Vick v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

95 N.Y. 267
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 N.Y. 267 (Vick v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vick v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 95 N.Y. 267 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The recovery in this action is based upon the ground that at the time of the accident, which resulted in the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, he was a passenger upon the defendant’s car and not an employe. This is the most important question arising upon this appeal, for if the deceased was an employe, and, at the time he received his injury, in the .service of the defendant, then the action cannot be maintained, and the court below erred in refusing to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant, as well as in denying the motion for a nonsuit, and in not holding, as requested, that the deceased was an employe at the time of the accident, and also in not charging the jury to that effect. The inquiry then arises as to the position the deceased occupied in reference to the defendant.

The evidence shows that he had been in the employment of the defendant, as a foreman in its tin-shops at Rochester, prior to December, 1876. The defendant at that time removed its [270]*270shops from Rochester to Buffalo, but before their removal the deceased had left defendant’s employment. Many of the employes in the tin-shop at Rochester continued in the employ of the defendant after it had removed its shops to Buffalo, but still resided at Rochester. By an arrangement made between . them and the defendant they were to be taken to Buffalo on ; Monday morning, and brought back Saturday evening of every i week in the defendant’s car. Sometimes they were carried in j a baggage car, sometimes in a passenger car, and afterward in a passenger car called a shop car in which other persons, who paid fares, were permitted to ride. Ho fare was required of the men thus employed and transported, but by agreement a deduction was made from their wages at an amount fixed pefJ^T hour, being the same as when at work, for the time «they were' ~*A' upon the train, their wages beginning when they reached the shops at Buffalo, and ending when they left them. In the month J¡fr-f of January, 1877, the deceased applied for his former position as foreman, and was employed accordingly by the defendant, if* He asked if he could 'go with the rest of the men, and he was told he would be passed with the rest of the men in the defend- ^ ant’s shop car. Upon these terms he again commenced working *''/ for the defendant as foreman in the tin-shop at Buffalo. The on ly pass given was one to the master mechanic, Mr. Gould, under which all the men who lived at Rochester and worked in the shops at Buffalo traveled. There was no evidence upon the trial showing that the deceased ever saw the joass, or that he was acquainted with'its contents. He was paid for his work in accordance with the arrangement already stated. It appears that the contract for his employment in the tin-shops, and for traveling between Rochester and Buffalo, while engaged in his work, was one and the same contract, made at the same time, and the whole must be taken together as an entire agreement. I

The essence of the contract was that the deceased should work for the defendant, as foreman of the tin-shop, and in consideration thereof it should pay him a price fixed per hour, and should transport him from his residence to the place where tile work was to be done, and back again, upon its rail[271]*271road without charge. At the time of the accident the deceased was in the shop car of the defendant on his way to the place where he was to perform services. As his transportation was a part of the contract, he was there by virtue thereof as an employe. His services had then commenced under the contract ; he paid no fare as an ordinary passenger would have done, but was being transported under the pass referred to. Under these circumstances the deceased was, at the time of the accident, in the car under the terms of the contract made for the rendition of his services, and not as a passenger. It/ was essential that he should be in the car, at the time and place of the accident, to enable him to perform the contract of service into which he had entered. But for this he would’ not have been there at the time, and .his traveling on this occasion was in the capacity of an employe and not as a passenger. If two separate contracts had been intended to have been made, one for the services of the deceased and the other for his transportation, it is fair to assume that the amount allowed for his wages would have been increased sufficiently to pay his fare as a passenger. Clearly such could not have been the intention, as the contract made was a single one which related only to the services of the deceased and the conpensa- j tion he was to receive for the same. It was part of this contract of service that he was to be carried to and from the place of his work every week on the defendant’s railroad, and on a train which was usually provided for that purpose. The right to go and return being inseparable from the contract to do the work, it is not obvious that any valid ground exists for claiming that the deceased was a passenger and paid his own fare.

As to the position that because his hours of labor had not commenced at the time of the accident, the deceased was to be regarded as a passenger, it is a complete answer to say that his conveyance to and from his work was incident to his employment, and was part of the contract of service under which he was engaged. This remark will also apply to the position of the respondent’s counsel that traveling to the shop where work was to be done was not the beginning of service but an [272]*272act done to obtain the service. If it was a part of the contract then obviously it cannot be said that the deceased gave a portion of his wages as the price of transportation independent of his contract. He was as much under the control of the defendant when traveling as any other employe who was transported by virtue of a contract with the company for his services, which contract provided for the right to go and come upon the defendant’s cars to and from the place where he was required to work. Although he had no particular duty to discharge while traveling, yet the traveling of the deceased was not as a passenger but as an employe under the contract of service between him and the defendant.

No question arises upon the record before us as to the liability of the defendant in case the injury had been received outside of the contract of service, and it is a sufficient answer to the suggestion made in this respect to say, that the accident which caused the injury to the deceased occurred while he was traveling for a purpose connected with and within the scope of the contract.

Some authorities are cited in support of the position of the appellant’s counsel, which tend in that direction. In the case of Ross’ Administratrix v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (5 Hun, 488; affirmed in this court in 74 N. Y. 617) the intestate was killed by an accident on the defendant’s road. He was an assistant surveyor, employed by the month, and had no duty to perform in connection with the running of the defendant’s train, nor any care in reference to the road. His death occurred while being transported on defendant’s cars, free of charge, from his home to the place where he was to perform work. There was no direct proof that the contract provided for his transportation upon the road free of charge, but it may be implied from the circumstances that such was the understanding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.Y. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vick-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-ny-1884.