1. The general rule exempting the common master, whether a
natural person or a corporation, from liability to a servant for
injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow servant recognized
and considered.
2. To that rule there are well defined exceptions, one of which
arises from the obligation of the master not to expose the
servants, when conducting his business, to perils or hazards
against which they may be guarded by proper diligence upon his
part.
3. Therefore, although his liability to them is not that of a
guarantor of the absolute safety or perfection of the machinery or
other apparatus provided for their use, he is bound to exercise the
care which the exigency reasonably requires, in furnishing such as
is adequate and suitable.
Page 100 U. S. 214
4. A railroad company is liable when its officers or agents who
are invested with a controlling or superior duty in that regard
are, in discharging it, guilty of negligence, from which injury to
an innocent party results.
5. If the servant of such a company who has knowledge of defects
in machinery gives notice thereof to the proper officer, and is
promised that they shall be remedied, his subsequent use of it, in
the well grounded belief that it will be put in proper condition
within a reasonable time, does not necessarily, or as matter of
law, make him guilty of contributory negligence. It is a question
for the jury whether, in relying upon such promise and using the
machinery after he knew its defective or insufficient condition, he
was in the exercise of due care. The burden of proof in such a case
is upon the company to show contributory negligence.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiffs in error, the widow and child of W. C. Hough,
deceased, seek in this action to recover against the Texas and
Pacific Railway Company damages, compensatory and exemplary, on
account of his death, which occurred in 1874, while he was in its
employment as an engineer.
In substance, the case is this:
The evidence in behalf of the plaintiffs tended to show that the
engine of which deceased had charge, coming in contract with an
animal, was thrown from the track, over an embankment, whereby the
whistle, fastened to the boiler, was blown or knocked out, and from
the opening thus made hot water and steam issued, scalding the
deceased to death; that the engine was thrown from the track
because the cow-catcher or pilot was defective, and the whistle
blown or knocked out because it was insecurely fastened to the
boiler; that these defects were owing to the negligence of the
company's master mechanic and of the foreman of the roundhouse at
Marshall; that to the former was committed the exclusive management
of the motive power of defendant's line, with full control over all
engineers and with unrestricted power to employ, direct, control,
and discharge them at pleasure; that all engineers
Page 100 U. S. 215
were required to report for orders to those officers, and under
their directions alone could engines go out upon the road; that
deceased knew of the defective condition of the cow-catcher or
pilot, and, having complained thereof to both the master mechanic
and foreman of the roundhouse, he was promised a number of times
that the defect should be remedied, but such promises were not
kept; that a new pilot was made, but, by reason of the negligence
of those officers, it was not put on the engine.
The evidence in behalf of the company conduced to show that the
engine was not defective; that due care had been exercised, as well
in its purchase as in the selection of the officers charged with
the duty of keeping it in proper condition; that the defective
cow-catcher or pilot was not the cause of the engine's being thrown
from the track; that the whistle was securely fastened, and did not
blow out, but, the cab being torn away, the safety valve was
opened, whereby the deceased was scalded; that if any of the
alleged defects existed, it was because of the negligence of the
master mechanic and the foreman of the roundhouse, for which
negligence the company claims that it was not responsible.
The principal question arising upon the assignments of error
requires the consideration, in some of its aspects, of the general
rule exempting the common master from liability to one servant for
injuries caused by the negligence of a fellow servant in the same
employment.
"The general rule," said Chief Justice Shaw, in
Farwell v.
Boston & Worcester Railway Corporation, 4 Metc. (Mass.)
49,
"resulting from considerations as well of justice as of policy
is that he who engages in the employment of another for the
performance of specified duties and services for compensation takes
upon himself the natural and ordinary risks and perils incident to
the performance of such services, and in legal contemplation the
compensation is adjusted accordingly. And we are not aware of any
principle which should except the perils arising from the
carelessness and negligence of those who are in the same
employment. These are perils which the servant is as likely to
know, and against which he can as effectually guard, as the master.
