It is difficult to obtain a rule to apply to cases of this character. The liability of a master is clearly stated. The master owes a duty to the employe to furnish safe machinery, tools and appliances adapted to the work to be done, together with capable fellow servants. (Laning v. N. Y. Central R. R. Co., 49 N. Y., 523; Flike v. Boston and Albany R. R., 53 id., 549.)
There is another class of cases which hold that a master is not bound to furnish the best machinery, tools and appliances, or the .safest, but that the master has a wide discretion in doing his business with such tools and appliances as he deems best, and that an employe assumes the risks and dangers incident to the business. (De Graff v. N. Y. Central, etc., 76 N. Y., 125; Gibson v. Erie R. R. Co., 63 id., 449.) There are other cases holding that the servant 'is chargeable with negligence against known defects by continuing-in the master’s employment, and again, cases holding that a servant is chargeable with notice of defects which he might have known, although he was in fact ignorant of their existence.
In the present case the evidence shows that the plaintiff was employed as a brakeman and oilman upon the defendant’s road. That the gauge of the road was originally six feet; that another rail has been laid down to make the gauge conform to the ordinary railroad gauge of the country ; that narrow gauge and wide gauge ears are hauled indiscriminately on the same train. That upon the occasion of the accident in question a freight train broke in two parts; that the brake was between a wide and-narro w-guage car; *639that the plaintiff was told to couple the two cars and thereby connect the train; that in doing so, in the- very early morning, he was jammed between the two cars and permanently injured. The ears, probably by reason of the difference in gauge, did not strike fair and cover up the draw-heads. The draw-heads passed each other and the ears went violently together. The ends of the cars had pieces of wood, or, as they are called, bumpers, not over three and one-half inches in thickness, so that there was only six inches or thereabouts to protect the plaintiff from injury. The negligence in this case is based solely upon the insufficiency of these bumpers. Upon the whole ease, I think it was improper to nonsuit the plaintiff.
It appears from the evidence that the cars belonged to.other roads than the defendant, but the defendant owes the same duty to its employes in respect to freight cars that it uses as it does as to its own. It appears that these cars are all under the charge of the defendant’s master mechanics. That they are all repaired under the same rules and regulations as govern the repairs of defendant’s cars. It appears that the ordinary car is provided with bumpers, from five and one-half to six inches on each end of the same, “ thick enough to protect a man’s body in case the draw-heads pass.” It further appears that the night was dark; that the ground was covered with a deep snow; that the plaintiff acted with proper care himself and made the effort to connect the cars in the usual way; that the accident was not occasioned by his negligence, but was occasioned by the difference in gauge of the cars, aided, it may be, by a curve in the track. It further appears that the cars were very numerous running over the road, and that plaintiff did not know of the particular defect in the bumpers until the instant of the accident. The plaintiff cannot be expected to know of the defect in a single car. The defendant was chargeable with neglect if the master mechanics and foreman failed to discover and remedy defects, if any existed. At all events, such question was one for the jury. (Court of Appeals, Kain v. Smith, N. Y. Week. Dig., Oct. 6, 1882, vol. 15, p. 160.)
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Cullen, J., concurred.
The principle is well settled that a railroad company owes to its employes a duty of providing and maintaining its operative machinery in good, safe and suitable condition, so as to protect them against danger so far as reasonable care can do it, and any failure in that respect is negligence of the corporation itself.-
Among the appliances necessary for the protection of brakemen are the buffers of freight cars. If well made and strong, the brakeman’s duties are comparatively safe; if defective, his work is highly dangerous.
In the case at bar, instead of the buffers ordinarily used, thin strips of wood about three inches wide, wholly unfit to protect the brakemen, were nailed upon the ends of the cars. Any inspection would have disclosed the defect.
Defendants argue that the brakemen had full opportunity to discover the defect and to refuse to perform the service. But to examine the cars for such a defect was no part of the brakeman’s duty. (Porter v. Hannibal, etc., 60 Mo., 160.) He had a right to assume that so far as inspection would disclose the cars were in good condition. "While in the act of coupling he discovered the defect, too late to save himself from injury.
That the plaintiff when ordered to couple the cars at five o’clock in the morning, loaded down with his lantern and a three-link chain weighing sixteen or eighteen pounds, oil a slippery road-bed, the train in motion, should fail to examine the cars to see if they were in good condition, is no evidence of negligence. Manifestly his whole attention was required for his proper duty, of which such an examination was not a part.
That the cars were property of other lines' is not material; they were supplied to this train by the act of the defendants, and for any defect which inspection would disclose the defendants are responsible.
The appellants assumed, that if plaintiff was aware of the defect in the cars, he cannot recover in this action; that if he continued in the employ of the company he waived all claim to recover for any injury thereby occasioned.
Such is not the law. Knowing of such defect his duty was to report it to his superior. He had a right to assume that upon the defect being made known it would be remedied; meanwhile the *641train was upon tlie track, it could not remain there, it must be removed, and the train hands were the persons to do it.
To hold that by performing that duty in the service and for the benefit of their employers, they lose all redress for injury sustained in the performance of such duty, would do violence to reason. If it finally became apparent that the company refused to repair defects, and that the employes must leave the service or continue exposed to peril, then, and not before, he would be put to his election how long he should abide in the service under such notice; and wuat facts would be held equivalent to notice must be a question for a jury in each case as it arises. • To enforce a stricter rule would be unjust to the employes and detrimental to the interest oí the master. To encourage the train hands to promptly abandon service on the disóovery of a defect, would imperil the whole traveling public and go far to render railroad traffic impracticable.
The judgment and order denying a new trial should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order denying new trial affirmed, with costs.