The danger to a brakeman at work in switching at one end of a
"manifest" train, arising from switching operations conducted by
another crew at the other end is not among the ordinary risks of a
brakeman's employment; and, in the absence of notice or knowledge,
such brakeman cannot be held to have assumed it.
To subject an employee without warning to unusual danger, not
normally incident to the employment, is itself an act of
negligence.
While an employee assumes risks and dangers ordinarily incident
to the employment, so far as they are not attributable to the
negligence of the employer or those for whom the latter is
responsible, the employee has a right to assume that the employer
has exercised proper care to provide a safe place and method of,
work.
An employee is not to be regarded as having assumed a risk
attributable to the employer's negligence until he becomes aware of
it, unless it is so plainly observable that he must be presumed to
have knowledge of it.
An employee is not obliged to exercise care to discover dangers
resulting from the employer's negligence and which are not
ordinarily incident to the employment.
Even if an employee knows and assumes the risk of an inherently
dangerous method of work, he does not assume the increased risk
attributable not to such method, but to negligence in pursuing
it.
In the absence of knowledge of a custom of the employer in
making up trains, a brakeman is not bound by such a custom unless
it is one that a reasonably careful employer would adopt.
A request to charge that the jury find for defendant if the
usual method of doing work was pursued irrespective of the question
of negligence of other employees was, in this case, properly
modified by the court to the effect that the method adopted must be
one that reasonably prudent men would adopt and that the injured
employee only assumed the risks reasonably and usually incident to
such method.
218 F. 23 affirmed.
Page 241 U. S. 463
The facts, which involve the validity of a judgment for damages
for personal injuries in an action under the Employers' Liability
Act, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action brought in the United States district court
under the Federal Employers' Liability Act of April 22, 1908 (c.
149, 35 Stat. 65).
Plaintiff was a brakeman in defendant's employ, and, during the
night of July 2, 1912, was called for duty at Gladstone, Virginia,
to take his place as head brakeman on a fast interstate freight
train, known as a "manifest train," comprising about forty cars,
which had just come into the division terminal yard at Gladstone
and was about to be taken forward. He got upon the road engine and
this was attached to the train, plaintiff making the coupling. Just
after this, he met the yard master, who had charge of all the work
done in the yard, whose orders plaintiff was bound to obey, and who
told plaintiff, according to his testimony, to
"cut out three cars at the head end of the train [numbers 2, 3,
and 4] and switch them off on a side track and come back and couple
up, and they would be ready to go."
Plaintiff proceeded with the road engine and crew to take out
the three cars, returned to the main track with the engine and car
number one, coupled the latter to the forward end of the train, and
was in the act of coupling up the air hose, an operation that
required him to step between the rails. While
Page 241 U. S. 464
he was in this position, a collision took place, caused by the
acts of the yard crew, who (unknown to plaintiff), under orders of
the yard master and with the aid of the yard engine, were engaged
in switching cars at the rear end of the train, and who,
negligently, as the jury doubtless found, drove a cut of
twenty-nine cars into the standing cars (about eight in number)
with undue violence. According to the testimony of the road
engineer and fireman, the jar of the impact was such that, although
their engine was standing, with its independent brakes set, it was
thrown forward 20 feet along the track. Naturally plaintiff was
knocked down and run over, and he sustained serious personal
injuries, including the loss of an arm.
In view of the character of the question that is to be passed
upon, a somewhat particular recital of the evidence is necessary.
