The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
The action was brought to rebover damages, for the death of plaintiff’s intestate, alleged to have resulted from the defendant’s
The suggestions of negligeneé' by the' defendant, made here are:
First. Failure to furnish a safe place to work.
Second. Failure to instruct. deceased as to dangers incident to the work .
Third. Failure to promulgate' rules ás to the employment.
The firét ground.seéms to involve not'so much a safe place to work as safe and suitable machinery and appliances. The claim made is that tlie placó should have been made safe by.inserting in the opening of the stopcock a plug or.cap-. The stopcock seems-'to have been constructed and used in the ordinary,-usual way. There was. no danger to be apprehended- from it unless a person was in close proximity to it when it .was opened and the . locomotive liad steam on. To be effectively used it would seem to be essential to have it so the engineer could operate it by pulling upon the rod-on the running board without going under the locomotive and removing a plug or cap from the opening. There was some effort made to show that it was usual to make use of the cap or plug, but no evi
The second ground relates to the deceased’s knowledge of the dangers -of steam escaping from the stopcock. There is no evidence directly that deceased had no knowledge or was not informed on this subject. He had been at'work in defendant’s plant for about two years under the same foreman. He had not worked at this particular'kind of labor all that time; but he was about the plant-, and we may assume acquired some knowledge of locomotives and the operation of steam. He "was the head man in charge of the work at the time of the accident, and the other man was his helper. . He must, therefore, have been a mail of some mind, not a mere common laborer. He had put the bands on four locomotives that week. — just the work he was engaged in when he received liis injuries — and all these locomotives had stopcocks on, constructed like the one in question. They were cold, had no steam on, but it cannot be assumed, he was ignorant of the nature’of steam, or that it would escape from the boiler if the stopcock was opened, or. that he did not know how it was opened. He did know this boiler had steam on, as it was warm. "We think there was no reason for "submitting this ground of negligence to the jury,, under the evidence.
The third ground relates to rules. We fail to see what rules could have' been formulated to prevent this accident. If the lever had been moved by- some one connected with the locomotive, by pulling up the rod on the running board, it might be argued that a rule would have been proper in analogy to the rule ip case of a man cleaning the ashes from tinder the locomotive, that the locomotive should not be moved until it was ascertained that no one was under it; in this case, that the engineer should not operate this stopcock to clean out the boiler until it was ascertained that no one was at work under the locomotive. But would a rule be necessary to prevent the laborer himself from accidentally moving the lever, and
We conclude that the trial court properly granted a nonsuit in, the'case and- that the judgment should be affirmed.
All concurred.
judgment affirmed, with costs.