VICKERS t1. CHICA.GO, B. & Q. B. 00.
139
23 Atl. 307; Graft v. Railroad Co. (Pa. Sup.) 8 Ad. 206; Johnson v. Railroad Co. (pa. Sup.) 29 Atl. 854; Pati. Ry. Ace. Law, § 424. The single case holding such a contract to be void is Miller V. Railway Co., 65 Fed. 305. The demurrer is overruled, to which the plaintiff excepts. VICKERS v. CHICAGO, B. & Q. R. CO.
(Circuit Court, N. D. illinois. 1.
December 6, 1895.)
MASTER AND SERVANT-NEGLIGENCE-EMPLOYES' RELIEF ASSOCIA.TIONS-C01'l'TRACT RELEASING MASTER.
A rallroad employ6 who, upon becoming a member of a voluntary rellef association, composed of employ6s, anel to whose funds the rallroad company ill bound to contribute In case of deficIency, signs, without fraud or undue Influence, a contract that In case of Injury he shall elect either to take the oeneflts provided by the association or have his action against the company, cannot avoid the effect thereof on the ground that he signed the agreement without reading it or understanding Its purport, and that he was at a disadvantage In with the company. :MIller v. RaHway Co., 65 Fed. 306, disapproved.
2.
BAME-ExERCISE OF ELECTION-IGNORANCE OF FACTS. '
The fact that at the time or receiving rellef from the association the employ6 Is not aware ot tl1e strength of his case against the company, Is Ignorant of certain Important facts and of the witnesses by whom he can prove them, Is to be regarded merely as his misfortune, and does not avoid the effect of his electlon, In barring an action against the company.
This was an action by Joseph Henry Vickers against the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company to recover damages for personal injuries received in its service. Defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor. S. K. Daw, for plaintiff. Chester M. Dawes, for defendant. ALLEN, District Judge (charging jury). Yesterday afternoon a motion was made in this case in effect that the court instruct the jury to find for the defendant, upon the close of the plaintiff's rebut· tal. Several questions have been argued in connection with the motion, and I conceive that it is of great importance, not only to the plaintiff, but as a question of law in a general sense. The ground of the motion substantially is, as presented by counsel for defendant, that the plaintiff, who, before this accident occurred, became a memo ber of the voluntary relief association or relief department of the de· fendant railroad company, made a contract, in substance, by which he agreed that if he should suffer from accident-receive injury, in other words-he should elect to take the benefits provided by the by-laws and regulations of this relief association, or have his action against the defendant. It is shown in this case that after his serious injury, resulting in the necessary amputation of his left arm (and it is contended-and perhaps that contention is supported by evidence-that he was seriously injured in his spine and the back portions of his body), he received from this fund,-this relief fund,-on account ot
140
FEDERAL REPORTER,
vol. 71.
such injlll'ies and sickness consequen't thereon, some $48. The fads in connection with it are, I believe, not disputed. It is shown that checks were dra.wn, indorsed by him, the money paid from the relief fund, and,as far as the evidence goes, appropriated by the plaintiff. There is no denial of that. Now, the effect of this act of his is the important matter for consideration. It is said on the part of the plaintiff that this clause in the application, which is a part of the contract, is a misleading clause; that it is a device by the company with a view of relieving itself from the obligations-the legal obligations-which it incurred through its negligence; that at the time the plaintiff signed the application he was not aware of its import; that he was at a disadvantage with the defendant; that the entire relief fund department was a cunningly devised scheme to entrap persons, and shield the company from just responsibility; and much contention on . that line, and very earnest contention, is' made; and, indeed, OJle anthority has been adduced; the decision being made in the in Colorado, in support of that view. Miller v. Railway Co.., 65 .Fed. 305. I am unable to reach the same view in this matter that was held by the very able circuit judge in the Eighth circuit. So far as I have learned from the evidence (and I have watched it :with a great'deal ofinterest),no improper,means or influerices were 1:lrought to bear to induce the plaintiff to sign this application to become a member of this benefit association,-relief association, I believe, 'technically, is the na.me of it. It was suggested to him that it was an association of the employes of the road entirely, as I understand, it,; to tl;1em; that itwas.a good arrangement; that it was foJ,' ,his :benefit; it would prove to be for his advantage to become a and that he hadbetter do so. The usual persuasive arguments, or, at any rate, the ordinary arguments, were adduced, and his judgment was addressed in the matter, and he finally signed the application. But such influences as those do not avoid the contract. It may be (he says himself) that he' did 'not read it over, or, if at all, not carefully; that he did not fully know all there was in it. But there is ho sta.tement that' he could not read, no denial of the fact that he' cotilq read, so that it would seem to be admitted that he COUld; that was a paper laid before him, and that he signed it, as and became a member, in the absence of any f::i-ct which would avoid the aet 'of membership on account of fraudcir undue It has been too long settled in this country to admit now of doubt that 'when a man is making a contract, and can read it, the presumption is that he does so; and when he signs with· out reading a 'written or printed contract, as his voluntary act, in the absence of any fraud whatsoever, he will not be heard to say that he' did not understand Its legal import That cannot be permitted, because some men-I am not saying that the plaintiff wassome men are careless, and never look into anyt)::ting. But contracts must be carried out according to their import, when they are fairly entered into. This relief association i.s supported, it seems, to some extent, by what may be called the "assessments" or "contributions" of the members, and where there is a deficiency the company makes it up, so as'to keep it in' a soh'ent condition,-able to
VICKERS V. CHICAGO, B. &: Q. R. CO.
