Under § 4 of the Employers' Liability Act, assumption of
risk as a defense is abolished only where the negligence of the
carrier is in violation of some statute enacted for the safety of
employees; in other cases, therefore, it is retained.
An experienced employee, admittedly knowing the material
conditions and presence of a pile of cinders, who attempts to board
a moving engine with a vessel of water in his hand must be
considered as appreciating the danger and assuming the risk
although at the time he may have forgotten the existence of the
cinders, and this is so even if the employer was negligent in
allowing the cinders to remain. There being no violation of any
safety statute, the common law defense of assumption of risk is not
eliminated in such a case by the Employers' Liability Act.
116 Va. 189 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction and application of the
contributory negligence provisions of the Employers' Liability Act,
are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, as amended.
April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65; April 5, 1910. c. 143, 36
Stat. 291.
Plaintiff in error, who was also plaintiff in the trial court,
and we shall so designate him, was in the service of
Page 241 U. S. 230
the railway company, in interstate commerce, as a fireman. He
received injuries while attempting to get on a moving locomotive.
He charged negligence against the company and sued for the sum of
$20,000 damages. The negligence charged was the causing and
permitting to be within dangerous proximity to the tracks of the
company a pile of loose cinders over which plaintiff stumbled and
slipped, and was drawn under the locomotive.
The railway company, among other defenses, pleaded the
following:
"That the said plaintiff was guilty of gross contributory
negligence in attempting to board the engine with a water cooler
filled with water in his arms, and was also guilty of gross
contributory negligence in attempting to board the engine from a
pile of cinders along the track, and was also guilty of gross
contributory negligence in running along the track, and in
attempting to board the engine without looking and seeing the pile
of cinders, which could have been observed with any caution and
care on his part; that the said pile of cinders had been allowed to
accumulate in the same manner and in the same place as they were at
the time of the accident for many years prior to the accident, and
that these facts were well known to the plaintiff, and that he
assumed the risk of danger from said pile of cinders, if there was
any danger in allowing them to remain there."
There were two trials of the action. The first trial resulted in
a verdict for plaintiff for $12,000, upon which judgment was
entered. The judgment was reversed by the Supreme Court of Appeals
for error in the instructions.
Upon the second trial, the verdict was for defendant. The court
refused to set it aside and grant a new trial, but ordered judgment
in accordance therewith. The Supreme Court of Appeals refused a
writ of error and supersedeas, the effect of which was to affirm
the judgment of the trial court.
Page 241 U. S. 231
The facts are practically undisputed. Plaintiff was engaged with
a crew in shifting cars in the railway company's yard at
Lawrenceville, Virginia. He descended from the engine at the depot
to get drinking water for himself and the engineer. He returned
with a can of water to mount the engine, and then as to what took
place he testified as follows:
"I came down the railroad road . . . and came across the track
on the crossing. At the time, the train was pulling out of the last
track. So I waited until the train was pulling up there, and aimed
to catch it, and when I aimed to catch it, I made three or four
steps to get on it, you know, and I got to the cinder pile before I
knew it, and I tripped, and went under the engine. . . . The cinder
pile tripped me."
The train was moving "just about as fast as anybody could walk;
that is, pretty pert walking; not over three or four miles an hour,
at the most." He further testified that it had been customary ever
since he had been on the road "for the trainmen to get on and off
the engine when it was going that way;" had seen it done hundreds
of times a day and had never seen any rule forbidding it. He was
about seven feet from the cinder pile when he "aimed to" catch the
engine, and the cinder pile was about eighteen to twenty-four
inches deep, and he indicated its length to be about as long as the
court room and as wide as the distance from himself to a person he
indicated. Describing how the cinders caused him to fall, he said
they were piled "right up against the rail" and
"sloped from the rail up. As I caught the engine, I made several
steps, and as I hit the cinder pile they commenced miring just like
mud, and it caused me to fall, and when I fell in the cinder pile
the journal box kept hitting and I couldn't get up. I tried, but I
couldn't. . . . Every time I made an effort, the cinder pile gave
way with me. . . . I fell down behind the cinder pile. The cinder
pile was sloping, and I fell down by the journal box, and the
train
Page 241 U. S. 232
was passing, and I rolled down next to the rail."
