I have read and reread the voluminous testimony in this case, taken so accurately by the stenographers, with a mind free from the exciting influences of the trial, and the result is that I am more than before satisfied with the verdict. Let us relate briefly the facts, precisely as the defendant company would have us to find them’, laying aside, of course, any mere theoretical inferences or conclusions that may be urged in its behalf, through a predetermination to force a conclusion that will permit it to escape all liability, and leaving for separate treatment the defense of contributory negligence. So, favorably stated, the facts are that a freight train, ascending a heavy grade, which rises for the distance of a mile and one-half, was closely followed by another train of the same kind. The first train \?as- manned with two brakemen and a conductor, and had orders, *77known to all, to cut out the fifth car, and leave it at the next station. As the train approached that station, still on the up grade, the conductor and his rear brakeman from the caboose observed, as the others had done, that there was a signal requiring him to go to the telegraph office for orders. The conductor told the brakeman that he would go forward to cut out the car, and get the orders. He did go forward, leaving the brakeman at his proper place on the first platform of the caboose. The train was stopped, and the brake on the caboose applied to hold it. The conductor and his engineer then went to the telegraph operator, received their orders, and returned to the train. The signal was given to loose the brakes, which was done, the train pulled up, and stopped until the conductor, who stood at the’coupling, could “get the slack,” and release it. The five front cars wore then pulled ahead, the conductor swinging behind the fifth until it had passed the switches, which be opened, and cut out that car, placing it on the side track. He then readjusted the switches, and returned the train to the main track, to be recoupled to the cars that had been left. But these, 12 in number, while the cutting out was going on, had receded down the grade, and, gathering momentum, crushed into the rear train at the foot of the grade, more than a mile away. The plaintiff’s intestate and a companion brakeman upon the rear train were killed. The rear brakeman on the front train forgot that a car was to he left at the station, and supposing, when he loosed the brakes at the signal from the engine, that his train had pulled out upon his trip, retired to the caboose, lay down, and went to sleep, so soundly that lie was awakened only by the collision. The conductor gave no signal to the rear brakeman to put on the brakes to hold the 12 cars to ho left upon the grade. Ho did not wait to see whether they would remain stationary until his return, but went forward with the engine and the other brakeman to do the work already described. Neither did the rear brakeman receive any signal from the engine, or elsewhere, to put on the brakes to hold the 32 cars.
Surely, no more advantageous finding of the facts than this could be claimed by the company; and it contains, I believe, every essential circumstance in its favor that is even possible to he interposed as a defense against negligence on the part of the conductor, the negligence of the brakeman being conceded; and yet, if there were a special finding of these facts, I should unhesitatingly direct a judgment tor the plaintiff, on the ground of the grossest negligence on the part of the conductor, or else, behind him, upon the company itself, for so inadequately manning its train as to impose duties upon the conductor which, if not necessarily, certainly had a tendency to distract his attention from the higher duty that belonged to him, namely, the protection of the lives of those upon the other train from such a calamity as came upon them. The company owed no more important duty to its men upon the rear train than full protection against *78such tragic results as were occasioned in this case by the escape of the greater part of this train from its “commander,” as he is shown to be in the ease of Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Ross, 112 U. S. 377; S. C. 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 184.
It is idle to undertake by conveniently adjusted distribution of duties, as between brakeman and conductor, to transfer that care of the train which was necessary to prevent this disaster, from the conductor, who was the representative of the company, to the brakeman, who was only a fellow-servant. The most important and primary duty of a conductor is to look to the safe-handling of his train, so that no mistake fatal to the lives of others dependent on his care and skill shall take place. • It takes all precedence of the work of coupling and uncoupling cars, following those cut out to open and close switches, etc.
