The action is under the Federal Employers' Liability Act for injuries resulting in death.
Heck, who was killed, was a conductor in charge of a freight train on defendant's railroad. Spanning the tracks are two low bridges about 200 feet apart. Heck, standing on top of a car, was seen to stoop as he reached the first of the bridges. He then passed beyond the view of the watchers in defendant's tower, and later his dead body, the neck broken, was found upon the car. The inference is permissible that he was struck by the second bridge. He had gone over the route many times before. He had in his caboose a time table furnished by the defendant to its employees warning them of the bridges located on its line. He saw the first bridge, for he avoided it. He was traveling in broad daylight, and there was nothing to obstruct his vision of the other. Telltales with danglers had been placed at appropriate points to serve as reminders of the peril (Railroad Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 49], § 71, subd. 2). In such circumstances, the fact that the bridges were low, standing by itself, would not lay the basis for a finding that the operation of the road was negligent (Harrison v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 195 N.Y. 86, 91; Bell v. N.Y.R.R. Co., 168 Mass. 443). Such bridges are so common that all railroad men expect them. There must indeed be proper warning (Harrison v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., supra). The master's duty is then discharged, unless, indeed, there are defects of construction exaggerating the peril. Even then, the servant will be taken to have assumed the risk so far as it is obvious (Southern Pac. Co. v. Berkshire, 254 U.S. 415;Boldt v. Penn. R.R. Co., 245 U.S. 441).
The plaintiff argues that in this bridge there were defects of construction exaggerating the peril, and that they were unknown and invisible. As the tracks go under the first bridge, they descend a little, then run level, and then, as they approach the second bridge, ascend. As a result, the space between the rails and the girder is about six *Page 215 inches greater at the south end of the bridge, which on this occasion was the point of entrance, than it is at the north or farther end. The change is not abrupt or sudden. It is distributed proportionately over a space of sixty feet. The case differs in essentials from Hunter v. N.Y., O. W.R.R. Co. (116 N.Y. 615), where in the middle of a long tunnel there was an unexpected projection five feet long. For the plaintiff, it is argued that the defendant was negligent in diminishing without warning the space available for employees engaged in work so hazardous. To this the defendant answers that in laying out its road it had no reason to believe that conductors or brakemen, mindful of a bridge, would estimate so nicely the space available for clearance. Its employees, so it argues, were not at liberty to assume, in calculating the risk to be accepted, that any such nicety of adjustment was expected or permissible. Warning of a bridge is warning of variations of the grade not substantial or unusual. There is no implied assurance that roadbeds are precisely level. The record does not inform us to what extent irregularities at such locations are in accord with engineering practice.
Choice between these arguments is unnecessary for the disposition of the case before us. Even if the rising grade at such a point were to be classed as negligent construction, resulting in a risk unknown and unforeseen, the plaintiff's case would not be helped. A causal connection is not established between negligence and injury. There is nothing to justify a finding that Heck was struck by the bridge at one end rather than at the other. Indeed, the jury found that he had been guilty of contributory negligence, reducing the verdict for that reason as permitted by the statute. For all that appears he was thrown down upon the car as he went into the tunnel and not as he went out. The plaintiff argues that a brakestick which he had been holding in his hand was found beneath the bridge at the north end or near by. *Page 216 The space between the two ends, however, was only sixty feet. We cannot say how the brakestick, dropping from the nerveless hand, was struck or thrown by the moving car. We have no reason to doubt that it could have been carried sixty feet before it reached the ground. The opposite inference is too tenuous to form the basis for a verdict.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Trial Term should be reversed, and the complaint dismissed with costs in all courts.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur.
Judgments reversed, etc.