Anderson v. Minnesota & Northwestern Railroad

Vanderburgh, J.

A new trial was asked for by defendant on the *524.ground that the verdict in plaintiff’s favor was not justified by the evidence, and the refusal of the trial court to grant the application is •the ground of this appeal. The plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant, and was one of a gang of section-men, seven or eight in number, including their foreman. They had charge of a hand-car, -which they used in their business to transport themselves and their •tools to and from different points on the section of the railroad upon which they worked. At the time of the injury complained of, they were returning on the car from their work, and the men were all engaged in operating it, — three on one side, and four, including the -plaintiff, on the other. The car was moving up grade, and against •the wind, and it required vigorous exertion to drive it- forward. While so working under the direction of the foreman, that portion of the •wooden handle which plaintiff held parted at the iron clasp or ring -through which it was passed to work the levers in operating the car, :and he was suddenly precipitated forward on the track, and was run -over and seriously injured, and he now seeks to recover damages against the defendant for its alleged negligence in not providing a •safer instrument to work with.

1. The evidence tends to prove that the handle was too weak for -the strain required and put upon it, and the use to which it was ap-plied. There was a knot in the wood at or very near the place where ;it broke, which caused a deflection in the grain of the wood under vthe clasp, which some of the witnesses testify was a defect in the flandle which weakened it. It was fastened in the clasps or bands at the ends of ¿he iron levers by screws or nails passing through into -the wood. This handle, it appears, had been so fastened a second dime, and there was under the band a second nail-hole, well worn, ex-dending through the wood at the place where it broke, which the jury might also find tended to weaken the handle at that point. In such .cases, in determining the question of reasonable care, regard must ibe had to the particular use to which the instrumentality furnished :is to be applied, and the risks and dangers attending such use; and •the obligation of the master extends as well to the matter of examination and repair as to furnishing. The jury had before them the •two parts of the broken handle, and some of the witnesses — experi-*525eneecl railroad bands, competent to speak on the subject — testified that the knot made the handle defective; and, among other things, that it was not a first-class handle; “that the grain ran out at the edge of the knot,” and “weakened the stick;” “the crooked grain around the knot weakens it a great deal.” A carpenter, familiar with different kinds of wood, testified: “I don’t.think it would have broke in that'way if there had not been a knot'there. I think it turned the graim by the knot being there.” One of the witnesses,also testified that’ the nail and screw hole weakened it. There is no doubt that there-was evidence enough to warrant the jury in finding the handle unsafe for the purpose to which it was applied. .The only question of serious doubt or difficulty is whether the defendant was negligent in1 permitting ■ such ■ a piece of wood to be used for a car handle, or in* suffering it to remain in use so long. The nature of the business,, and the dangers attending the use of the ear, required a corresponding degree of care on the part of the defendant in guarding against' accidents from .defects in the same. And we think it was for the-jury to determine whether such care was exercised in this case, upon the evidence of the witnesses as to the nature, of the defects in the-handle, the length of time it had been in use, the nature and appearance of th# defects, and the manner it had been repaired, and the-condition it was in at and previous to the time,of the accident. The-evidence tends to show that it was the duty of the foreman, who had1 the car constantly in charge, to see that -it was kept in repair, and-furnished with new handles, when necessary. He represented the-master, and if (as upon the evidence the jury might find) the repairs have been so carelessly made in fastening,the handle as to render it unsafe, or if the other defects testified to were such as to weaken it,, and as were discoverable by reasonable diligence, the defendant is-chargeable with knowledge thereof, and responsible for the consequences resulting therefrom.

2. Though the plaintiff may not have been charged with the duty and responsibility of inspecting or repairing the car except as he might from time to time be directed by the foreman, yet he was undoubtedly bound to exercise care commensurate with the risks to which he was subjected in.his employment; and such defects in an instrument' *526-which he was frequently using as were obvious to the senses, or with reasonable diligence, considering the circumstances and nature of his .employment, ought to be discovered or known by him, he must be held to take the risk of. In this case the car had been in use there .about six months. The accident occurred the latter part of May. The plaintiff had worked with the car the fall before, and about two months in the spring next preceding the accident, but was absent .during the winter. The evidence in his behalf tended to show that he was a track laborer acting under the immediate supervision of •the section foreman, who was charged with the responsibility for the .car and its condition, and that it was the duty of the latter to attend to the inspection and repairs thereof. It does not appear that plaintiff worked with one handle more than the other, nor that it was his .duty to inspect or repair the same. Plaintiff denies that he had any notice of the defect complained of, and it does not appear that he knew of the extra nails that had been used to fasten the handle, or •that it had been turned and refastened while he was working with the car. The jury were informed by the evidence of the nature of his work and duties, saw and examined the stick that was broken, and heard the evidence of the witnesses as to the nature of the defect; and upon the whole record we are not prepared to say that th@ trial court .erred in submitting to them the question whether his ignorance of the character and extent of the defect was attributable to want of reasonable diligence on his part.

Order affirmed.