If, for the sake of economy, his company imposes these latter duties on him, it must answer if the more important be neglected, or transferred thereby to others who neglect it. In our view, it is the conductor’s duty reasonably to supervise the brakeman and other train-hands in their work, and that if he neglects such supervision, that neglect is the proximate cause of whatever injury occurs, and not the carelessness of the brakeman. We do not say that he is responsible, or the company for him, for every dereliction of duty by those under him, for this may happen with all his care, and after the closest attention from him; but we do say that, under the circumstances of this ease, his duty was to know that those 12 cars were so blocked upon the height of that grade that they would not descend it while he was gone away to do the work of switchman and coupler, in cutting out the car. He could not, reasonably, leave the lives of those behind him at the peril of a collision, because the rear brakeman already knew that a car was to be set out, and knew that it would be his own duty to set a brake to hold those to be left unattached. He should have stood by the unattached cars until the brakeman had performed that duty, or, at least, he should have known that he was in his place at that moment, and understood from his signals that it was the time to set the brakes. He should not have relied solely on the expectation that the brakeman W'ould know when to replace the brakes at the proper moment, without a further signal. Indeed, I do not see how the brakeman, 12 cars back, could know, without a signal from some one, just when the uncoupling required him to replace the brakes. The backward motion of the cars might inform him, but prudence would require that he should have information before and outside of that, and it would be negligence to rely alone on such a movement, upon a grade like that described by this proof; particularly when it was known that there was another train following .closely, and then about due at that spot; for the rear train had somewhat lost time, as its hands explain, by being too closely held with brakes on the grade just behind that on which this disaster took place. The *79situation and circumstances of the moment forbade any uncertainty about those 12 cars being held to their place, and held promptly. If the brakeman himself tells the truth, he had time while the work of uncoupling was going on to get up from a recumbent position in the caboose, to answer the signal to loose the brakes which held the train at a stand-still, return to his resting place beside the stove, and fall soundly asleep, before the backward movement began. The conductor relied, according to his story, upon the fact that he left the brakeman on the platform, telling him what he was going to do about cutting out the car, and that he knew how to keep the detached cars from going back, and at the proper moment would set the brakes. But lie left him while the train was approaching the station, and the brakeman says he did not hear him say anything about cutting out the car, and, although he knew that at some time and distance back they had received orders to leave the car, he had forgotten that fact.
Now, these circumstances show how careless it was on that grade to cut loose those cars, upon such a reliance as that, without any attention by the conductor to the rear part of the train. The truth is, I have no doubt, lie forgot all about the danger to that train behind. The grade was not in his mind, which was absorbed in other purposes than that of looking to the security of those following him, by giving his careful attention to the 12 cars cut loose. Negligently, he gave too entirely his labor to the matter of cutting out the cars, and doing work that should have been done by others, or left undone until he had given his intelligent supervision to the more important matter of "preventing the loose cars going down the hill. A skillful conductor would have had this danger in mind, and given his best attention to the more important duty devolved upon him. It is settled “that, if the occupation or employment be one requiring skill, the failure to exert that needful skill, either because it is not possessed, or from inattention, is gross negligence.” New World v. King, 16 How. 469, 475.
This is the case against the company on the most favorable statement of the facts. But if the jury had found that there was a good deal of nepotism about this affair; that the brother who was conductor fraternally permitted the brother who was brakeman, overworked, tired from loss of sleep, wet, and cold, to sleep beside the stove while bo did the work of setting out the car, forgetting the grade, and the danger to those behind, I should not complain at their verdict, notwithstanding the positive swearing of these inculpated brothers to the contrary. Not because of their humble station, nor of their being witnesses for the company employing them, or the like, should they be discredited, if-at all; but, as I said in a recent decision, where the station and pretensions of the witnesses were of the highest, I have long since ceased to believe a statement of fact simply because one intensely interested in its being true shall swear to it. We should have as much confidence in human testimony, *80sworn or unsworn,-as one can have who believes in the common honesty of men; but, as a trier of facts, we should scrutinize the oaths of all men who are interested to establish their property rights, or their characters, or to excuse themselves from blame for the loss of human life, and we should not, because the common-law doctrine of exclusion of such testimony has been abrogated, rush to the other extreme, and credulously accept every statement that is made by interested witnesses, upon the solemn sanction of an oath, in the trial of a cause. These two brothers made a favorable impression on the court, as no doubt they did upon the jury; but, after all, and analyzing their testimony in the closest way, the story that they tell is not corroborated by a single fact—Isay nothing of opinions—established by other testimony than their own. It is not at all an impossible story that they tell, but it is not as probable, in its relation to the well-established facts, as is the inference that the brakeman was asleep when the train reached Ashland, and was permitted by the conductor to sleep on, in a kindly effort to get along without him.