There was testimony that, when a manifest train came into a
terminal yard such as Gladstone, destined to points further along
the line, the engine and caboose were changed and sometimes cars
were taken out and others brought into the train, and that, in
order to save time, it was customary to have such shifting
operations, when necessary, done at both ends of the train, the
road engine and road crew operating at the front, the yard engine
and yard crew at the rear. Whether plaintiff knew of this custom
was, under the evidence, open to dispute. He at one time denied
that he knew it was customary for both ends of a manifest train to
be "worked" at the same time, and while this was afterwards
qualified, it appears not to have been withdrawn. He admitted that
it was customary to follow the instructions of the yard master, but
denied that, on this occasion, the yard master told him anything to
the effect that the rear end of the train was to be worked. He
testified that he had no notice that anything was to be done at
that end of the train beyond attaching the caboose, and that,
Page 241 U. S. 465
after putting the second, third, and fourth cars upon the side
track and coming back to the train, he looked up the track, which
was straight, saw no lamp or other signal, and then proceeded with
his coupling operations, with the result already mentioned. Whether
it was usual, in conducting such switching operations, to have a
man at the forward end of the moving cut of cars was in dispute.
Plaintiff testified that
"it is the custom to have a man on the front end of a cut of
cars that is being switched into other cars, who looks out for that
and runs and stops the engine just before they get there, in making
the coupling."
Two of defendant's witnesses contradicted this, one in terms
denying the custom of giving a warning as stated by plaintiff, the
other declaring that
"all the warning he knew of being given, or the practice, was
for the men in and about the train to take care of themselves and
see for his own danger when he attempts to do any work, and the
witness knew of no signals given,"
while another and experienced witness, called by defendant,
being asked if it was customary when running in a cut of cars to
have a man on the front end with a light, replied:
"Well, on the yard, in switching cars, they come right down to
the book rule. It says where cars are being shoved, a man must be
placed on the head car."
Whether there was a man at the forward end of the cut of cars
that produced the collision in question was in controversy. As to
plaintiff's opportunity to gain knowledge of the alleged custom, it
did not distinctly appear that he had previously worked on a
manifest train. He testified that he had been employed as brakeman
something more than five years, part of the time as an extra man
and part of the time as a regular man; that he was an extra man
when hurt; had been a regular brakeman until about three weeks
before the accident, when he was "pulled off the local
freight."
Plaintiff recovered a verdict for substantial damages,
Page 241 U. S. 466
and the judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals.
218 F. 23.
There are numerous assignments of error, but most of them are
manifestly unfounded. The only ones requiring notice are based upon
the refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury in accordance
with defendant's Request B, and the modified instruction that was
given in its stead. The requested instruction was, in substance,
that if the jury believed from the evidence that the method adopted
by defendant in making up the train on the occasion in question was
the usual and ordinary method of doing this work, then plaintiff
assumed all the risks incident to that method, and they should not
find a verdict in his favor because of any injury received on
account of said method of doing the work, even though it was the
direct and proximate cause of his injury. The instruction given
was, in substance, that defendant had the right to adopt reasonable
rules and regulations for the conduct and method of handling its
trains in its yards, and of making up trains for their departure
therefrom, and that, if the jury believed from the evidence that
the custom prevailed in the Gladstone yard of making up the train
from both ends at the same time -- that is to say, by working the
train engine and crew at the forward end and the yard engine and
its crew at the rear end -- and that such method was one that
reasonably prudent and careful men would have adopted in the
conduct of the business, then the plaintiff assumed the risks
reasonably and usually incident to and arising from such method of
making up trains, and they should not find a verdict in his favor
because of any injury received solely on account of said method of
making up the train, although they believed from the evidence that
the method adopted was the proximate cause of the injury.
The argument for plaintiff in error is that an employee assumes
the risks arising from the employer's method of
Page 241 U. S. 467
doing the work, where the dangers are open, obvious, or known to
the employee, even though they be due to the employer's negligence
in establishing the method or system; that the customary method of
shifting and coupling cars at both ends of a manifest train at the
same time, without notice or warning to those working at the other
end, was open, obvious, and known to plaintiff, and that he
therefore assumed the risk of any injury from that source.