He further testified that, if he had fallen from some other
cause, he could have got out of danger, and that, when he started
to get on the engine, he was not conscious of any danger from
coming in contact with the pile of cinders; that it was not in his
mind at all. But he testified:
"I had knowledge of it, of the cinders being there, but I did
not know that it was dangerous. I had forgotten them being there at
the time. I was watching when I was going to step on the engine --
watching my feet, where I was going to step, and was not noticing
the cinder pile. . . . It was not in my mind."
It is not disputed that it was customary, and had been for
eleven or twelve years, for the ashpans of the engine to be cleaned
upon the tracks, and the ashes then drawn out from the tracks, and,
when a lot had accumulated, taken away. The piles were of irregular
height.
Plaintiff contends that, upon this evidence, he was entitled to
recover under proper instructions, and that the trial court
followed the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeals in giving an
instruction at the second trial which it had refused to give at the
first trial. The instruction is as follow:
"The court instructs the jury that, if they believe from the
evidence that the existence of the cinder pile was known to the
plaintiff, or that he had been working for the Southern Railway at
Lawrenceville for more than a year, and that the cinders had been
piled at the same place in the way described by the witnesses for
many years prior to the accident, and that the plaintiff had failed
to show that he had made complaint or objection on account of the
cinder pile, then he assumed the risk of danger from the cinder
pile, if there was any danger in it, and the act of Congress
approved April 22, 1908, permits this defense, and the jury should
find their verdict for the defendant. "
Page 241 U. S. 233
This instruction, it is contended, became "the law of the case"
by the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeals, and precluded the
instructions which plaintiff asked, and which otherwise would have
been correct, it is insisted, and should have been given.
The instructions refused presented these propositions: (1) the
unsafe character or condition of the railway was of itself no
defense to the injury caused thereby; (2) knowledge of it by
plaintiff might constitute contributory negligence and diminish the
amount of recovery; (3) if the company suffered or permitted the
cinders to be placed and to accumulate alongside of its main line
in dangerous proximity to the railroad track or road, and
plaintiff's injury resulted in whole or in part from such
negligence, or if the cinders constituted a defect or insufficiency
in the railroad track, the verdict should be for plaintiff; (4)
knowledge of the existence of the cinders would not bar recovery,
but it might be considered with other evidence in determining
whether plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and, if
guilty, recovery would not be barred, but the amount of recovery
would be diminished in proportion to such negligence; (5) to charge
plaintiff with contributory negligence, he must not only have known
of the cinders, but also the danger occasioned by them, or that the
danger was so obvious that a man of ordinary prudence would have
appreciated it and not have attempted to get upon the engine at the
time and under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence.
The rulings of the trial court and Supreme Court of Appeals upon
the instruction given and those refused make the question here and
represent the opposing contentions of the parties. The railway
company contends that plaintiff's knowledge of the cinder pile and
his conduct constituted assumption of risk and a complete defense
to the action. The plaintiff, on the other hand, insists that such
knowledge and conduct amounted, at the utmost,
Page 241 U. S. 234
to no more than contributory negligence, and should not have
barred recovery, though it might have reduced the amount of
recovery. Indeed, plaintiff goes farther and contends that,
whatever might have been the evidence respecting his knowledge or
lack of knowledge of the danger, he did not assume the risk if the
company was negligent; and, further, that employees' continuance in
service with knowledge of a dangerous condition and without
complaint does not bar recovery under the act of Congress. He
concedes, however, that he encounters in opposition to his
contentions the ruling in
Seaboard Air Line v. Horton,
233 U. S. 492, and
therefore asks a review of that case, asserting that "the
considerations upon which the true construction of the act depends
were not suggested to the court."