How came the brother who was conductor to exclaim, “My God Í my brother Miles is asleep in that caboose, and will be killed,” immediately upon recognizing the awful fact that the cars had gone down the grade? How did he know that he was asleep, if he had not left him so? We are asked to believe that this was a rational inference from the fact that the cars had gone, but this is not wholly satisfactory. The proof shows that everything was done in a hurry, and that the stopping, going in for orders, return to the train, moving up and cutting out, was all done in a very few minutes; and if the conductor left the brakeman at his brakes, and he was there to free them when the train pulled up to loosen the coupling, why did not that situation suggest to the conductor, when he learned the train had' receded, the inference that the brake had broken, or that some other such accident had occurred? Why did the notion of his being asleep in the caboose occur at all? It might have suggested that he had been hurt, or for some reason like that was not at his post, but the idea of being asleep in the caboose was not a necessary suggestion from the circumstances as they are now related. It was not the language of apprehension that he used, but the statement of a fact.
Again, the brakeman relates most graphically that he dreamed of an explosion of a gun, and when he awoke, amid the wreck, the idea occurred to him that his brother toas in the caboose with him, and that he heard his cries for help. He actually extricated himself, followed the call, hunted amid the debris, and, after some time, found the fireman of the rear train, from whom the cries proceeded, and, yet thinking it to be his brother, set to work to help him; and all this time it never occurred to him that his brother had gone from the caboose to cut a car out, nor was there any suggestion to him of the actual facts as they must have been known to him if he were awake at Ashland, as he -now says he was, only a very few minutes before the cars *81started back. It was a time of confusion of ideas, no doubt, but it is significant that there was in his mind, all during this hunt for his brother, the notion that he was with him in the caboose, and never any trace of a remembrance of the actual occurrences of which he now says he was an active participant at the station. If he went to sleep while his brother was in fact in the caboose, his actions, and the thoughts accompanying them, were natural enough; but they were somewhat inconsistent with the facts as they existed in his mind, if he fell asleep at Ashland, after manipulating the brakes, as he says he did, at the very moment when his brother was away, and the retrograde movement must have commenced. Indeed, he had scarcely time to descend from the platform into the caboose, lay down, and go to sleep, from the moment lie turned off the brakes until the cars started back, if the speed with which the train was jerked forward and back, “to get the slack,” is correctly described by the witnesses.
There are other circumstances tending to support the inference that he was asleep some time before be confesses that he was, but it is not necessary to refer to them here, as, in any view of the facts, the negligence of the conductor is established. One circumstance only is against this inference, if it can bo said to be proved by the testimony. The head brakeman says he set no brake to hold the train on its arrival at the station, and the engineer and others give the opinion that the train would not have stood on that grade without a brake, and could not have been started “to get the slack” for uncoupling unless the brake holding it had been unloosed. This corroborates, if the opinion be well founded that the engine would not have held the train without a brake, the testimony of the brakeman that he was awake, and set the brake on the caboose, and subsequently unloosed it, on the signal to do so. If that opinion be erroneous, however, or the brake had been set by his brother, the conductor, before leaving the train, as it might have been, if he wished to let him sleep, there is no other circumstance to corroborate them. I have closely examined this proof, with all charity of judgment, and it is my own belief that while perhaps it is not impossible, it is quite improbable, that this accident could have happened, as we know it did, if the brakeman had been on duty at the brakes, as he says he was, almost at the very moment when the cars commenced to go Lack; for he had scarcely time to ro-enter, and fall asleep in the caboose as soundly as he did sleep. But all the peculiarities of the accident are consistently harmonized with the inference that this brakeman was asleep all the time, and that his brother, the conductor, permitted him to rest, while he undertook to get along without him.