They are perils incident to the service,
Page 100 U. S. 216
and which can be as distinctly foreseen and provided for in the
rate of compensation as any other."
To prevent misapprehension as to the scope of the decision, he
deemed it necessary, in a subsequent portion of his opinion, to
add:
"We are far from intending to say that there are no implied
warranties and undertakings arising out of the relation of master
and servant. Whether, for instance, the employer would be
responsible to an engineer for the loss arising from a defective or
ill constructed steam engine; whether this would depend upon an
implied warranty of its goodness and sufficiency, or upon the fact
of willful misconduct or gross negligence on the part of the
employer, if a natural person, or of the superintendent or
immediate representative and managing agent, in case of an
incorporated company, are questions on which we give no
opinion."
As to the general rule, very little conflict of opinion is to be
found in the adjudged cases, where the court has been at liberty to
consider it upon principle, uncontrolled by statutory regulations.
The difficulty has been in its practical application to the special
circumstances of particular cases. What are the natural and
ordinary risks incident to the work in which the servant engages;
what are the perils which, in legal contemplation, are presumed to
be adjusted in the stipulated compensation; who, within the true
sense of the rule, or upon grounds of public policy, are to be
deemed fellow servants in the same common adventure or undertaking
-- are questions in reference to which much contrariety of opinion
exists in the courts of the several states. Many of the cases are
very wide apart in the solution of those questions.
It would far exceed the limits to be observed in this opinion to
enter upon an elaborate or critical review of the authorities upon
those several points. Nor shall we attempt to lay down any general
rule applicable to all cases involving the liability of the common
employer to one employee for the negligence of a co-employee in the
same service. It is sufficient to say that while the general
doctrine, as stated by Chief Justice Shaw, is sustained by
elementary writers of high authority and by numerous adjudications
of the American and English courts, there are well defined
exceptions which, resting as they clearly
Page 100 U. S. 217
do upon principles of justice, expediency, and public policy,
have become too firmly established in our jurisprudence to be now
disregarded or shaken.
One, and perhaps the most important, of those exceptions arises
from the obligation of the master, whether a natural person or a
corporate body, not to expose the servant, when conducting the
master's business, to perils or hazards against which he may be
guarded by proper diligence upon the part of the master. To that
end the master is bound to observe all the care which prudence and
the exigencies of the situation require in providing the servant
with machinery or other instrumentalities adequately safe for use
by the latter. It is implied in the contract between the parties
that the servant risks the dangers which ordinarily attend or are
incident to the business in which he voluntarily engages for
compensation, among which is the carelessness of those, at least in
the same work or employment, with whose habits, conduct, and
capacity he has, in the course of his duties, an opportunity to
become acquainted and against whose neglect or incompetency he may
himself take such precautions as his inclination or judgment may
suggest. But it is equally implied in the same contract that the
master shall supply the physical means and agencies for the conduct
of his business. It is also implied, and public policy requires,
that in selecting such means, he shall not be wanting in proper
care. His negligence in that regard is not a hazard usually or
necessarily attendant upon the business. Nor is it one which the
servant, in legal contemplation, is presumed to risk, for the
obvious reason that the servant who is to use the instrumentalities
provided by the master has ordinarily no connection with their
purchase in the first instance or with their preservation or
maintenance in suitable condition after they have been supplied by
the master.
In considering what dangers the servant is presumed to risk, the
Court, in
Railroad Company v.
Fort, 17 Wall. 553,
84 U. S. 557,
said:
"But this presumption cannot arise where the risk is not within
the contract of service and the servant had no reason to believe he
would have to encounter it. If it were otherwise, principals would
be released from all obligations to make reparations
Page 100 U. S. 218
to an employee in a subordinate position for any injury caused
by the wrongful conduct of the persons placed over him, whether
they were fellow servants in the same common service or not. Such a
doctrine would be subversive of all just ideas of the obligations
arising out of the contract of service, and withdraw all protection
from the subordinate employees of railroad corporations. These
corporations, instead of being required to conduct their business
so as not to endanger life, would, so far as this class of persons
were concerned, be relieved of all pecuniary responsibility in case
they failed to do it. A doctrine that leads to such results is
unsupported by reason, and cannot receive our sanction."
