The plaintiff admits that the controversy is to be determined under the provisions of the Eederal Employers’ Liability Act, and that the two decisive questions are involved in the first and third issues. The defendant in apt time moved to dismiss the action as in case of nonsuit on the grounds that the plaintiff had not shown any act of negligence on the part of the defendant, and, if he had shown negligence, that the plaintiff had assumed the risk of personal injury and was barred of his alleged right to recover damages. The motion was denied. We are therefore first concerned with the question whether the evidence when construed most favorably for the plaintiff is sufficient to make a case of actionable negligence entitling the plaintiff to an affirmative answer to the first issue.
Negligence, which is not defined by the Employers’ Liability Act, must be determined by applying the principles of the common law. Brundege v. R. R., 154 N. E. (Ill.), 433. In general terms it signifies a failure to exercise that degree of care which the circumstances demand and which prudent men ordinarily observe. R. R. v. Richardson, 91 U. S., 454, 23 Law Ed., 356. In the case of a passenger the fact of an *19accident usually carries with it a presumption of negligence; but a different rule imposes upon an employee the burden of showing as an affirmative fact that the employer bas been negligent. Patton v. Railway Co., 179 U. S., 655, 45 Law Ed., 361. And in determining an .issue of negligence under the Federal Act the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States must control. That Court bas beld that submission to the jury of contested issues of fact is not required in the Federal courts if there is only a scintilla of evidence; that it is the duty of the judge to direct the verdict when the testimony and all inferences which the jury could justifiably draw therefrom would be insufficient to support a verdict for the other party; and, further, that this Federal rule must be applied by State courts in cases arising under the act. R. R. v. Hughes, .... U. S., ., decided 18 February, 1929.
Section 1 of tbe Act of 1908 (45 U. S. Code, Annotated) provides that every common carrier by railroad while engaging in interstate commerce shall be liable in damages . . . for injury or death resulting in whole or in part from the negligence of any of its officers, agents, or employees, or by reason of any defect or insufficiency, due to its negli--gence, in its cars, engines, appliances, machinery, track, roadbed, works, boats, wharves, or other equipment.
The plaintiff’s brief is confined to alleged negligent acts of omission— the defendant’s failure to exercise due care to provide for him a reasonably safe place in which to work and reasonably safe tools, appliances and equipment.
“The word ‘equipment’ as used in a contract or statute relating to railroads bas been -held to mean the necessary adjuncts to the operation of a railroad, such as cars, locomotives, and other movable property. The term cannot, however, be construed to include everything that is necessary to the operation of the road and is not broad enough to include structures such as machine shops, round-houses, and the like.” 22 R. C. L., 902; Elliott v. Payne, 239 S. W. (Mo.), 851, 23 A. L. R., 706. In the latter citation it is said that the word “equipment” is applied more to personal and movable property than to fixed or real property; and we think it manifest that the words “tools and appliances,” as used in the complaint, were intended to apply to implements or instruments of manual operation. We have found no evidence of the defendant’s negligent failure to provide such instrumentalities for the benefit of the plaintiff. There is nothing in the record to show that any tool or appliance was essential to the prosecution of the work in which the plaintiff was engaged, or was approved and in general use by persons doing the same or similar work. The plaintiff made use of a bar to slide the bolster to the end of the cap sills, and immediately after be bad worked the bolster from under the stringer be undertook to assist in raising it; *20but it was brought up by means of ropes and not by the use of tools. For this part of the work no tool or appliance was requested; apparently none was needed. These facts, it would seem, leave as the only basis of the cause of action the defendant's alleged negligent failure to provide a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff while carrying on his work.
