Plaintiff was injured, as he claims, by the negligence of defendant, while in its employ in the capacity of a car repairer. The alleged negligence consists in the failure by defendant to adopt and promulgate rea- . sonable rules and regulations for the safety of its car repairers. At the . trial plaintiff was nonsuited, and thereafter a motion for a new- trial was made upon the minutes of the court, which was granted. In assigning a
Examined in the light of these rules, it seems, to my mind, that plaintiff ■must fail. I quote his whole testimony bearing upon the alleged negligence: “I never saw any rule or regulation of the company in relation to the flags, prior to my injury; and I was never informed by anybody connected with the yard that they had a rule requiring me to put up a flag. Mr. Musenberger said something to me about putting up a flag. He didn’t say anything to me about any rule or regulation of the company requiring me to put up a flag, I never asked anybody if there was any rules. In the years I had worked for these other railroad companies—the Lake Shore and Erie and the Nickel Plate—I never was furnished with a copy of their rules, but I knew they .had rules. When I came to work for the Lackawanna I never asked any •official or my foreman or anybody for the rules of the road. I never made •any inquiry. I never spoke to any of these people about the rules of flags. I never asked Musenberger whether there was any rules of the company. Mr. Faber is foreman of the car department at East Buffalo. I never asked him ,nor Mr. Fomes about the rules. I knew at that time that railroad companies had rules as a general thing; the companies I had worked for had. I worked off and on for the Lackawanna before, tint I never was furnished with a copy of the rules. ” Giving full force to this testimony, it amounts to this: “I never saw any rules. I never was informed of any rules. I was -never furnished with any rules. I never asked for any rules.” The significant feature about it is, that the plaintiff nowhere says that he did not know that rules of the company existed, consequently this testimony falls short of establishing affirmatively that he was ignorant of the existence of rules, while it does appear that he knew that “railroad companies had rules as a general thing.” The whole of the testimony is entirely consistent with the fact that defendant had adopted and promulgated sufficient rules. Plaintiff nowhere disputes it, nor does he furnish any circumstances from which an inference that defendant has not sufficiently complied with the law can fairly arise. It is the duty of an employe to make use of'his faculties to inform himself. If the rules were placed within his vision, then he was bound to see them; and if they were placed where the employes generally came, upon the blackboards, and about the shops, or if he had reason to suppose that any existed, and by inquiry he could obtain them, it became .his duty to visit the place or make the inquiry, and thus inform himself.