Madden v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway Co.

20 N.W. 317, 32 Minn. 303, 1884 Minn. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 18, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 20 N.W. 317 (Madden v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madden v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railway Co., 20 N.W. 317, 32 Minn. 303, 1884 Minn. LEXIS 158 (Mich. 1884).

Opinion

Gilfillan, C. J.1

Action for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff by the running off from defendant’s track of a box car, on which he was in its service as a brakeman. That the track was bad defendant does not deny. Indeed, it appears to have endeavored at the trial to show the track in worse condition than as shown by the evidence on the part of the plaintiff; its theory as presented here, and apparently as presented in the court below, being that the condition of the track was so bad that the plaintiff must have known the dangers to which he was exposed by continuing in the employment. That tho injury was caused by the unsafe condition of the track was shown clearly enough. It is not claimed that defendant ever gave plaintiff actual notice of its unsafe condition; nor is it claimed that it had used proper care to have the track safe, except that, having allowed it to fall into bad condition, the defendant was then engaged in extensively repairing and putting the track in safe condition by resurfacing the bed and taking up the old ties and rails, and replacing them with new ties and new steel rails. A gravel train on which plaintiff served as. brakeman was loaded with gravel at a gravel-pit about four miles south of Waseca, and was drawn south to a point near New Richland about 17 miles from the gravel-pit, and there the gravel was unloaded by the side of the track wherever needed for the purpose of resurfacing, and then the train would return to the pit to be reloaded. When the train would return to the pit at night, the gravel ears were left there, and the locomotive, with a box car on which plaintiff served as brakeman, brought the workmen into Waseca for the night. It was while thus coming from the pit to Waseca for the night that the casualty occurred.

We will not attempt to set forth the language of the court below in its instructions to the jury. The propositions touching the rights, and duties of the parties contained in it are, in substance, these: First, the plaintiff, by continuing in the employment, assumed the. reasonable, ordinary risks of the occupation upon which he entered, —that of brakeman upon a gravel train repairing the road of the defendant, — and if his injuries resulted from such risks he cannot re[305]*305cover; second, that it was the duty of the defendant to furnish plaintiff in his employment a reasonably safe and suitable road over which to travel; third, but that if he knew or had competent opportunity to learn the defects and imperfections in the track, and the negligence on the part of the defendant, and still continued in the employment, he cannot recover.

On the first and third of these propositions no point is made; but upon the portions of the charge containing the second, the defendant (having saved the objection by its first, second, and sixth exceptions to the general charge, and its exception to plaintiff’s first request) makes the principal question in the case. The objection made to it is that the rule which it states is not applicable. That it is the duty of a master to use reasonable care and skill to furnish his servants safe and suitable instruments and means to perform the service in which they are employed, is not denied by the defendant. But it is claimed that it does not apply to the safety or condition of a thing which the servant is employed to repair. It is argued in effect that where servants are employed to put a thing in safe condition and good repair, it would be inconsistent and absurd to require of the master to have it in safe condition and good repair for the purpose of such employment; and where the servant has nothing to do with the thing but to repair it the argument is undeniable. Such, however, is not exactly this ease. The defendant was making extensive repairs to its track, necessarily doing the repairs or renewals a part at a time ; or, rather, so far as. plaintiff was concerned, it was preparing for such repairs by having the necessary material hauled and distributed along its track where it might be needed; and for this purpose it furnished, as one of the means to perform the service required of plaintiff, the old track, so far as it had not been taken up. Was it the duty of the defendant to plaintiff to have the old track it so used in a reasonably safe and suitable condition to perform this service ?

The duty of a master in respect to the instruments and means furnished his servant to perform his service is the same, whatever the nature of the service may be, — whether it be to repair or to do any other thing. For instance, where repairing is to be done by means of engines and machinery, the duty of the master applies to such en[306]*306gines and machinery; or if the servant is required to remove damaged ears to the place and for the purpose of repairs, while he assumes the risk that necessarily arises from the damaged condition of the cars, it is the duty of the master to use the proper care and skill in respect to the track over which the cars are to be moved, and to the other instruments, means, and appliances for moving them; and it extends also to the establishing and promulgating of suitable and needful regulations for the safe and proper conduct of the business, having reference to its risks and exigencies. Fraker v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., ante, p. 54.

There is no difference as to the duty of the master and the assumption of risk by the servant between an employment to make repairs and any other employment. In all cases the servant is held to take on himself the risks necessarily incident to the employment, unless, perhaps, they be latent and known to the master, but not known to, nor by the use of proper diligence discoverable by, the servant; and in no case does he take on himself risks that arise by reason of neglects on the part of the master, unless they be known to him, or by the use of proper diligence are discoverable by him. If the danger in making repairs is increased by the damaged condition of the thing to be repaired, he ordinarily assumes the risk of such enhanced danger; but if it be increased by the neglect of the master to use proper care to employ competent and careful fellow-servants, or to furnish safe and suitable means and instruments to perform the service, or to establish and promulgate suitable and needful regulations for the safe and proper conduct of the business, he does not ordinarily assume such risks. In this case the danger might be designated as a risk incident, not so much to the work of repairing the track, as to the manner of doing it, or of the regulations for the conduct of the business. For it seems that defendant, using the old track for the purpose, chose to distribute the necessary material, the gravel, tics, and rails, on a long line of the road, before doing the actual work of repairing; that is, of putting the new material into the track. That this was a more convenient and less expensive mode of doing the work than by delivering the material only so fast as actually put into the repairs, commencing at one point and proceeding simultaneously with [307]*307-the delivery of the material and the actual renewal of the track, and •using the new track for the purpose of delivering the material, is prob•ably true. But it does not appear that it was necessary, nor that the ■work could not have been done in the way we have indicated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 N.W. 317, 32 Minn. 303, 1884 Minn. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-minneapolis-st-louis-railway-co-minn-1884.