Upon this cause of action the plaintiff must fail. Of course the defendant owed him the nondelegable duty to exercise due care to provide a reasonably safe place in which to work; but the question is whether the evidence tends to show a, breach of this duty. The answer, we think, may be found in the plaintiff’s own testimony. He was 19 years of age when injured. He had worked on the defendant’s trestle force in 1926; again for two months immediately before he was injured; also at some other time in the defendant’s carpenter department. In his testimony he said: “I was replacing a bolster, which is a piece of timber which goes between the stringers and cap sills. The cap sills sit upon the piling that is driven down. I think the trestle was about eighteen or twenty feet high. The bolster sits on the cap sills and the stringers are on top of the bolster and the cross-ties on the stringers. There is a guard rail at the end of the cross-ties. The bolsters are twenty-one inches wide and about six ór seven inches thick. They consist of three pieces of 7 x 14 timbers bolted together. They are about seven feet in length. On this day we were repairing bolsters and trestles. In order to do the work we had to take out the bolsters. At the time I was hurt we had taken the bolster out from under the stringer. It had to be taken out in order to repair it. They placed two ropes, one under each end of the bolster and around it on the outside of the guard rail and brought it up. The rope was looped around the bolster, one at each end. The men who were pulling on it were on top of the trestle. In pulling it up it got fastened under the cross-ties and I was instructed to help them. I was told to get it out from under the track. I went there like I was told, and I braced myself and reached over and got overbalanced. I braced myself by bearing against the guard' rail and bracing; the guard rail was round and I lost my balance and slipped and had no way to catch my hold. I was trying to get the bolster loose so they could bring it over the track when I fell. I struck on a cross piece with my back, which was about nine feet from the top of the trestle and slipped off and fell to the ground. . . . On top of the stringers were laid the cross-ties and at the end of the cross-ties on each end were the guard rails running parallel with the railroad lines in the middle of the trestle. The cap sills extended beyond the guard rail about twenty inches. The guard rail was about six inches above the cross-ties. In taking the bolster from under the trestle you jack up the stringer, carrying with it the cross-ties, guard rail and railroad rail,, and this had been jacked up at *21tbe time to clear tbe bolsters. I slid tbe bolster to tbe end of tbe cap sills using a piece of bar, working it out from under tbe stringer. Tbe ropes were fastened to tbe rail and passed over tbe guard rail and cross-ties and around under tbe bolster, and tbe loose ends were brought up. One rope on each end of tbe bolster. Tbe men were pulling tbe bolster up on top of tbe track. As they pulled on tbe ropes tbe bolster rolled up on tbe trestle against tbe guard rail. I went there to get it loose from tbe cross-ties. Tbe bolster was right underneath tbe cross-ties. Tbe cross-ties extend about an inch beyond tbe guard rail usually. I do not know whether these extended or not. It was about twenty-two inches from tbe cap sill to tbe top of tbe trestle. I went there to help raise tbe bolster and1'slipped and fell over. It bad been raining practically all that day.”
J. II. Potter testified that tbe plaintiff bad told him that be put bis foot against tbe stringer which bad a “rounding edge and everything being slick, be got overbalanced and there was nothing to protect him and nothing to do but fall.”
That the stringer bad a “rounding edge” can hardly be regarded as evidence of a negligent omission of the defendant’s duty. Tbe principle that an employer is required in the exercise of due care to provide for bis employee a reasonably safe place in which to work does not usually apply to “ordinary everyday conditions requiring no special care, preparation, or prevision, where the defects are readily observable, and there is no reason to suppose that the injury complained of will result.” Bunn v. R. R., 169 N. C., 648; Smith v. Ritch, 196 N. C., 72. Indeed, under the Federal Act, except as provided in section 4, the employee assumes, not only the ordinary risks of bis employment, but such as are extraordinary or due to the negligence of bis employer, when they are obvious or fully known and appreciated. R. R. v. Koske, .... . . U. S., ....., decided 18 February, 1929.
All the defendant’s evidence tends to show that its work was done in the customary method; and while, as the plaintiff insists, the test of responsibility is whether the employer has exercised due care, still if such methods of performing the work are adopted as are generally used by prudently conducted roads engaged in the same business and surrounded by like circumstances, the employer as a rule will not be liable. Railway Co. v. Barrett, 166 U. S., 617, 41 Law Ed., 1136.
Tbe defendant insists that tbe plaintiff’s injury resulted from chance or casualty, or from bis assumption of risk, and that in either event the defendant cannot be held to respond in damages. We concur to tbe extent of saying that tbe evidence is not sufficient to warrant tbe verdict which was returned or tbe judgment which was signed and entered of record. Tbe motion for nonsuit should have been granted.
Judgment reversed.