87 Ga. 161 | Ga. | 1891
Kimberly sued, the railroad company for damages, and alleged in his declaration that while the company was constructing its road, it made a deep cut and piled the fresh earth therefrom near his dwelling-house, and dammed up a small stream and ponded the water therefrom near the house; and that it also stationed near the house a camp of convicts whom it was using in said construction, and permitted the filth accumulating in the sinks of this camp and otherwise therein from the convicts, to flow from the camp and be deposited a few yards from the house ; by reason of which the air in and around the house became infected with noxious scents, malaria and other substances injurious to health, whereby plaintiff and his. wife both became sick and endured great pain and suffering and were unable to attend to their daily dutiesj etc. The defence of the railroad company was, that it did not do the acts complained of in the declaration ; that if they were done at all, they were done by the Chattahoochee Brick Company, an independent contractor which it had employed to build the railroad from Atlanta to Senoia. On the trial of the case the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant made a motion for a new trial on the various grounds set out therein, which was overruled, and it excepted.
The main question argued before us was whether, under the facts of this case, the railroad company was liable for the damages sustained by Kimberly. The general rule of law upon this subject is : where an individual or corporation contracts with another individual or corporation exercising an independent employment, for the latter to do a work not in itself unlawful or attended with danger to others, such work to be done according to the contractor’s own methods and not subject to the employer’s control or orders except as to
To the general rule there are several exceptions.
Applying the foregoing principles to the facts of this case, we find that the railroad company made a contract with the Chattahoochee Brick Company, whereby the latter agreed to build the former’s road from Atlanta to Senoia according to certain specifications ; and the railroad company did not retain any control over the contractor as to the method or manner of doing the work. The construction company was to furnish the labor and all the materials, including the pipes with which the sewers or culverts were to be built. All the control reserved by the road was, that its superintendent was to see that the road was built according to the contract. There is no indication in the record, outside oí some loose and illegal declarations of third parties, the admission of which as evidence we will speak of presently, tending to show that the railroad company
Nor do the facts of the case bring it within the third or the fourth exception. There was no duty imposed uj)on the railroad company, either by contract or by statute, to do this particular work, or to do it in a particular way. Its charter does not impose upon it the duty of building the road, and does not specify the manner in which it shall be built; nor is any liability imposed upon it for acts of the kind complained of in this case. The authorities all hold that a railroad company has the right to make a contract with other parties for the construction of its road, and it is held that a contract of this character is not such a delegation of its chartered rights as to render the company liable for unauthorized wrongs committed by the contractor or his servants while engaged in the work. “The principle that a railroad company cannot delegate to an employee its chartered rights and privileges so as to exempt it from liability, does not extend to the use of
As we have already seen, the case does not come within the fifth exception, for there is no legal evidence that the railroad company had any control over the construction, as to the manner or means of doing the work. Nor does it come within the next exception, for the facts do not show any ratification of the wrongful acts.of the contractor. It is not shown when the company accepted the road from the contractor. The evidence does show that the work near the plaintiff’s house was done either in March, April or May, and that about the 1st of June the plaintiff and his wife became sick. But under the contract the road was not to be turned over to the company until several months after this. The company not being in possession of the road at the time the plaintiff received the injury from the nuisance, and there being no evidence to show that it knew there was a nuisance, it cannot be said that the company ratified- any act of its contractor which created a nuisance.
It only remains for us to say that we think the court should have excluded the whole answer to the interrogatory set out in the 4th ground of the motion for a new trial, and that the error was not cured by the
The court should also have excluded the declarations of English and Hammond as set out in the 5th and 6th grounds of the motion. They were not the servants or agents of the railroad company, and any declarations they may have made would not bind the company. Judgment reversed.