Carrigan v. Union Pacific Railroad
Carrigan v. Union Pacific Railroad
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff and the defendant were engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the happening of the matters complained of. Plaintiff brings this action to recover damages alleged to have been sustained through the negligence of the defendant, while so engaged.
Plaintiff had been engaged as storer for about a year at the same place, and had assigned to him approximately the same number of cars each morning. Every morning, the cars stood approximately at the same place. This morning he had 4 cars to load'. The cars, we presume, were ordinary freight cars. The distance between the platform and the door of the car into which the goods were loaded .was about 16 inches, and the sill of the car, the car in question, was approximately 8 or 10 inches higher than the platform. The space between the car and the platform had to be bridged over by iron aprons or running boards. These were furnished by defendant and distributed along the platform for use by the storers. Some were made of iron and some of wood. The one used by the plaintiff on this morning was an iron running board. These boards differed in size, from 3 feet by 3 feet to 2 % by 2- and 3 by 4. These running boards, or aprons, are placed over this space connecting the platform with the doorsill of the car by the storer; after the car has been spotted for 'loading. It was the duty of the storer to get these boards and place them in the car. This particular apron selected by the plaintiff and used that day was about 4 feet long and 3 feet wide. Bolts were furnished to hold the apron after it had been" placed in position for use, and to keep it from slipping-back from the door. These bolts were dropped into holes
Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that he had been at work as trucker for 7 or 8 years; had worked as storer for about a year. This particular morning, he was assigned several cars to load. He commenced working about half past seven in the morning. The cars assigned him stood practically where cars had previously stood during the time of his service. Or, in other words, the cars this morning stood practically in the same place with reference to the platform. When cars were loaded, they were removed from this sidetrack. Each morning, new cars were placed in the same position that the other cars had occupied. The foreman directed him what cars to load. This morning, the first thing he did ivas to open the car doors, select his aprons for use, and put them in the doorways of the cars assigned to him. He did that this morning, and did that every morning. Did this without any direction from anyone. He dropped the bolts in to keep the apron from slipping back, two bolts in holes at the edge of the apron next to the platform. These were all the bolts dropped in by him in this particular apron. He testifies:
“The bolts so placed by me were put there to keep the boards from slipping, and to get a toe hold with heavy loads.”
He had been engaged in loading these cars from about 7:30 in the morning until about 5:00 in the evening. He
He testifies that there are two kinds of aprons, wooden boards and steel boards; that wooden boards are larger and more clumsy to handle, and it is hard to put a truck over them into the car; that it is his duty, as storer, to select the apron he desires to use and the bolts to keep it from slipping; that this morning, he chose this particular apron; didn’t put apy bolts in except the bolts used to keep the apron from slipping; that the car in question was next. to the last car that he was required to load; that he had taken several loads into this car before he was injured; that, at the time he was injured, he was halfway up the board, when his foot slipped; that he reached back and felt for and found the bolt, and the board rocked; that the bolt turned around, his foot slipped out, and he turned his ankle.
He further testified that the storers remove the aprons from the cars after they have finished loading, and leave them on the platform, usually in front of the car in which they were used; that, when occasion arose for using one of the boards, he went to the car assigned him, and took
“I just picked them up and dropped my board down; picked them up quick, stuck them in there, and then went on to load the car.”
He was asked this question:
“You know a car sill has a flat strip of iron across it. A. Some of them do and some of them don’t. The apron was not resting upon that flat strip of iron, but was resting on just the irregular edge of it. It was an old car, and one end of the strap was loose that went across the car door. This irregular edge was next to the edge of the apron.”
It appears that there were six storers, each assigned approximately the same number of cars to load. Each of these storers used aprons and bolts gathered from the platform. The aprons and bolts were placed along the platform for the use of the storers. Each man selected and used aprons as he chose to use; selected the bolts, whether they used them for preventing the aprons from slipping, or whether they used them for toe holds. The evidence discloses that there were more of these running boards than were ever at one time in use, from which the storers might select; that the bolts are of different sizes, running from 4 to 10 inches in length, and from *4 to 1 inch in thickness. They are placed in position along the platform, and there
As to the apron, there is no claim that the apron in and of itself was the proximate cause of any injury to this plaintiff. The complaint is of the bolts and of the doorsill of the car. It will be noted that he testifies that the door-sill had an iron strip across it; that most of the cars had these iron strips across the doorsills; that, when he placed this apron, it did not rest upon that flat strip of iron, but rested on just the irregular edge of it. It is not claimed that it could not have been adjusted on this doorsill so as to avoid tipping or “wobbling.” He threw the apron down without noticing where it rested, and found, after his injury, that it was placed so as to rest on the irregular edge of this strip of "iron, thereby causing it to “wobble.” He does not claim that the doorsill was irregular all through. The nearest approach to this is where he says the car sill was worn down in places and uneven, but he does not say
Touching the bolts in question, it occurs readily to the mind that, if anyone could know the danger of using bolts with flat heads or with .smooth tops, it would be the one who had experience in the use of such bolts. Plaintiff had been engaged in this work for over a year. He had selected and used a great many of these bolts, though he says he never had used this particular one before. If bolts with flat heads were furnished for use generally and used by these storers, it takes no stretch of imagination to reach the conclusion that plaintiff had used flat or smooth bolts before. He says that, when he selected his bolts, he did it without observing the character of the bolt selected; that he did this on this morning. If they had been furnished and used generally, he must have known the danger that attended their use, if they were dangerous at all. Yet he selected these flat-headed bolts, placed them in the apron, knowing at the time that it was dangerous, and knowing at the same time that the company had furnished other bolts, the use of which rendered his work reasonably safe.
