Szabo v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.

40 A.2d 562, 132 N.J.L. 331, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 4, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 562 (Szabo v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Szabo v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 40 A.2d 562, 132 N.J.L. 331, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 157 (N.J. 1945).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Campbell, Chancellor.

This cause was tried at the Middlesex Common Pleas resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff-appellant.

*332 The complaint originally consisted of five counts but all were eliminated except the first two and the cause was submitted as an action under the Federal Employer’s Liability Act, seeking recovery of damages for the death of plaintiff-appellant’s husband, who was employed as a laborer by the defendant-respondent and was a member of a track maintenance crew.

The first count charges that appellant’s intestate, while engaged as a track maintenance laborer, was prostrated by the heat and by reason thereof became powerless to help and care for himself and because thereof it became the duty of the respondent to give him immediate attention and first aid and, if his emergent necessities so required, medical care and assistance, which it failed to do and by reason thereof appellant’s intestate died.

The second count charges that the defendant-respondent undertook to care for its stricken employee and failed to discharge this duty with reasonable prudence and due care.

The defendant-respondent has and now does insist and urge that under the facts and circumstances of this case no legal duty rested upon it and that any action upon the part of its foreman or other members of decedent’s gang or crew was beyond the scope of their employment and not binding upon it.

Eespondent appealed from appellant’s judgment in the Common Pleas to the Supreme Court and that Court reversed the judgment and the plaintiff below now appeals to this court.

It is conceded that in this and other jurisdictions, the law is, that in the absence of a contract or a statute, there rests no duty upon an employer to provide medical service or other means of cure to an ill, diseased or injured .employee, even though it result from the negligenec of the master, Koviacs v. Edison Portland Cement Co., 3 N. J. Mis. R. 368; 39 C. J. 240, § 348; 18 R. C. L. 506.

In our judgment there is a sound and wise exception to this rule, founded upon humane instincts.

That exception is, that where one, engaged in the work of his master receives injuries, whether or not due to the negli *333 gence of the master, rendering him helpless to provide for his own care, dictates of humanity, duty and fair dealing, require that the master pat in the reach of such stricken employee such medical care and other assistance as the emergency, thus created, may in reason require, so that the stricken employee may have his life saved or may avoid further bodily harm. This duty arises out of strict necessity and urgent exigency. It arises with the emergency and expires with it.

This precept probably had its inception in the code of moral conduct, hut, like many others, such as furnishing the employee with a safe place in which to work, and proper tools with which to labor, has become a legal duty incorporated in every contract of hiring, by legal inference, notwithstanding a lack of specific provision or statutory requirement. Carey v. Davis, 190 Iowa 720; 180 N. W. Rep. 889; 12 A. L. R. 904, 909, et seq., and the cases cited there; Ohio and M. R. Co. v. Early, 141 Ind. 73, 91; 28 L. R. A. 546; 40 N. E. Rep. 251; Shaw v. Chicago, M. and St. P. R. Co., 103 Minn. 8; 114 N. W. Rep. 85; Rausch v. Elite Laundry Co., 98 Minn. 357; 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 940; 108 N. W. Rep. 477; Hunicke v. Meramac Quarry Co., 262 Mo. 560; L. R. A. 1915C, 789; Terra Haute and I. R. R. Co. v. McMurray, 98 Ind. 358; 49 Amer. Rep. 152; Depue v. Flatau, 100 Minn. 299; 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 485; 111 N. W. Rep. 1.

Now this emergency must arise in the presence of the employer but a superior employee in charge of the particular work is sufficient to charge the master. Hunicke v. Meramac Quarry Co., supra. Footnotes, Ohio and Mississippi Railway Co. v. Early, supra; 28 L. R. A. 541; Holmes v. McAllister, 123 Mich. 493: 82 N. W. Rep. 220; 28 L. R. A. 396; Terra Haute and I. R. R. Co. v. McMurray, supra.

Of this legally created duty the United States Supreme Court in Cortes v. Baltimore Insular Line, 281 U. S. 361, 316, 311, seems to have taken notice by its reference thereto in the citation of the cases, Ohio and Mississippi Railway Co. v. Early; Shaw v. Chicago, Minn. & St. P. Railway Co.; Raasch v. Elite Laundry Co., and Hunicke v. Meramac Quarry Co., all supra.

*334 ' The Supreme Court in reversing the judgment of the Common Pleas says:

“We think the motion for nonsuit should have been granted at the end of the plaintiff’s case and at the end of the whole case the motion for directed verdict for the defendant should •have been granted because there was no proof that the death of the decedent was caused by airy act of the employer which had been negligently performed. ■ No evidence in the case leads to the fair assumption that the employer had knowledge, or should have had, that the employee was mortally stricken.”

With this we do not agree.

The foreman of this labor crew had an experience, as such, for a period of thirty-three years. While he was not called upon to correctly diagnose decedent’s particular ailment he could or should have known of his physical and mental collapse, and inability to care for himself, whatever the cause, if it existed.

He saw and knew the physical prostration of decedent because he directed him to cease work. He knew that decedent could not care for himself because he directed two fellow employees to convey him to his home — one because he had an automobile and the other because he knew where he resided. He knew that these two had to support and assist him into the conveyance.

We conclude that this and all of the evidence made it necessary for the jury to decide whether or not the condition of the decedent was such that the foreman knew or should have known that it presented an emergency requiring more or greater care than was exercised.

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 562, 132 N.J.L. 331, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szabo-v-pennsylvania-railroad-co-nj-1945.