A railroad corporation may be controlled by competent, watchful,
and prudent directors, who exercise the greatest caution in the
selection of a superintendent or general manager, under whose
supervision and orders its affairs and business, in all of its
departments, are conducted. The latter, in turn, may observe the
same caution in the appointment of subordinates at the head of the
several branches or departments of the company's service. But the
obligation still remains to provide and maintain in suitable
condition the machinery and apparatus to be used by its employees
-- an obligation the more important, and the degree of diligence in
its performance the greater, in proportion to the dangers which may
be encountered. Those, at least, in the organization of the
corporation who are invested with controlling or superior authority
in that regard represent its legal personality, their negligence,
from which injury results, is the negligence of the corporation.
The latter cannot, in respect of such matters, interpose between it
and the servant, who has been injured, without fault on his part,
the personal responsibility of an agent who, in exercising the
master's authority, has violated the duty he owes as well to the
servant as to the corporation.
To guard against misapplication of these principles, we should
say that the corporation is not to be held as guaranteeing or
warranting the absolute safety under all circumstances, or the
perfection in all of its parts, of the machinery or apparatus which
may be provided for the use of employees. Its duty in that respect
to its employees is discharged when, but only when, its
Page 100 U. S. 219
agents whose business it is to supply such instrumentalities
exercise due care as well in their purchase originally, as in
keeping and maintaining them in such condition as to be reasonably
and adequately safe for use by employees.
A leading case upon the question before us is
Ford v.
Fitchburg Railroad Co., 110 Mass. 241. That was an action by
an engineer to recover damages for injuries caused by the explosion
of his engine, which was old and out of repair. His right to
recover was disputed upon the ground that the want of repair of the
engine was due to the negligence of fellow servants in the
department of repairs.
But the court said:
"The rule of law which exempted 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 exercise of ordinary care in supplying and
maintaining proper 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 always be discharged, when the employer is a
corporation, by officers and agents does not relieve the
corporation from that obligation. The agents who are charged with
the duty of supplying safe machinery are not, in the true sense of
the rule relied on, to be regarded as fellow servants of those who
are engaged in operating it. They are charged with the master's
duty to his servant. They are employed in distinct and independent
departments of service, and there is no difficulty in
distinguishing them, even when the same person renders service by
turns in each, as the convenience of the employer may require."
In a subsequent portion of the same opinion, the court said:
"The corporation is equally chargeable whether the negligence
was in originally failing to provide or in afterwards failing to
keep its machinery in safe condition."
The same views substantially are expressed by Mr. Wharton in his
Treatise on the Law of Negligence. The author (sec. 211) says:
"The question is that of duty, and without making the
unnecessary and inadequate assumption of implied
Page 100 U. S. 220
warranty, it is sufficient for the purposes of justice to assert
that it is the duty of an employer inviting employees to use his
structure and machinery to use proper care and diligence to make
such structure and machinery fit for use."
Again (sec. 212):
"At the same time we must remember that where a master
personally or through his representatives exercises due care in the
purchase or construction of buildings and machinery and in their
repair, he cannot be made liable for injuries which arise from
casualties against which such care would not protect. It is
otherwise if there be a lack in such care either by himself or his
representatives. The duty of repairing is his own, and, as we shall
hereafter see, the better opinion is that he is directly liable for
the negligence of agents when acting in this respect in his behalf.
If the master 'knows, or, in the exercise of due care, might have
known,' that . . . his structures or engines were insufficient,
either at the time of procuring them or at any subsequent time, he
fails in his duty."