141
pay at all times upon the demand of its in case of sickness or accident. It is said that it is an insurance company, and, being an insurance company, it i.s not organized and carried on according to the laws of the state of Illinois. I do not know that it is necessary for me to decide whether it is an insurance company or not. It does not purport to be. I do not feel called upon to give this aI'of the company with its employes (for that is what it is in substance) any name to characterize it, or to put it in any particular category. It dc;es not purport to be an insurance company. It is not organized on that idea at all, but is an· arrangement between the corporation and the employes, intended to> be for the ben, efit, perhaps, of the employes, and, it may be, indirectly of the cor· poration. The corporation ought to. have a; desire to do everything . thans reasonable for the welfare and benefit of its employes. There. ought to be; a mutual interest on the part of the employes and em- , ployers,each to advance the interests of the other. ,And I do not,: think that; because it may have some of the elements or features of . an insurance company, and because it has not complied with the law in reference to .insurance companies in Illinois, I would be al· lowed to say that therefore it is absolutely void. I cannot think that for a moment. The Wabash, I know, has had for years an arrangement by which hospitals are maintained. There is one main· tainedin the town where I live, purchased at a large cost, and owned as here. There all employes who entered the. service of the .com· pany, of a certain class (conductors, engineers, brakemen, and haps others), were required to contribute a certain portion of their earnings; a small per cent. is taken· from their monthly pay, and goes to the maintenance of this hospital. .The company has its surgeonsandnursesthere, and people to attend to those who take sick or meet with accidents. This is understood by everyone to be mutuallybeneficial. Of course, the employes pay for that wholly. In this case the members do not pay wholly, because, if there is a deficit, the company seemS. to have made it up,-not only has done so, but is bound to do so. There being no contention but what the plaintiff received, or elected to receive, these benefits from the relief association, or relief fund, it is .insisted (and I have given that view of the case the best consideration I could) that at the time the plaintiff took this money-this $48-from the association, he did not know the strength of his case against the company; that he did not know certain important facts that he could prove, and by what witnesses he could prove them; and they have been specified (such as,that the engineer in charge of the engine that ran over him was intoxicated, or running at a high and reckless rate of speed in defendant's yards, -when the injury occurred, and perhaps other facts); that he did not know by whom he could prove these facts until after he received this money. No authority has been cited in support of the position that ignorance of the strength of his case at the time that he made. his election would avoid the effect of that act. I have been thinking over the proposition, and I asked counsel to restate it. There is not an element of fraud in this which can be imputed to the defendant.
