Plaintiff is an employee of the Boston and Albany Railroad Company. While lawfully in the yards of the defendant upon the morning of February 17, 1899, he was struck by the tender of a switch engine operated by the defendant’s employees.' The claim of the.plaintiff is that this engine proceeded down the track upon which he was employed without warning by whistle, bell or light, and that he himself was free from contributory negligence. The defendant contends that its employees were free from negligence
We are unable to see why this exception is not fatal to the judgment. It appeared in the evidence that the defendant company had a rule requiring its employees to use great care to avoid injury. The rule, however, which an employer gives to an employee cannot change the degree of care which the law requires from the employer to a stranger. The duty of the plaintiff was defined to be the reasonable care of a reasonably prudent person while almost in juxtaposition to this the jury was told that the defendant’s duty was to exercise great care for the plaintiff’s protection. At no other point in the charge was the jury told that reasonable care was the measure of the defendant’s duty,. and the inference seems to be irresistible under the instructions of the court that a greater degree of care was required from the defendant toward the plaintiff than he was required to exercise in his own behalf. This error was distinctly pointed out in the exception taken by the defendant’s counsel,
In Leonard v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (57 App. Div. 125) a charge was sustained which defined the duty of the defendant to be to exercise “ a very high degree of care.” This case followed the authority of Koehne v. N. Y. & Q. Co. R. Co. (32 App. Div. 419). But those eases were both of them cases of injuries to passengers, to whom a railroad company owes a greater degree of care than to a stranger.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.