Michigan Central R. R. Co. v. Smithson

7 N.W. 791, 45 Mich. 212, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 684
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 7 N.W. 791 (Michigan Central R. R. Co. v. Smithson) 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
Michigan Central R. R. Co. v. Smithson, 7 N.W. 791, 45 Mich. 212, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 684 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

Stnithson sued the Railroad Company to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been caused by the. [215]*215company’s negligence. He was a switchman in the employ of the company, and had been for about a month, when in an attempt to couple two freight cars his hand was caught between them and he was seriously hurt. He had been a switchman and brakeman for several years on the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada before entering the service of defendant. The cars he was coupling were cars belonging to, and received from, the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railway. At the ends were what are known among railroad men as double dead-woods. A car of this construction has a horizontal timber at the end with projecting blocks bolted to each end of the timber, and the draw-bar for coupling extends but little beyond the faces of these blocks. In coupling, the blocks come together and receive the blow of the cars. The coupling-pin is dropped between the blocks from above.

Distinguished from the ear with double dead-woods is that known as the single dead-wood, which dispenses with the projecting blocks, and leaves the draw-bar to receive the concussion when the cars are coupled. The cars of the defendant are single dead-woods, and so perhaps are four-fifths of all the cars which pass over its road. Several long lines, however, use the double dead-woods exclusively, and among these are the Pennsylvania Railroad Company’s lines, those of the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, and the Pittsburgh, Port Wayne & Chicago. The New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company has adopted the double dead-woods, but have some old cars not of that style.

The gravamen of the plaintiff’s complaint is that he was employed by the defendant in making up trains and coupling cars; that the existence and use of double dead-woods was unusual and in the highest degree dangerous to the life and limb of persons so employed as the defendant well knew, and that on the 9th day of March, 1879, the plaintiff, in and about the ordinary course of his said employment, “and when the plaintiff did use due care, was coupling certain cars, which said cars by the carelessness, negligence and default of the defendant, had been introduced and used upon the said [216]*216railroad by tbe defendant, then having and bearing such unusual attachments called dead-woods, so as aforesaid placed and being, which the defendant well knew, but of which the plaintiff was wholly ignorant, without using reasonable and ordinary care to notify its employees or the plaintiff of the existence of such attachments thereon so placed and being,, and without providing reasonable and ordinary means and appliances for the protection of its employees, and especially the plaintiff, in coupling the same, was caught between the dead-woods so placed and being upon said cars, and being so-held the said cars were driven and run against plaintiff, and a portion of his hand was destroyed,” etc.

The coupling of cars on the road of defendant appears to-be done with the hand alone, without the assistance of any mechanical implement. There is some evidence that what is called a “ stick ” is sometimes made use of in coupling the-double dead-woods, but the evidence' is very slight, and scarcely intelligible, and it does not appear that the use of' such an implement is general anywhere. The plaintiff gave evidence that tended to show that the coupling of the double-dead-woods belonging to the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railway Company is always dangerous; one witness-going so far as to testify that the man attempting it is more apt to be caught than to escape with safety. It was also shown that the construction of these cars differed from double dead-woods in general; the blocks being higher and nearer together; and there was considerable evidence that this difference increased the danger. On the other hand it was shown that the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railway Company deliberately adopted this peculiar form “as the result of some twenty years’ experience,” and that many of the cars of that company are passing over the road of defendant constantly. Eour hundred and seventy-six passed over in the first ten days of plaintiff’s service, but how many of these were double dead-woods, or how many it was necessary to couple, did not appear.

The case was submitted to a jury who returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing his damages at , $5000. It is [217]*217claimed in this court that there was nothing to submit to the .iwy-

Nobody disputes that when a person enters the service of a railroad company he assumes the risks and dangers incident thereto, and cannot demand compensation from his employer for any accidental injury. In Davis v. Detroit, etc., R. R. Co. 20 Mich. 105 ; Quincy Mining Co. v. Kitts 42 Mich. 34, and other cases, we have said all that can be needfnl on the subject, and shall not repeat it here. Nobody disputes either that the employer is charged with the duty of care to those in his service, and must not subject them to risks by his own negligence. This is amply explained in Chicago, etc., Railway Co. v. Bayfield 37 Mich. 205; and in Swoboda v. Ward 40 Mich. 420, it was held in an opinion by Mr. Justice Marston, that when the servant is to be sent into dangerous places or put to dangerous tasks of the risks of which he is ignorant, due care on the part of the master requires that he shall give the servant notice and put him on his guard. We abide by all these decisions, and new cases must be governed by them as the facts may require.

If the only question before us were whether it was prudent and safe to introduce and use the cars with the coupling arrangement now complained of, we should perhaps be compelled upon the evidence before us to decide that it was not. The preponderance of evidence that they are more dangerous than the single dead-woods is very decided, and makes us regret that we are without explanation as to what it was in the twenty years’ experience of the New York, Lake Erie & Western Bailroad Company that led the company to adopt this style of car. It is not likely that the consideration of safety escaped attention, because it should have had great if not controlling weight; but it must be admitted that the evidence presented in this record tends to establish the fact that all double dead-woods are more dangerous to the man called upon to couple them than are the single dead-woods, and that the form adopted by the New York, Lake Erie & Western is most dangerous of all. There is nevertheless some evidence the other way.

[218]*218But if it be conceded the double dead-woods are so dangerous, the concession does not dispose of this case. This is a question of negligence. The charge is that defendant has been guilty of a breach of duty'to one of its servants in permitting the cars of the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad to come upon his own road, and to be handled and coupled by its switchmen, without warning them of the peculiar construction and without furnishing them with appliances to make the coupling safe. There is no dispute regarding the main facts bearing upon this question. The company owning these cars have many thousands of them in use, and probably several hundred are coupled together every day. No doubt accidents sometimes occur, for the act of coupling cars of any pattern is always hazardous; but the evidence of persons having actual knowledge does not show that they are more frequent on that road than on others.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.W. 791, 45 Mich. 212, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-central-r-r-co-v-smithson-mich-1881.