It is apparent from this record that the place in which plaintiff had been working for more than a year was a reasonably safe place in which to discharge the duties assigned to him. Reasonably safe and simple appliances were furnished him with which to discharge his duties. He was a man of large experience in that line of work. He knew that, if -he placed the apron so that it “wobbled,” it would render the work in pushing heavy loads over the apron difficult and dangerous. He knew that, if he placed these bolts, in there for toe holds, a flat-headed bolt would not serve that purpose. These are matters that a man without experience would know and appreciate; matters requiring no technical skill or knowledge to understand and appreciate. He knew that, if he wanted to use those bolts for toe holds, he must
The general rule is that it is the duty of the servant to use his senses in all that relates to his employment; to give attention and care to the selection of materials from the mass provided for general use; and to make provision, with reasonable diligence, for the safety of himself in his management of the work assigned him. Or, in other words, he is bound to bring his mind as well as his limbs into the service of his master, at least so far as it may be necessary to enable him to exercise a reasonable decree of care for his own safety.
These aprons and bolts were simply appliances or instrumentalities by means of which the plaintiff was to do his work. It was his duty to adjust them. It was his duty to place them in position for service and for his own use. The record discloses that reasonably safe instrumentalities were furnished for this purpose. From the mass, he must have selected that which would not serve the purpose he sought to accomplish by their use,
Two things must have been apparent to him at the time: (1) That a board laid on an uneven surface is liable to tip; (2) that a fiat surface will not serve as a toe hold-. By the slightest care, he could have adjusted this apron
“ £It is impossible that a master himself can control the-detail work.’ * * * This injury arose from negligence which was connected with the detail work. ‘Such negligence is not the negligence of the master, but is purely the negligence of the coservant, and of this there is no possible question.’ The evidence is overwhelming that proper- appliances were at hand and could have been used; and the failure to employ them is not negligence chargeable to the master. He did all the law reasonably required of him in providing and having at hand, to be used, proper appliances; and, as we have seen above, their non-use was negligence consequent upon the detail work in which the plaintiff was engaged, and was not the negligence of the master.”
See also Watts v. Beard, 45 N. Y. Supp. 873; Ross v. Weaker, (Pa.) 21 Atl. 157. This was an action to recover
“After the workmen have been employed * * * and the work is actually entered upon, each workman is bound by the nature and terms of service to exercise reasonable care, diligence and skill in the performance of the work he has undertaken. * * ^ They must exercise their own senses in the selection of material out of the mass provided for them; they must use their own judgments as to the manner of handling it, as to the sufficiency and stability of the scaffolding they erect for themselves, and the amount of burden to be put upon such structures. No employer could have the burden bf legal responsibility for every blunder or neglect on the part of each and all of his employees. * * * The master * * * is neither bound to provide the best tools and machinery nor the highest rate of skill in his foreman, but he is bound to provide that which is reasonably and sufficiently safe in both cases, and having done so, he has discharged his duty. What remains 'to be done is that each workman * * shall, with reasonable diligence and intelligence, discharge his duty towards his employer and his fellows [and himself].”
It is further said:
“[The servants] were to judge of the suitability of the pieces of timber they used for the uses in which they put them, and their error in judgment, or their careless discharge of this duty, was their fault or failure, and not that of their employer. ' He had discharged his duty when he furnished an abundance of materials from which they could select what was needed. The actual selection out of this stock, of the sticks needed from time to time, was not his duty, but that of the workmen themselves. If there was a visible defect in a stick; prudence and common care on their part would ,have rejected it, and supplied its place with another out of the stock at their command.”
In Ross v. Walker, 139 Pa. St. 42 (23 Am. St. 160, 21 Atl. 157), it is said that it is not the employer’s duty, after having provided materials ample in quality and quantity, to supervise the selection of every article used by his employees out of the mass for their purpose.
Judson v. Village of Olean, 116 N. Y. 655. In this case, the plaintiff was injured by the falling of a scaffold insufficiently nailed by a fellow servant. No liability.
Thompson v. Libbey, 19 N. Y. Supp. 680. A fellow servant used too few spikes in building a scaffold, where there were plenty of them, or used carpenter planks too short, when there were planks long enough. Held that the injury was not due to any failure of the master to discharge any legal duty which he owed to the servant, but rather, due to the negligence of the servant.
These are a few cases which exemplify the rule which ■we have attempted to apply in this case.
The judgment is reversed and remanded, with directions to sustain defendant’s motion to dismiss the case.— Reversed and Remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.