The obligation upon an employee of a railroad company to take
care and exercise diligence in avoiding accidents from its trains
while in the performance of his duties about the tracks is not to
be measured by the obligation imposed upon a passenger when upon or
crossing them.
In an action by a track repairer against the receiver of a
railroad to recover damages for injuries received from a locomotive
and train while at work repairing the track in a station yard, it
is held that the servants of the receiver were guilty of no
negligence, and that if they were, the plaintiff's negligence
contributed directly to the result complained of.
On May 17, 1887, William Aerkfetz, being under twenty-one years
of age, by Frederick Aerkfetz, his next friend, commenced this
action in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Michigan against the defendants in error, receivers
duly appointed and in possession of the Wabash Railroad, to recover
damages for personal injuries caused, as alleged, by their
negligence. The defendants answered, and on a trial before a jury
the verdict and judgment were for the defendants. To reverse such
judgment, this writ of error has been sued out.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff was in the employ of the defendants in the yard of the
railroad company at Delray, working on one of the tracks therein,
and, while so engaged was run over and injured by a freight car
moved by a switch engine.
Page 145 U. S. 419
The defenses presented were three: first, the receivers were
guilty of no negligence; second, even if they were, plaintiff was
guilty of contributory negligence; and, third, whatever negligence
there was, if any, was that of a fellow servant. The trial court
directed a verdict for the defendants on the ground of contributory
negligence. Much might be said in favor of each of the three
propositions advanced by the defendants. We rest our affirmance of
the judgment upon the grounds that, under the circumstances, there
was no negligence on the part of the defendants, and that the
accident occurred through a lack of proper attention on the part of
the plaintiff.
There is little dispute in the testimony, and the facts as
disclosed are plainly these: the Delray yard is in the western part
of the City of Detroit. In it were twelve tracks and side tracks,
and the yard was used for the making up of trains. A switch engine
was employed therein, and, as might be expected, was constantly
moving forward and backward, changing cars, and making up trains.
Plaintiff was a repairer of tracks. He had been employed there
about eighteen months, and was familiar with the manner in which
the work was done. The yard was about a quarter of a mile in
length. The tracks were in a direct line east and west, with
nothing to obstruct the view in either direction. At the time of
the accident, plaintiff was working near the west end of the yard
when a switch engine pushing two cars moved slowly along the track
upon which he was at work, the speed of the engine being about that
of a man walking. Plaintiff stood with his back to the approaching
cars, and so remained at work, without looking backward or watching
for the moving engine, until he was struck and run over by the
first car.
Upon these facts, we observe that the plaintiff was an employee,
and therefore the measure of duty to him was not such as to a
passenger or a stranger. As an employee of long experience in that
yard, he was familiar with the moving of cars forward and backward
by the switch engine. The cars were moved at a slow rate of speed,
not greater than that which was customary and that which was
necessary in the
Page 145 U. S. 420
making up of trains. For a quarter of a mile east of him there
was no obstruction, and by ordinary attention he could have
observed the approaching cars. He knew that the switch engine was
busy moving cars and making up trains, and that at any minute cars
were likely to be moved along the track upon which he was working.
With that knowledge, he places himself with his face away from the
direction from which cars were to be expected, and continues his
work without ever turning to look. Abundance of time elapsed
between the moment the cars entered upon the track upon which he
was working and the moment they struck him. There could have been
no thought or expectation on the part of the engineer or of any
other employee that he, thus at work in a place of danger, would
pay no attention to his own safety. Under such circumstances, what
negligence can be attributed to the parties in control of the train
or the management of the yard? They could not have moved the cars
at any slower rate of speed. They were not bound to assume that any
employee familiar with the manner of doing business would be wholly
indifferent to the going and coming of the cars. There were no
strangers whose presence was to be guarded against. The ringing of
bells and the sounding of whistles on trains going and coming, and
switch engines moving forward and backward would have simply tended
to confusion. The person in direct charge had a right to act on the
belief that the various employees in the yard, familiar with the
continuously recurring movement of the cars, would take reasonable
precaution against their approach. The engine was moving slowly, so
slowly that any ordinary attention on the part of the plaintiff to
that which he knew was a part of the constant business of the yard
would have made him aware of the approach of the cars and enabled
him to step one side as they moved along the track. It cannot be
that, under these circumstances, the defendants were compelled to
send some man in front of the cars for the mere sake of giving
notice to employees who had all the time knowledge of what was to
be expected. We see in the facts as disclosed no negligence on the
part of the defendants, and if by any means negligence could be
imputed to them, surely
Page 145 U. S. 421
the plaintiff by his negligent inattention contributed directly
to the injury.
The judgment was right, and it is
Affirmed.