142
of his case; a mere misfortune of the plaintiff not to flnd out wit· nesses who would testify to facts which would have enabled him, according to his view, to recover; and, not being in possession of this knowledge, which would, according to his theory, make a case against the company, he thought he had better take what he could get from the relief fund of which he became a member. It must be borne in mind that the plamtiff himself testified to witnessing this fast running at the time he was injured, and to the substance of all the damaging facts, according to his contention, that it is now claimed he walil supported in by evidence discovered after he elected to and received the money from the relief fund. I doubt if any authority, either in the text·books or in any well-considered case, can be cited in support of this view. At least I have not been able to flnd it, and my attention has not been directed to any. Refiecting on the matter, I cannot think that it is sound. In fact, I amsatis· fled it is not. I supposed that the theory of the plaintiff, when the case was being tried, and after this evidence had been introduced, was that at the time of this acceptance of the benefits by the plain. tiff he was acting under the influence of fraud by defendant, or other improper means brought to bear to produce that result. There is no doubt but what fraud would avoid it. There is no doubt but what any sort of undue influence (which is another cies of fraud) would avoid it. But to say as a proposition of law that the want of knowledge as to the exact facts and full strength of the case would avoid it, is far beyond where I have the right to go, according to my conception of the law. It is not necessary to say that I reach this conclusion with hesitation, and that I sympa· thize with the unfortunate always; and especially do I act with reluctance in taking any man's case from a jury before whom he has placed it for decision, and if there was any question of fact disputed for them to pass on I would not do so. I have done so very rarely. But the way it occurs to me, I could not sustain a verdict if it was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. I do not know of any ground on which it could be placed, according to my view. Of course, I am liable to error. According to the way I look at pla.intiff's case, it cannot be sustained. Then, from my view, it will do the plaintiff no good whatever to get a verdict, even if the jnry should flnd that he was entitled to one. The jury are to judge alone of the facts of the case (and all so answered), and not of the law. They said they were impartial (I have no doubt they were), ' and would pass upon the facts without reference to there being a natural person on one side and an artificial party on the other; that they would take the facts from the witnesses and the law from the court, and I have no doubt that they are ready and willing to do so. One feature has added to my embarrassment with reference to the matter, and increased my sympathy. The plaintiff has borne himself in his evidence in a manly way, and has shown a disposition to tell the facts (and I have no doubt he has) in every particular, and he has made a mistake, perhaps, as it turned out, as far as his own good is concerned, in accepting those benefits; but it has been dis-
It was a mere misfortune that the plaintiff did not know the strength
DIXON tl. WESTERN 'UNION TEL. 00.
143
covered afterwards, and, no doubt, if he had known what the effect would be, he would have acted differently. But a m.ere error of judgment cannot be relieved against in a court of law, and does not give me any right or excuse to fail in carrying out the law as I understand it, and you are instructed, gentlemen, to return a verdict in this case for the defendant, and you can be discharged from the further consideration of the case.
DIXON v. WESTERN UNION TEL. CO. (Circuit Court. D. Indiana. December 26. 1895.)
No. 9,207. L INJURY TO EMPLOYE-DEFECTIVE TELEPHONE POLE.
When, in the course of the erection of a telegraph pole by a telegraph company, an occasion arises for the casual and sporadic use of a telephone pole belonging to another company, to remove an obstructing wire, the telegraph company is not at fault because it directs an employll to cIlmb such telephone pole Without makIng a previous inspection to ascertain whether it is safe. The risk from defects in such a pole is incIdental to the service of the employll, and is assumed by him, unless he Insists on an inspection ot the pole.
SAME-ASSUMPTION OF RISK.
Action by Thomas W. Dixon against the Western Union Tele· graph Company. Demurrer to complaint sustained. Finch & Finch and Dunn & Love, for plaintiff. Butler, Snow & Butler and Chambers, Pickens & Moore, for de· fendant. BAKER, District Judge. The third paragraph of the complaint, to which a demurrer has been interposed for want of facts, does. not aver that the telephone pole belonged to, or was under the control of, the defendant;' and, from the fact that it is only empowered to erect and use poles for telegraphic purposes, the court must assume that the defective and unsafe telephone pole belonged to another company, and that the defendant had no interest in, or right of control over, it. The sole ground of negligence charged is in the failure of the defendant and its foreman to inspect the telephone pole and the spikes which had been driven therein, before directing the plaintiff to climb it. It is also alleged that the defendant and its foreman failed to notify the plaintiff that the pole had not been inspected. But, unless the defendant was bound to in· spect the pole before directing the plaintiff to climb it, it is not apparent how it could be held responsible for failure to notify him that it had not done something which it was under no obligation to do. The true question, then, is this: Is the defendant responsible to the plaintiff for failure to inspect a telephone pole which does not belong to it, and over which it has no control, but which