St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway v. Harper

44 Ark. 524
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 44 Ark. 524 (St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway v. Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway v. Harper, 44 Ark. 524 (Ark. 1884).

Opinion

Cockrill, O. J.

The appellee, while in the discharge of his duty as watchman for the railroad, in its yards at Texarkana, was injured by the explosion of the boiler of one of the company’s locomotives. Critically considered his complaint charges an injury to a servant by a co-servant, and nothing more. It is the well established rule of this court that the master cannot be made to respond in damages for this. The defendant, however, made no objection to the sufficiency of the complaint, but denied all knowledge of defects in the exploded engine, as well as a want of care on its part, and permitted the plaintiff to introduce evidence tending to show that the boiler of the engine which caused the injury was defective, and that the agents of the company who were charged with the duty of repairing it, ought to have known of the defects. After . verdict for the plaintiff the complaint may be considered as amended to conform to this proof, and the defendant can take nothing by the motion in arrest of judgment. The court was right in overruling it.

1. master vast:™ frVmYo-

2. Amendment after verdict,

The counsel for the appellant insist that there was no proof of any defect in the engine, nor of a want of care on the part of the company’s servants in keeping the engine in repair. It is useless to detail all the testimony. It was made to appear that the engine that did the injury had, several years before, collided with another engine and was badly damaged. Shortly afterwards it was put in condition in the company’s shops at Baring Cross, and again put to service on the road. A few months before the explosion, it was carried to the same shops where the foreman who had superintended the former repairs was still in charge, to be again overhauled. This duty, as far as the boiler was concerned, seems to have devolved solely on the foreman of the boiler-making department of the shops. It was left to him to determine what repairs were necessary and how the work should be done; and the final test of safety by pressure of steam was applied by him. The foreman of the shops had general supervision over all the matters of repairs, and there was also a master mechanic for the entire road. Deno Casat, who was at this time inspector of engines in the same shops, testified that one of the usual methods to ascertain the soundness of a boiler is to sound all the rivets, and that this was not done in this instance. He examined the boiler after the explosion and found the line of rivets that hold together the “wagon top” and “cylinder” parts of the boiler had been partly cut in two by the old collision. Another witness testified that in the explosion the boiler parted at the weak point indicated by Casat.

B. Negligence in testing boiler.

This testimony tended to establish the plaintiff’s ease. It is true Casat was contradicted in almost every material particular by witnesses who appear to have been entitled to more credit than he was. Mechanics experienced in such matters testified also that the best test for finding a defect in a boiler was applied; that care and diligence failed to disclose any imperfection in the boiler, and an inspection of it after the explosion gave no clew to the cause. But these facts, while they greatly weaken, do not obliterate the testimony given for the plaintiff. If the company ■omitted any test of soundness of the boiler that ought to have been made, it was guilty of negligence, and it was not for the court to take the question from the jury.

“ The rule of law which exempts the master from responsibility to the servant for injuries received from the ordinary risks of his employment, including the negligence of his fellow servants, does not excuse the employer from the exercise of ordinary care in supplying and maintaining suitable instrumentalities for the performance of the work required. One who enters the employment of another has a right to count on this duty, and is not required to assume the risks of the master’s negligence in this respect. The fact that it is a duty which must be always discharged when the employer is a corporation, by officers and agents, does not relieve the corporation from the obligation.” Ford v. Fichburg R. R., 110 Mass., 260.

4. master vant?ek" se?5"aynt lectivo ma-

It is not an absolute duty of the master to maintain suitable and safe engines and machinery for his servants. There is no warranty that they are safe in the beginning, or that they will be so at any time. The master’s duty is performed if he uses due care and diligence to effect this end, and this is rigidly required of him. Fifield v. Northern. R. R., 48 N. H., 245; M. & O. R. R. v. Thomas, 42 Ala., 672; L. R. & F. S. Ry. v. Dufy, 35 Ark., 602; Hurd v. V. & C. R. R., 32 Vt., 473.

When there is no notice to the master of defects, and no . . blame imputable in not discovering them, he is not liable if injury results to his employe therefrom. Noys v. Smith, 28 Vt., 59.

Notice to of

When an injury has occurred to a servant in consequence of a defect in machinery furnished by the master, to warrant a recovery the servant must show negligence or the want of care and diligence on the part of the master in relation to the defect. The onus of proof is not shifted tó the master, as in the case of a passenger injured by a common carrier, by proof of the fact that an injury has resulted from the defect. M. & O. Ry. v. Thomas, supra; N. & C. R. R. v. Elliott, 1 Cold. (Tenn.), 611; Wood on Master and Servant, sec. 382.

„ „ 5. Burden of proof>

Fellow-Servant.

It is not essential to show more in this respect than the want of such care and diligence as a prudent man would have exercised under like circumstances. The master may not be able to perform this duty to the servant in person, but he must see that some one discharges it faithfully for him. He cannot shirk the -responsibility. The law casts upon him certain duties to his employes, and if he deputes the performance to another, the latter, as to these duties, is not a fellow-servant with the other employes, but stands in the master’s place, and his negligence binds the employer. Fones v. Phillips, 39 Ark., 17; Brabitts v. C. & N. Ry., 38 Wisc., 289; N. & C. R. R. v. Elliott, sup.

It is urged that the master mechanic of the railroad alone occupied that relation to the company in this case, and that no attempt was made to show negligence as to him. That the company would have been liable had the injury resulted from his negligence is established by numerous adjudged cases. The reason assigned for liability on the negligence of the master mechanic applies as well to the foreman of the shops and to the foreman of the boiler department in this case. “ Each within his sphere was the agent of the company, charged with the performance of certain duties which the- latter owed to the public and its servants, and on principle it seems quite immaterial that one of them was subordinate to the other, or that he operated in a narrower field.” Brabitts v. C. & N. R. R., sup.; Fones v. Phillips, sup.; Wood on Master and Servant, secs. 454, 445.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Ark. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-iron-mountain-southern-railway-v-harper-ark-1884.