Still further, in reference to the obligation upon the master to
supply suitable machinery for working use (sec. 232a):
"It has sometimes been said that a corporation is obliged to act
always by servants, and that it is unjust to impute to it personal
negligence in cases in which it is impossible for it to be
negligent personally. But if this be true, it would relieve
corporations from all liability to servants. The true view is that,
as the corporation can act only through superintending officers,
the negligences of those officers in respect to other servants are
the negligences of the corporation."
The current of decisions in this country is in the same
direction, as will be seen from an examination of the authorities,
some of which are cited in the note at the end of this opinion.
It is, however, insisted that the defense is sustained by the
settled course of decisions in the English courts. It is
undoubtedly true that the general doctrine of the immunity of the
master from responsibility for injuries received by his servant
from a fellow servant in the same employment has in some cases been
carried much further by the English than by the American courts.
But we cannot see that, upon the
Page 100 U. S. 221
precise question we have been considering, there is any
substantial conflict between them. That question was not, as is
supposed, involved -- it certainly was not decided -- in
Priestley v. Fowler, 3 Mee. & W. 1. The decision there
was placed by Lord Abinger partly upon the ground that, in the
"sort of employment especially described in the declaration
[transporting goods of the master by one servant, in a van,
conducted by another of his servants], . . . the plaintiff must
have known as well as the master, and probably better, whether the
van was sufficient, whether it was overloaded, and whether it was
likely to carry him safely."
But even in that case, although the court declared it was not
called upon the decide how far knowledge upon the part of the
master of vices or imperfections in the carriage used by the
servant injured would make him liable, it was said:
"He (the master) is no doubt bound to provide for the safety of
the servant in the course of his employment to the best of his
judgment, information, and belief."
The question came before the House of Lords in
Paterson v.
Wallace, 1 Macq.H.L.Cas. 748, and again in 1858 in
Bartonshill Coal Co. v. Reid, 3
id. 266. In the
last-named case, Lord Cranworth said that it was a principle,
established by many preceding cases,
"that when a master employs his servant in a work of danger, he
is bound to exercise due care in order to have his tackle and
machinery in a safe and proper condition so as to protect the
servant against unnecessary risks."
This he held to be the law in both Scotland and England. At the
same sitting of the House of Lords,
Bartonshill Coal Co. v.
McGuire, 3
id. 307, was determined. In that case,
Lord Chancellor Chelmsford delivered the principal opinion,
concurring in what was said in the
Reid case. After
referring to the general doctrine as announced in
Priestley v.
Fowler and recognized subsequently in other cases in the
English courts, he said:
"In the consideration of these cases, it did not become
necessary to define with any great precision what was meant by the
words 'common service' or 'common employment,' and perhaps it might
be difficult beforehand to suggest any exact definition of them. It
is necessary, however, in each particular case to ascertain whether
the fellow servants
Page 100 U. S. 222
are fellow laborers in the same work, because, although a
servant may be taken to have engaged to encounter all risks which
are incident to the service which he undertakes, yet he cannot be
expected to anticipate those which may happen to him on occasions
foreign to his employment. Where servants, therefore, are engaged
in different departments of duty, an injury committed by one
servant upon the other by carelessness or negligence in the course
of his peculiar work is not within the exception, and the master's
liability attaches in that case in the same manner as if the
injured servant stood in no such relation to him."
Upon the same occasion, Lord Brougham, referring to the remark
of a Scotch judge to the effect that an absolute and inflexible
rule releasing the master from responsibility in every case where
one servant is injured by the fault of another was utterly unknown
to the law of Scotland, said:
"But, my lords, it is utterly unknown to the laws of England
also. To bring the case within the exemption, there must be this
most material qualification, that the two servants shall be men in
the same common employment and engaged in the same common work
under that employment."
3
id. 313.