Having thus disposed of tho question whether the fault was that of the conductor, for which the company is liable, or only that of the brakeman, for which plaintiff concedes it would not be, we come to the other defense of contributory negligence. Were it not for the *82evidently sincere opinions of very able counsel, the court would think that defense frivolous. The second train had three brakemen,— head, middle, and rear brakemen,—and they were assigned to portions of the train indicated by those designations. The contention is that, as Au was killed on the car next the tender of the engine, he was negligently out of place, and that he would not have been killed if he had been in the “middle” of the train. Possibly this is so; and he would not, possibly, have been killed if, like the engineer, he had crouched behind the boiler-head, or, like the fireman, had risked a jump to the ground, notwithstanding the difficulties to which he called attention when he said, “We cannot jump here.”
This kind of ex post facto knowledge which we now have, that in certain places on the train he would have escaped, cannot aid us in determining a question like this. 'The real inquiry is, was he negligent in being in the particular spot where death came to him? The train had been at the water-tank, had moved but slightly, and was barely under way, when Au, the other brakeman who was killed, the engineer, and the fireman, who were all in the cab of the engine, saw the red lights of the runaway train, which at first they did not comprehend. When the engineer realized the danger, he told them to save themselves, and all attempted to jump; but, the engine being on a bridge across the creek or branch, only the fireman attempted that mode of escape. The engineer crouched behind the boiler, and the two brakemen, evidently trying to escape down the train, were caught and killed at the place before stated. Now, the train-hands examined as witnesses, dominated no doubt by the belief that if the “middle” brakeman had been “about the middle” of the train he would not have been killed, and, pressed hard by counsel to support that capricious theory, gave it as their “expert” opinion that Au ought to have been “about the middle” of the train, because he was “middle brakeman.” But it needs no “expert” to know, as we all do, that in the very nature of the work to he done by brakemen, such a confinement of them to particular places on the train is only a convenience for this occasion, and altogether delusive.
When counsel was asked how many feet and inches from the exact middle of the train, either to the front or rear, he would draw the dead-lines beyond which it was contributory negligence to be found, and to tell us where the same fateful lines would come for the “head” and “rear” brakemen, and how it would be when there were only two, as on the first of these colliding trains; and how, where there were more than three,—there was and could be no satisfactory answer ; and yet, common humanity would require that these lines should be defined with great precision, if they are to be drawn at all. How do we know that Au was not ordered by his conductor to go where he was, for some purpose unknown, or that some sudden emergency did not make it his duty to go there? We are asked to base an inference that he was out of place upon the bare fact that he was “mid*83dio.” brakeman, and was not at the “middle” of the train; for no witness testifies that the middle brakeman could not be required to work elsewhere, if commanded to do so, or that he is not frequently required to work all over the train; and there is proof that he would have been required to do the work necessary to set out that very car on which he was killed when he should get to the next station, and that he knew that that car was not about the middle of the train. Moreover, not one of these witnesses but agrees, on cross-examination, that he might properly go to the engine to warm when the train was stopped, as it was, at the tank. True, it had resumed its motion, but only barely so, when ho was killed, and it may be he was on his way “to the post of duty”—as counsel calls it—when be was killed. The witnesses say that, generally, the middle brakeman would go to the caboose to warm, but nothing forbade him to go to the engine, if he chose, as the head brakeman generally did. The caboose was a nicer place, and would be preferred, they say, but circumstances, or a whim, may have led him to the engine on this cold night. I did not submit such proof to the jury, because, on a motion for a new trial, I would not have sustained a verdict charging him with contributory negligence, and this was clearly right, upon authority. Randall v. Baltimore & O. R. R., 109 U. S. 478, 482; S. C. 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 322; Metropolitan R. R. Co. v. Jackson, 3 App. Cas. 193; Marshall v. Hubbard, 117 U. S. 415; S. C. 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 806; Anderson Co. v. Beal, 113 U. S. 227, 241; S. C. 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 433.
The case bears no resemblance to that of Railroad Co. v. Jones, 95 U. S. 439. The duties of a brakeman may call him to be even upon the pilot, or he might be ordered there, as he might be anywhere upon the train. Therefore no contributory negligence should properly he inferred against him upon the bare fact that he is found dead in any particular spot, away from that part of the train where he generally works, in any division of labor between the brakemen on a train.
New trial refused.