1. When, because of washouts, the presence of employees on the
tracks may be anticipated, the railroad company should exercise
reasonable care to have trains under control and to sound warnings
and to keep lookout at places such as blind curves where the view
is obstructed, and, in such situations, the rule that the employee
on the track assumes the risk does not apply.
Chesapeake &
Ohio Ry. Co. v. Nixon, 271 U. S. 218,
distinguished. P.
288 U. S.
277.
2. A track inspector, riding a railway tricycle, set out on an
inspection trip, as required by his duty, and was run down on a
blind curve by a delayed train, which he must have known was
somewhere on the line before him. In an action under the Federal
Employers' Liability Act,
held that his failure to obey a
rule requiring him, before leaving to ascertain from the railway
office the whereabouts of trains was not to be taken as the primary
and efficient cause of the accident, precluding recovery, but was
to be considered by the jury with the other evidence in determining
the question of his negligence.
Davis v. Kennedy,
266 U. S. 147;
Unadilla Valley Ry. Co. v. Caldine, 278 U.
S. 139, distinguished. P.
288 U. S.
279.
3. The Employers' Liability Act imposes liability on the carrier
if the injury or death results "in whole or in part" from its
negligence. In this case, the questions of negligence and
contributory negligence were for the jury. P.
288 U. S.
278.
259 N.Y. 51, 181 N.E. 11, reversed.
Certiorari,
287 U. S. 58, to
review the reversal of a judgment, 231 App.Div, 323, recovered by
the executrix
Page 288 U. S. 276
of a deceased railway employee in an action under the Federal
Employers' Liability Act for death by negligence. The judgment
under review was entered in the trial court pursuant to a
remittitur.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner's husband, while riding a track inspection
tricycle, was killed in a head-on collision with an electrically
operated passenger train on a single track branch of the
respondent's railroad connecting Ithaca and Auburn, New York. The
line, which skirted the eastern shore of Cayuga Lake, was subject
to washouts in stormy weather. Primarily to protect four daily
passenger trains, the decedent, Rocco, an experienced employee, was
assigned to inspect a section extending from Ithaca to a point
about 7 1/2 miles north of that city. His schedule required him to
leave Ithaca 6:30 a.m., preceding the morning north-bound train,
and to return in advance of the south-bound train, which arrived at
Ithaca at noon; to go out again at 3:30 p.m., about an hour and a
half before the afternoon train left Ithaca, and to return ahead of
the train from Auburn, which was due at Ithaca at 8:30 p.m.
On December 8, 1927, there was a high west wind blowing across
Lake Cayuga, which had driven the waters over the track at various
points and been the clause of washouts and delays. The south-bound
train due at Ithaca at 12:23 p.m. was over three hours late. At
3:30 in the afternoon, Rocco left to cover his inspection beat, and
was struck by the train about a mile from Ithaca, on a blind
Page 288 U. S. 277
curve, where he could not see the approaching train, nor the
motorman see him.
A rule with which Rocco was familiar forbade trackwalkers to
occupy the main track without first ascertaining from the operator
the whereabouts of approaching trains in both directions. Rocco's
practice had been to comply with this rule. On one or more
occasions when he failed to do so, he had been reprimanded for the
omission. He must have known on the day of the accident that heavy
washouts had occurred and that the train which should have arrived
at 12:23 was somewhere on the line. It reached Ludlowville, eight
miles north of Ithaca, the last reporting station prior to reaching
Ithaca at 3:14 p.m. This fact Rocco could have ascertained if, in
compliance with the rule, he had inquired of the operator.
Suit was brought in the Supreme Court of New York, under the
Federal Employers' Liability Act, by Rocco's executrix, who averred
that his death resulted from negligent failure to operate the train
at proper speed, omission to warn him of its approach by whistle or
bell, and breach of the duty to provide him with a safe place to
work. The defenses were that decedent assumed the risk and that his
negligence barred a recovery. Upon the trial, a verdict of $12,096
was rendered, which the jury reduced 40 percent on account of
Rocco's contributory negligence. 135 Misc. 639, 239 N.Y.S. 157. The
Appellate Division affirmed judgment for the petitioner. 231
App.Div. 323, 248 N.Y.S. 15. The Court of Appeals ordered that the
complaint be dismissed. 259 N.Y. 51, 181 N.E. 11. The case is here
on certiorari from the judgment of dismissal entered by the trial
court pursuant to mandate.