It appears to have been conceded by plaintiff in the circuit
court of appeals that the attaching and detaching of cars by
working on both ends of the train at the same time was customary at
the Gladstone yard, but it does not appear to have been conceded in
that court or in the trial court that plaintiff knew of this
custom, or had had such opportunity for knowledge as to be charged
with notice of it. Nor was it conceded that the custom included the
pushing in of a cut of cars without a man at their head to give
warning to other workmen and to signal the engineer to slacken
speed. As already shown, the evidence left these matters open to
dispute.
There are several reasons why error cannot be attributed to the
trial court for refusing the requested instruction B.
(a) The evidence left it in doubt what method was adopted in
making up the train in question and what was the usual and ordinary
method, and the request therefore failed to define what state of
facts should charge plaintiff with an assumption of the risk.
(b) The request ignored the question whether plaintiff had
knowledge or was chargeable with notice of the customary method.
The argument in effect concedes what is plainly inferable from the
evidence -- that the danger to a brakeman at work in switching at
one end of a manifest train, arising from switching operations
conducted by another crew at the other end, is not among the
ordinary
Page 241 U. S. 468
risks of a brakeman's employment. But if it was an unusual and
extraordinary danger, plaintiff could not be held to have assumed
it in the absence of knowledge or notice on his part. To subject an
employee, without warning, to unusual dangers not normally incident
to the employment is itself an act of negligence. And, as has been
laid down in repeated decisions of this Court, while an employee
assumes the risks and dangers ordinarily incident to the employment
in which he voluntarily engages, so far as these are not
attributable to the negligence of the employer or of those for
whose conduct the employer is responsible, the employee has a right
to assume that the employer has exercised proper care with respect
to providing a reasonably safe place of work (and this includes
care in establishing a reasonably safe system or method of work),
and is not to be treated as assuming a risk that is attributable to
the employer's negligence until he becomes aware of it, or it is so
plainly observable that he must be presumed to have known of it.
The employee is not obliged to exercise care to discover dangers
not ordinarily incident to the employment, but which result from
the employer's negligence.
Tex. & Pac. Ry. v.
Archibald, 170 U. S. 665,
170 U. S.
671-672;
Choctaw, Oklahoma &c. R. Co. v.
McDade, 191 U. S. 64,
191 U. S. 68;
Tex. & Pac. Ry. v. Harvey, 228 U.
S. 319,
228 U. S. 321;
Gila Valley Ry. v. Hall, 232 U. S. 94,
232 U. S. 101;
Seaboard Air Line v. Horton, 233 U.
S. 492,
233 U. S.
504.
(c) The request required defendant to be acquitted if the usual
method of doing the work was pursued, irrespective of the question
of the negligence of the yard crew in carrying it out. Negligence
in the doing of the work was the gravamen of plaintiff's complaint,
in his declaration as in his evidence, and defendant was not
entitled to an instruction making the pursuit of a customary system
decisive of the issue, without regard to whether due care was
exercised in doing the work itself. Even if plaintiff knew and
assumed the risks of an inherently
Page 241 U. S. 469
dangerous method of doing the work, he did not assume the
increased risk attributable not to the method, but to negligence in
pursuing it. Had the instruction been given in form as requested,
the jury, in view of the issue and the evidence, might easily have
interpreted it as meaning that, if defendant's employees usually
and customarily made up trains in such a manner that, by a violent
collision produced by negligent switching operations at the rear
end of a long train a brakeman engaged in the performance of his
duties at the forward end, and having no notice or warning of the
rear-end switching, was in danger of serious personal injury, there
was no liability. This, of course, is not the law.
Nor is the modification of the requested instruction a matter of
which defendant may complain. The court evidently understood the
request as meaning no more than what it said, and as not intended
to embrace the hypothesis that plaintiff knew or had notice that
the usual method of making up trains was that adopted on the
occasion in question. In the absence of such knowledge or notice,
the custom could not be made binding upon plaintiff, certainly not
without a finding that it was one that a reasonably careful
employer would have adopted. It was this finding that the
modification called for.
Judgment affirmed.