This case upon the facts remains as it was on the former trial, when the plaintiff had a judgment, which was reversed and a new trial ordered, as appears by the report of the case in 19 Hun, 509. The prominent facts stand out now, as they did on the former trial, that plaintiff’s intestate had for some two years been engaged for the defendant as an employe coupling cars, etc., upon the same yard; that the sluice across the track which it is alleged caused the injury, was well known to him, was open to his view, was passed by him day after day, and had remained entirely unchanged all that time. The. learned justice, before whom this cause was tried, as is evident from his remarks on refusing the motion for a nonsuit, thought the case of Plunk v. Central Railroad Company (60 N. Y., 607) had changed or materially modified the rule of law which had before then existed in regard to the risks which an employe assumed when he entered upon any particular service. Entertaining this opinion as to the principle of that case, as the General Term did not refer to it in the opinion, it was natural for the justice to think it had been overlooked, and that if the attention of the General Term had been called to it, its ruling would have been different. While, therefore, he held that the defendant was not guilty of negligence *492by reason of tbe manner in which tbe sluice was maintained under tbe track of the railroad, and tbe deceased was fully chargeable with knowledge of its existence and tbe place of its location, be deemed it necessary under tbe case of Plank to find some fact to submit to tbe jury, and be selected tbe only possible one left, which, in bis own estimation, was exceedingly narrow. We think it entirely too narrow, if found in favor of tbe plaintiff, to warrant a verdict for her.
We think the justice erred in bis view of the question decided in the Plank Case. No discussion was bad as to what the rule was between employer and employe, and the only question seems to have been whether the facts so clearly appeared in the case as to warrant the court in applying the rule of law to those facts without the intervention of a jury to settle them. the only thing the Court of Appeals passed upon was that the facts did not so clearly appear, and for that reason the case should have been submitted to the jury. Plank was brakeman on a freight train, stopped at Palatine Bridge and run on a side track in the night when the ground was covered with snow. He was there required to couple cars, and while doing so stepped or fell into a trench two feet wide and deep which run under the track. the court says, in so many words, “the evidence of defendant’s negligence was sufficient to require the submission of the question to the jury; also that the fact of the knowledge of the deceased of the existence of the trench was not sufficient to charge him, under the circumstances, with contributory negligence,” etc.
Thé rule that when a party enters into the employment of another be assumes the usual risks and perils of the service, and also the risks and perils incident to the use of the machinery and property of the employer as it then was, so far as such risks were apparent, is so well settled in our jurisprudence that no court would undertake to change or modify it in a mere memorandum decision, and the subsequent action of the Court of Appeals shows it bad no such intention in deciding the Plank Case. In several cases reported since the one in 60thNew York Reports, the court has distinctly recognized and approved of the rule as above stated, and that case has never been referred to as at all modifying or changing it. (Gibson v. Erie Railway Co., 63 N. Y., 449; Mehan v. Syracuse, B. and N. Y. R. R. Co., 73 id., 584; DeGraff v. Central R. R. Co., 76 id., 125.) *493As there was no contradictory evidence as to the knowledge of the deceased of the situation, location and condition of the sluice, during all the time he was at work upon that yard for the defendant we think he asstuned' all the perils incident thereto, and the justice erred in refusing the nonsuit when defendant asked for it.
After the motion for nonsuit was refused, the defendant’s counsel asked the court to charge that if this sluice had remained, while the deceased was there, in the condition in which it was at the time of the accident, and in plain sight, and that hé knew of its existence, he took the risks incident to its existence, and plaintiff cannot recover.
The court charged in substance that that was so if deceased understood fully all the dangers that might under any circumstances result to him from the existence of such sluice.
The defendant excepted to the refusal to charge as requested, and also to the charge as made. Both exceptions are well taken. The request, as made by the defendants, contains the true rule by which the case is to be governed according to all the authorities and should have been given to the jury without qualification.
The qualification embraces the narrow question the justice felt compelled to submit to the jury under the PlamJc Case, and is entirely too uncertain and speculative to warrant the jury in rendering a verdict upon it. This would require every ease involving the knowledge of a party to be submitted to the jury, and a verdict rendered under such a charge would be a mere guess based upon the probable intelligence and discretion of the employe. The law presumes when a man enters upon any employment he has sufficieut .intelligence to meet its requirements, and therefore holds him responsible for its possession.
The verdict must be set aside and a new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
Talcott, P. J., and Hardin, J., concurred.New trial ordered, costs to abide the event.