An instructive case is
Clarke v. Holmes, decided in
1862 in the Exchequer Chamber upon appeal from the Court of
Exchequer, 7 H. & N. 937. There, the plaintiff was employed by
the defendant to oil dangerous machinery, and he was injured in
consequence of its remaining unfenced. He had complained of the
condition of the machinery, and the manager of the defendant, in
the latter's presence, promised that the fencing should be
restored. In the course of the argument, counsel for the defendant
relied upon
Priestley v. Fowler, claiming it to have
decided that whenever a servant accepts a dangerous occupation he
must bear the risk. He was, however, interrupted by Cockburn, C.J.,
with the remark, "That is, whatever is fairly within the scope of
the occupation, including the negligence of fellow servants; here,
it is the negligence of the master." Crompton, J., also said: "It
cannot be made part of the contract, that the master shall not be
liable for his own negligence."
In the opinion delivered by Cockburn, C.J., it was said:
Page 100 U. S. 223
"I consider the doctrine laid down by the House of Lords in the
case of
The Bartonshill Coal Co. v. Reid as the law of
Scotland with reference to the duty of a master, as applicable to
the law of England also -- namely that when a servant is employed
on machinery from the use of which danger may arise, it is the duty
of the master to take due care and to use all reasonable means to
guard against and prevent any defects from which increased and
unnecessary danger may occur."
Again, in the same opinion:
"The rule I am laying down goes only to this, that the danger
contemplated on entering into the contract shall not be aggravated
by any omission on the part of the master to keep the machinery in
the condition in which, from the terms of the contract or the
nature of the employment, the servant had a right to expect that it
would be kept."
Byles, J.:
"But I think the master liable on the broader ground, to-wit,
that the owner of dangerous machinery is bound to exercise due care
that it is in a safe and proper condition. . . . The master is
neither, on the one hand, at liberty to neglect all care, nor, on
the other, is he to insure safety, but he is to use due and
reasonable care. . . . Why may not the master be guilty of
negligence by his manager or agent, whose employment may be so
distinct from that of the injured servant that they cannot with
propriety be deemed fellow servants? And if a master's personal
knowledge of defects in his machinery be necessary to his
liability, the more a master neglects his business and abandons it
to others, the less will he be liable."
To the same effect is the recent case of
Murray v.
Phillips, decided in 1876 in the Exchequer Division of the
High Court of Justice. 35 Law Times Rep. 477.
It is scarcely necessary to say that the jury were not correctly
informed by the court below as to the legal principles governing
this case. It is impossible to reconcile the general charge or the
specific instructions with the rules which we have laid down. They
were, taken together, equivalent to a peremptory instruction to
find for the company. The jury may have believed from the evidence
that the defects complained of constituted the efficient proximate
cause of the death of the
Page 100 U. S. 224
engineer; that such defects would not have existed had the
master mechanic and foreman of the roundhouse exercised reasonable
care and diligence in the discharge of their respective duties
touching the machinery and physical appliances supplied to
employees engaged in running trains, and that the deceased was not
chargeable with contributory negligence; yet, consistently with any
fair interpretation of the charge, and the specific instructions,
they were precluded from finding a verdict against the company.
One other question, arising upon the instructions and which has
been discussed, with some fullness by counsel, deserves notice at
our hands. It is contended by counsel that the engineer was guilty
of such contributory negligence as to prevent the plaintiffs from
recovering. The instruction upon that branch of the case was
misleading and erroneous.
The defect in the engine, of which the engineer had knowledge,
was that which existed in the cow-catcher or pilot. It is not
claimed that he was aware of the insufficient fastening of the
whistle or that the defect, if any, in that respect was of such a
character that he should have become advised of it while using the
engine on the road. But he did have knowledge of the defective
condition of the cow-catcher or pilot, and complained thereof to
both the master mechanic and the foreman of the roundhouse. They
promised that it should be promptly remedied, and it may be that he
continued to use the engine in the belief that the defect would be
removed. The court below seem to attach no consequence to the
complaint made by the engineer, followed, as it was, by explicit
assurances that the defect should be remedied. According to the
instructions, if the engineer used the engine with knowledge of the
defect, the jury should find for the company, although he may have
been justified in relying upon those assurances.
