
    Thomas F. Morgan, Resp’t, v. The Hudson River Ore & Iron Co., App’lt.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, Third Department,
    
    
      Filed July 11, 1891.)
    
    Master and servant—Negligence.
    Defendant operates ten kilns for roasting ore with a railroad in front of them inclined so that the cars will run down of their own weight. When ore in loading the cars fell so as to block them the employes were instructed to remove it by the use of shovels and rakes. While so removing ore which had fallen around a car plaintiff was obliged to reach under it with a rake and called to those at the kiln above not to let the car there .come down on him. The car, however, collided with the one he was under and he was injured. It was not distinctly shown that this was caused by the negligence of the other employes. Held, that the question whether the defendant was negligent in not providing and promulgating rules and regulations for the guidance of its workmen for their protection was properly left to the jury.
    Appeal from judgment in favor, of plaintiff, entered upon the verdict of a jury.
    
      Matthews & Smith (Frank Smith, of counsel), for app’lt; L. F. Longley (R. E. Andrews, of counsel), for resp’t.
   Learned, P. J.

—This is an action to recover for injuries alleged „ to have been received by plaintiff, an employe of the defendant,when engaged in work for it, which injuries it is alleged were caused by the negligence of defendant. Several grounds of alleged negligence are stated in the complaint. All were withdrawn by plaintiff at the close of the case, except one, viz., that defendant negligently omitted to provide and promulgate rules and regulations for the guidance and government of its workmen for their protection. We have, therefore, to consider only this single subject.

The defendant has ten kilns for roasting ore, each about twenty-five feet in diameter, standing in a row about ten feet apart, and numbered from one to ten. They stand on a slight decline, number one being the uppermost Along the kilns is a narrow-guage railroad, on which run cars, which are loaded with ore from the kilns and then taken to the point of shipment, some five hundred feet distant. At that part of the railroad by the kilns the cars will usually run down of their own weight, being, however, sometimes started or drawn by a horse. Beyond kiln number ten an engine draws them.

In loading these cars from the kilns, it often happens that ore falls on the tracks and obstructs the movement of the cars. It is necessary to remove it. There are shovels, rakes and pickaxes there, with which the workmen remove the ore that has thus fallen on the rails, so that the cars may move.

On the day of the accident plaintiff was at work opposite kiln number three. The ore ran over the car on the side next the kiln, so that it blocked the wheels about a foot and one-half from the track. Some fell in front of the wheels; some on the centre of the track. There were two wheels on each side of the car. The ore was between and in front of the wheels. There was a loaded car opposite kiln number two. Two workmen, one called Smith, the other the Hungarian, were at the car opposite number two. Plaintiff spoke to them and told them to look out for his safety, when he was clearing out the car; not to move the cars or let them run down on him until he got through. They said they would. The car at which plaintiff was working opposite number three was blocked with a block of wood. The plaintiff’s testimony conflicts with itself. He sometimes says he blocked the car himself, and sometimes he says he did not know who blocked it. The plaintiff raked out between the wheels with the rake; then he lay down to clean out what he could not reach with the rake. As he reached over, a car above came down and pushed the car where he was working. His fingers were caught under the wheel of the car and were injured. The plaintiff says the block of his car was not there at the time of the accident, but he does not know who took it out. There is evidently some confusion in his mind, which is not strange.

It was in evidence that the superintendent had given oral instruction that the men in removing the ore from the track should use, and had directed them to use, the rakes. The foreman also states that he had given instructions that, if there was a large quantity of ore, they should take the shovel, if not, that they should put their backs to the car and try to shove it over. It is evident that unless the amount of ore were too great, the car might thus he pushed along, crushing or forcing aside in its progress the ore which was in the way.

It is not distinctly shown that the negligence of Smith and the Hungarian caused the accident. What started the car which was higher up the grade does not appear. The workmen may have started it, or it may have moved of its own weight. We cannot determine which was the fact Therefore it cannot be said that the accident was caused by the negligence of a fellow servant. The court properly charged that if it was so caused, the plaintiff could not recover. True, the plaintiff said that he requested Smith and the other workman to look out for his safety when he was under the car, and not to let their cars move while he was-under the car at number three. But this only serves to show that they knew where he was. It does not show that they neglected any duty or were negligent For it is not shown that any duty was imposed on them by the regulations of defendant; or that the neglect of such regulations caused the car to move.

