant for several years. The custom was for him to go with a hostler to an engine and after the latter had shaken down the fire the plaintiff would hoe out the pan. Upon occasions, and this was so upon the night in question, in the neighborhood of thirty engines would he thus shaken down and cleaned out during the night. The hostler would ordinarily or frequently finish his work before the “hoer” had finished his and would then go to some other engine or place, leaving the latter at work under the engine and alone. Different persons, sometimes the hostler, sometimes the fireman, sometimes an engineer, and sometimes a strange crew would come into the yard- and take away one of these engines. Upon the occasion involved, while plaintiff was at work under the engine, the hostler left it and a crew came into the yard, took possession of the engine and set it in motion.

A number of similar mistakes in improperly putting an engine in motion had - happened before this one, but there is no testimony to show that plaintiff had heard of any of these accidents and his own testimony negatives that idea. .

Common observation and foresight, as well as actual experience indicated that in the absence of any precautions to prevent it, such an accident as overtook the plaintiff might happen. In view of the large number of engines which were cleaned nightly in defendant’s yard, and in view of the number of different persons who were accustomed to come there and set them in motion, a jury might say that defendant in the exercise of reasonable care ought to have apprehended that some engine was liable to be put in motion while the man was at work thereunder unless there was some rule to prevent it. This certainly might be said by a, jury in view of what had already happened at the time the plaintiff was injured.

In Devoe v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (174 N. Y. 1) it was said: “ When the business of a master is such that the safety of one servant depends upon the' way in which other servants do their work, it is his duty to make, promulgate and enforce reasonable and sufficient rules for the protection of the servant exposed to danger * * * The duty of a master in making rules is measured by the law of ordinary diligence. That law varies with the situation, for what would be ordinary diligence under one set of facts, would be negligence in another. If, however, under the circumstances of a [169]*169particular case, the master has met the obligation of ordinary diligence in making and enforcing a rule he is free from liability even if some other rule would have been safer and better.. The law requires him to make and promulgate reasonably safe and proper rules, and if he does so he is not liable, even if he might have made safer and more-effective rules. If a rule is actually made, the question still remains whether it is proper and sufficient under the circumstances, for due diligence is not satisfied by an insufficient and inadequate rule.”

It is urged that any obligation resting upon defendant to thus protect plaintiff from being injured while at work had been met.

First, our attention is called to the fact that he was supplied with a lantern which was placed by the side of the engine while he was at work thereunder and which it is said ought to have been a sufficient notice to the man who put the engine in motion that somebody was at work there. It appears in answer to this contention, however, that the light with which plaintiff was supplied was an ordinary white light for simple illuminating purposes, and that there was no rule or practice which made it a warning as it sat beside the engine, but that other employees furnished with like lights were accustomed to leave them upon the ground in various places throughout the yard where they gave no indication such as would be applicable to this case.

Secondly, it is said that there was a practice upon the part of the engineers to ¿mg the bell upon an engine before starting it, and that if that had been done plaintiff would have heard it and escaped injury. Without discussing whether the ringing of the bell would have given him time to escape from under the engine it is sufficient to say that the evidence indicates that this practice was not followed in the yards.

Finally, our attention is called to á written rule which it is claimed governed this case. This rule reads that enginemen “ must report for duty at the appointed time ; see that the engine is in good working order and furnished with necessary stores and supplies and a full set of signals,” and counsel reasons that if the engineer had done this he would have been compelled to walk around his engine and this would have led him to the discovery of plaintiff. This reasoning as to what might have happened if the engineer had done [170]*170what it is assumed he did not do is somewhat speculative at least. But we think it quite clear that this rule related simply to an examination of the working condition of the engine, and that it cannot be cited as a discharge of defendant’s duty to protect plaintiff, because perhaps its full observance indirectly and incidentally might have accomplished that result. It seems 'manifest that the authority of a rule' and its binding effect upon a large number of employees must depend in part upon an understanding of the particular object for which it is prescribed and of the dangers which may ensue from its disobedience. It is quite a general principle in passing upon the negligence or misconduct of a man that he is only to be charged with the natural consequences of his act. A servant who understood that the object sought by a rule was of comparatively insignificant consequence very naturally might be less conscientious in his obedience than he would be if serious results might be apprehended from his failure to obey. In this particular case an employee.

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Related

Devoe v. . N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.
66 N.E. 568 (New York Court of Appeals, 1903)
Dowd v. New York, Ontario & Western Railway Co.
63 N.E. 541 (New York Court of Appeals, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
107 A.D. 166, 94 N.Y.S. 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nyappdiv-1905.