The argument to sustain the assertion and to present what he
deems to be the true construction of the act is elaborate and
involved. It would extend this opinion too much to answer it in
detail. He does not express his contention in any pointed
proposition. He makes it through a comparison of the sections of
the act, and insists that to retain the common law doctrine of the
assumption of risk is to put the fourth section in conflict with
the other sections. The basis of the contention is that the act was
intended to be punitive of negligence, and does not cast on the
employees of carriers the assumption of risk of any condition or
situation caused by such negligence. This is manifest, it is
insisted, from the provisions of the third section of the act,
which provides that the contributory negligence of the employee
"shall not bar a recovery," and of the fifth section, which
precludes the carrier from exempting itself from liability. This
purpose is executed, and can only be executed, it is urged, by
construing the words of § 4 (which we shall presently quote)
to apply to "the ordinary risks inherent in the business -- the
unavoidable risks which are intrinsic notwithstanding
Page 241 U. S. 235
the performance by the carrier of its personal duties. They do
not include the "secondary and ulterior" risks arising from
abnormal dangers due to the employer's negligence." And,
further:
"The object of this section was not to adopt by
implication the common law defense of assumption of risk
of such abnormal dangers. Its object was in
express terms
to exclude the defense which, before the passage of the act, was
available to the carrier in determining what are the 'risks of his
employment' assumed by the employee."
These, then, are the considerations which plaintiff says were
not submitted to the court in the
Horton case, and which
he urges to support his contention that assumption of risk has been
abolished absolutely.
We are unable to concur. The contention attributes to Congress
the utmost confusion of thought and language, and makes it express
one meaning when it intended another.
The language of § 4 demonstrates its meaning. It provides
that in any action brought by an employee, he
"shall not be held to have assumed the risks of his employment
in any case where the violation by such common carrier of any
statute enacted for the safety of employees contributed to the
injury or death of such employee."
It is clear therefore that the assumption of risk as a defense
is abolished only where the negligence of the carrier is in
violation of some statute enacted for the safety of employees. In
other cases, therefore, it is retained. And such is the ruling in
the
Horton case, made upon due consideration and analysis
of the statute and those to which it referred. It was said:
"It seems to us that § 4, in eliminating the defense of
assumption of risk in the cases indicated, quite plainly evidences
the legislative intent that in all other cases such assumption
shall have its former effect as a complete bar to the action."
And there was a comparison made of § 4 with the other
Page 241 U. S. 236
sections, and the relation and meaning of each determined, and
the preservation by the statute of the distinction between
assumption of risk and contributory negligence, which was
pronounced "simple" although "sometimes overlooked." Cases were
cited in which the distinction was recognized and applied (p.
233 U. S.
504).
It is, however, contended that the conditions of the application
of assumption of risk were not established, and that
"to charge a servant with assumption of risk, the evidence (1)
must show that he was 'chargeable with knowledge of the material
conditions which were the immediate cause of his injury,' and (2)
must establish his 'appreciation of the dangers produced by the
abnormal conditions.'"
The testimony of plaintiff is adduced to show that these
conditions did not exist in his case.
He admitted a knowledge of the "material conditions," and it
would be going very far to say that a fireman of an engine who knew
of the custom of depositing cinders between the tracks, knew of
their existence, and who attempted to mount an engine with a vessel
of water in his hands holding "not over a gallon" could be
considered as not having appreciated the danger and assumed the
risk of the situation because he had forgotten their existence at
the time and did not notice them. We think his situation brought
him within the rule of the cases.
Gila Valley Ry. v. Hall,
232 U. S. 94,
232 U. S.
102.
It is objected, however, that instruction A, "viewed wholly with
reference to common law principles," is erroneous in that it
omitted to state as an element the appreciation by plaintiff of the
danger of the situation as necessary to his assumption of risk. But
that objection was not made at the trial. The objection made was
general, that the instruction did "not correctly state the common
law doctrine of assumption of risk." It was therefore very
indeterminate, and we cannot say that the court considered that it
was directed to the omission
Page 241 U. S. 237
to express or to bring into prominence the appreciation by
plaintiff of the danger he incurred.
The instruction was refused by the trial court upon objection by
plaintiff. It was considered by the Supreme Court of Appeals, and
plaintiff contended against it there only upon the ground that the
assumption of risk was not available as a defense under the act of
Congress. He made the contention there that he does here, and which
we have already considered, that the act of Congress precludes the
defense of assumption of risk of any condition or situation caused
by the negligence of a carrier. And this was the full extent of
plaintiff's contention. Had he made the specific one now made, the
Supreme Court of Appeals would have dealt with it, for the opinion
of the court shows a clear recognition of the elements necessary to
the doctrine of assumption of risk, and the trial court as well
must have understood them, and we cannot suppose that the court
discerned in plaintiff's general objection the specification which
he now contends was necessary, and which it was error to
refuse.
Judgment affirmed.