The questions presented are whether, under the circumstances,
the respondent owed the decedent any duty to warn him of the
approach of the train, or to keep a lookout for him, and whether
Rocco's disobedience of the rule
Page 288 U. S. 278
was in such sense the primary cause of his death as to render
immaterial any neglect on the part of the motorman. The Court of
Appeals decided both questions against the petitioner.
Respondent relies on the duty of a person employed on the tracks
of a railroad to exercise vigilance for his own safety, and to keep
out of the way of moving trains, and asserts that the chance of a
collision was a risk assumed by an employee assigned to work on the
roadbed.
Aerkfetz v. Humphreys, 145 U.
S. 418;
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Nixon,
271 U. S. 218.
Those cases applied the principle to accidents on a stretch of
track where the workman's view was unobscured. Here, according to
the proof, the curve on which the collision occurred, and
obstructions at the side of the roadway, prevented any but a very
short view of the track ahead. We think these facts required that
the jury should determine whether the motorman exercised reasonable
care to have his train under control, to sound a warning before
entering the curve, and to be on the lookout for workmen whose
presence might be expected on the day in question, when the waters
of the lake were washing over the tracks at this point and
inspection and repair might be required. Under the authorities
cited, the decedent assumed the risks ordinarily incident to his
employment as a track inspector, but, in the circumstances shown,
we do not think they included a failure on the part of the motorman
to keep a lookout and to give warning in places where the view of
one who might be expected to be on the track or approaching in the
opposite direction was shut off, and the probability of accident
was therefore much greater than where the track is straight and the
view unobstructed. The issues of negligence of the motorman and
contributory negligence of the decedent were for the jury.
The Court of Appeals held, as matter of law, that Rocco's
negligence was the primary cause of the accident, and therefore the
petitioner could not maintain the action.
Page 288 U. S. 279
This ruling was made in reliance upon the authorities of which
Davis v. Kennedy, 266 U. S. 147;
Unadilla Valley Ry. Co. v. Caldine, 278 U.
S. 139, and
Southern Ry. Co. v. Youngblood,
286 U. S. 313, are
typical. These were cases where a member of a train crew was killed
as a result of disregarding orders to wait at a given point until a
train moving in the opposite direction had passed. In each of them,
the decedent's negligence was the proximate and efficient cause of
the accident; in each, it was sought to show that the facility was
in part due to alleged negligence of some other employee in
omitting to give the decedent an order which would have reminded
him of the orders previously given and by which he was bound. In
none was there any negligence on the part of employees operating
the train moving in the opposite direction with which the collision
took place.
These decisions are not controlling in the present case. There
is no suggestion that the rule upon which the respondent relies
forbade Rocco to start on his inspection trip if he ascertained
that the approaching train was within seven or eight miles of
Ithaca. It was his duty to make his afternoon trip. The rule
required no more than that, before leaving, he should acquaint
himself with the whereabouts of trains on the branch and guide
himself accordingly. If he had made inquiry, whether he should
await the arrival of the train or attempt to meet it at some point
a short distance from that city was a matter for his decision. If
the rule had forbidden him to leave under circumstances such as
inquiry by him would have disclosed, this case would be parallel
with those cited. His disregard of the rule was nonetheless an
element in the case. Whether he was guilty of negligence was to be
determined in the light of all facts he knew, or ought in the
exercise of reasonable care to have known. How he would have
conducted himself, and what precautions he would have taken had he
ascertained the exact whereabouts of the train, is a matter of
speculation. The jury
Page 288 U. S. 280
adjudged him guilty of contributory negligence, and moulded its
verdict accordingly. But it was open to the jury, as above shown,
to find that the motorman of the train was also guilty of
negligence which contributed to the collision. Rocco's infraction
of the rule was a concurrent cause, but may not in any proper sense
be held the primary cause of the accident. His negligence did not
preclude a finding by the jury that his death was in part due to
the negligence of the respondent's servants. The Act imposes
liability upon the carrier for injury or death resulting "in whole
or in part" from the negligence of any of its officers, agents or
employees (U.S.C. Tit. 45, § 51).
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER are of opinion
that the judgment should be affirmed.