On the subject of the liability of a master for not making proper rules and regulations we refer to McGovern v. Central Vermont R. R. Co., 123 N. Y., at page 289; 33 N. Y. State Rep., 416. In that case the deceased entered a large bin of the defendant. He entered it though a trap door in the bottom, for the purpose of shoveling the com and cleaning out the bin, the corn having ceased to run out at the spout While in the bin, some corn which had become piled up therein, probably owing to its heating, fell on him and he was killed. In regard to this the court of appeals said: “ The question might also have been left to the jury to determine whether the omission to make rules and regulations prescribing the conditions under which servants should be required or permitted to enter the bins at the bottom was or was not a neglect of such reasonable care,” etc. It will be seen in that case that the rules and regulations suggested by the court referred to the person who was entering the bin and not to some other person. It will also be seen that there was nothing “ complex ” in the business in which deceased was engaged. He was-merely required to climb through a hole into a bin and shovel loose corn and clean out the bottom of the bin. It will further be seen that no special rule or regulation were shown to have existed in similar elevators; but that the court of appeals said that the jury might determine whether the defendant ought- not to have made some rule on that subject.

It had been previously stated in the opinion that the defendant might have been found to be negligent in not making a proper inspection of the bin before permitting the servants to enter. The sentence we have above quoted therefore has no reference to such inspection, but suggests another ground of negligence, that of the insufficiency of rules or regulations. What these rules or regulations should be was to be left to the jury. Of course it is evident that to permit a jury to predicate negligence on the omission to make a rule which, after the event, the jury can say might, if it had been made, have prevented the accident, gives a great opportunity to hold.corporations liable. This was shown by the result of the new trial in that case. And in the case of Abel v. D. & H. C. Co., 31 N. Y. State Rep., 356, this court was of the opinion that an expression in the charge, allowing the jury to conjecture that some rule, before unknown, would be a better rule, that such an expression, standing alone, would be erroneous.

Following, however the language of the opinion in the McGovern case we do not see why the learned justice did not properly leave the question to the jury. He left it to them to say whether defendant’s business was complex, difficult or complicated, in which case it was its duty to establish rules. Certainly it was as complex as that carried on by the defendant in the McGovern case; in which the court of appeals held that the jury might find it was -the defendant’s duty to establish rules. He left it to the jury to say whether the rules proved were sufficiently explicit to guard the life and limb of the employes.

It is true that the Abel case, 103 N. Y., 581; 4 N. Y. State Rep., 269, is not quite analogous. There the alleged neglect was a failure to give sufficient notice-that the testator was under the car where he was injured. In this, the persons controlling the car which came down and struck plaintiff’s car had actual notice that he was under it And actual notice was better than the notice implied by a flag, red or blue. But the language quoted from the McGovern case speaks of rules prescribing the condition under which servants should be permitted to put themselves in places of danger. It therefore justifies the submission to the jury of the question whether some reasonable rule might not have been made which might have prevented the accident

In the McGovern case the court said that the case was not free from doubt, and the same remark might be made here. But, of course, there will be no doubt of the result when a jury is to decide whether the master ought not to have promulgated rules, under the circumstances of the case, “ as a reasonable care and precaution.”

The defendant urges that the accident was caused by the negligent or wrongful act of co-employes. We have already considered this point The judge properly charged in respect to it, and we cannot hold that the cars necessarily started by their neglect or by their act. If the defendant was held liable for permitting that car to start and come down on the plaintiff’s car, then cases like Searles v. Manhattan R. R., 101 N. Y., 661, cited by defendant, might apply, but defendant is held liable only for neglect to promulgate rules.

The defendant further insists that plaintiff knew the risk and took it as incident to his employment If, however, it was proper, as held in the McGovern case, to submit to the jury the question of negligence in respect to making proper rules and regulations, then it could not be held that he assumed a risk from which proper rules would have saved him. Heavey v. Hudson River Paper Co., 57 Hun, 339; 32 N. Y. State Rep., 565; Stringham v. Stewart, 100 N. Y., 516; Benzing v. Steinway, 101 id., 547.

We are, therefore, of the opinion that the judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.

Land on, J., concurs in result; Mayham, J., not acting.  