If the engineer, after discovering or recognizing the defective
condition of the cow-catcher or pilot, had continued to use the
engine without giving notice thereof to the proper officers of the
company, he would undoubtedly have been guilty of such contributory
negligence as to bar a recovery so far as such defect was found to
have been the efficient cause of the
Page 100 U. S. 225
death. He would be held in that case to have himself risked the
dangers which might result from the use of the engine in such
defective condition. But
"there can be no doubt that where a master has expressly
promised to repair a defect, the servant can recover for an injury
caused thereby within such a period of time after the promise as it
would be reasonable to allow for its performance, and, as we think,
for an injury suffered within any period which would not preclude
all reasonable expectation that the promise might be kept."
Shearman & Redf. Negligence, sec. 96;
Conroy v. Vulcan
Iron Works, 62 Mo. 35;
Patterson v. P. & C. R. W.
Co., 76 Pa.St. 389;
Le Clair v. The First Division of the
St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Co., 20 Minn. 9;
Brabbits
v. R. W. Co., 38 Mo. 289. "If the servant," says Mr. Cooley in
his work on Torts, 559,
"having a right to abandon the service because it is dangerous,
refrains from doing so in consequence of assurances that the danger
shall be removed, the duty to remove the danger is manifest and
imperative, and the master is no in the exercise of ordinary care
unless or until he makes his assurances good. Moreover, the
assurances remove all ground for the argument that the servant by
continuing the employment engages to assume the risks."
And such seems to be the rule recognized in the English courts.
Holmes v. Worthington, 2 Fos. & Fin. 533;
Holmes
v. Clarke, 6 H. & N. 937;
Clarke v. Holmes, 7
id. 937. We may add that it was for the jury to say
whether the defect in the cow-catcher or pilot was such that none
but a reckless engineer, utterly careless of his safety, would have
used the engine without it being removed. If, under all the
circumstances and in view of the promises to remedy the defect, the
engineer was not wanting in due care in continuing to use the
engine, then the company will not be excused for the omission to
supply proper machinery upon the ground of contributory negligence.
That the engineer knew of the alleged defect was not, under the
circumstances, and as matter of law, absolutely conclusive of want
of due care on his part.
Ford v. Fitchburg Railroad Co.,
110 Mass. 261;
Laning v. N.Y.C. Railroad Co., 49 N.Y. 521.
In such a case as that here presented, the burden of proof to show
contributory negligence was
Page 100 U. S. 226
upon the defendant.
Railroad Company v.
Gladmon, 15 Wall. 401; Wharton, Negligence, sec.
423, and authorities there cited in note 1;
Indianapolis &
St. Louis Railroad Co. v. Horst, 93 U. S.
291.
Our attention has been called to two cases determined in the
Supreme Court of Texas and which, it is urged, sustain the
principles announced in the court below. After a careful
consideration of those cases, we are of opinion that they do not
necessarily conflict with the conclusions we have reached. Be this
as it may, the questions before us, in the absence of statutory
regulations by the state in which the cause of action arose, depend
upon principles of general law, and in their determination we are
not required to follow the decisions of the state courts.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions to set
aside the verdict and award a new trial and for such other
proceedings as may be consistent with this opinion.
NOTE -- 73 N.Y. 40; 49
id. 530; 53
id. 551; 59
id. 517; 13 Allen 440; 48 Me. 116; 66
id. 425; 3
Dillon 321; 55 Ill. 492; 45
id. 197; 60
id. 175;
8 Allen 441; 1 Coldw. 613; 38 Wis. 293; 78 Pa.St. 32; 46 Mo. 169;
20 Minn. 9; 3 Sawyer, 444; Wharton, Negligence (2d ed.), secs.
199-242 and notes.