The action is brought by the personal representatives of a servant against his master to recover for the death of the intestate claimed to have been caused by the master's failure to provide a safe place to work. The deceased was a hostler at the defendant's roundhouse in Rochester, whose duty it was to take charge of a locomotive which had been brought in by the engineer at the end of his run, place it in the roundhouse and prepare it *Page 22 for use on the next run. The deceased had under him a fireman and assistant. The deceased had been standing inside the roundhouse from three to eight feet from the doorway conversing with the foreman, who instructed him to prepare for use two other engines then in the roundhouse. The fireman and assistant had taken the engine into the roundhouse, placed it on the turntable and were taking it out to a water tank seventy-five feet away to fill the engine tank with water, then to place it on a side track ready for the engineer to take it on a regular trip. As the engine was moving at a speed of from three to four miles an hour the deceased jumped on it, catching hold of the grab handles, but while he was standing on one of the steps, and before he had got into the engine cab, he was struck by the door jamb and killed.
The negligence charged against the defendant was the insufficiency of the space between the engine and the side of the doorway. The roundhouse had been built some forty years before, since which time the size of the engines had been increased. The engine which the deceased attempted to board was one of the larger kind in use by the defendant, overhanging the rails thirty inches, and leaving a clear space between it and the side of the doorway of eight inches. Between an engine of the smaller kind and the doorpost the clear space would have been sixteen inches. Evidence was given on behalf of the plaintiff that in another roundhouse of the defendant the clearance between a large engine and the door jamb was fourteen inches; that in one recently erected by the defendant the clearance was twenty inches, and that in various roundhouses of other railroads the clearance was twelve and one half to fifteen inches.
The respondent relies on the numerous cases in which it has been held negligence to locate structures of various kinds so near the tracks of a railroad as to injure the crews of moving trains. This rule has been held as to spouts of water tanks, mail cranes, signal posts and the *Page 23 like, and would apply to the case of a doorway so narrow as to endanger the safety of employees while on an engine. But it is not applicable to the present case. The crew of a train are often obliged, in the discharge of their duties, to place some parts of their bodies beyond the limits of the cars or engines. Brakemen on freight trains are obliged to go to the top of the cars, and on many cars to mount by ladders at the side of the cars instead of at the end. Engineers and firemen often are compelled to put their heads out of the cabs, looking for signals. Of course, it would be impossible for one of the crew on a rapidly-moving train to remember the location of the structures or to guard against contact with them. But entry into or exit from a closed building, through a doorway, is a very different matter. Every one going through a doorway must be conscious of its presence and govern his movements in accordance with its size and location. The question really is this: "Is the master required to provide a doorway so large that not only the occupants of the vehicles but persons holding on to the outside of the vehicles may pass through with safety?" If the rule applies to engines it would seem to equally apply to other vehicles, and the doors of carriage houses, barns and the like must be large enough to permit persons standing on the steps of vehicles to pass through. As already said there is no suggestion that the doorway was not sufficient for the safety of the employees in the engine. In this the case differs vitally from that recently decided by the Supreme Court of the United States (Texas Pacific Ry. Co. v.Harvey, 228 U.S. 319). There was nothing calling upon the deceased to mount the engine at this time or place. The fireman and assistant were operating the engine, had run it into the house and were running it out. True, the deceased would have been justified in boarding the engine whenever he could do so safely; but the engine was to proceed only seventy-five feet from the door of the roundhouse to the *Page 24 water tank, where it would be stopped. The deceased had merely to walk after it. If, however, for any purpose, he wished to board the engine there was no reason why he should not have had it stopped. Even had the clearance been the greatest shown to exist in any of the roundhouse mentioned, either those of the defendant or of the other roads, it would have been insufficient to allow a person standing on the steps to pass the doorway in absolute safety. As stated by witnesses for the plaintiff, twenty inches clearance would permit one to pass only when holding his body sideways to the door and "squeezing" if he were of large size. In the absence of proof that any duty might require an employee to board a moving engine, about to pass through a doorway, the defendant cannot be held guilty of negligence in not providing against such a contingency. It is equally clear that the plaintiff's intestate was, under the circumstances, guilty of contributory negligence. The motion for a nonsuit should have been granted.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
GRAY, WILLARD BARTLETT, CHASE, CUDDEBACK and MILLER, JJ., concur; HOGAN, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed, etc.