Lead Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.) A decision of this case involves the determination of only one question. That question may be stated thus: Does the petition, which is brought against the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. and B. C. Poppell, a section foreman of said company, state a cause of action against B. C. Poppell, the foreman, on which he can be held individually liable? If no cause of action is set out against B. C. Poppell, the resident defendant, the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, the 'nonresident defendant, has the right to remove the case to the proper Federal court, as being a controversy solely between citizens of different states. “Where a nonresident corporation and -its resident employee are joined as defendants in a suit filed in a
Judge Story, in his work on Agency, founded the following statement on what he calls Lord Holt’s celebrated judgment in Lane v. Cotton, supra: “The agent is also personally liable to third persons for his own misfeasances and positive wrongs. But he is not, in general (for there are exceptions), liable to third persons for his own nonfeasánces or omissions of duty, in the course of his employment. His liability, in these latter cases, is solely to his principal, there being no privity between him and such third persons, but the privity exists only between him and his principal. ' And hence the general maxim as to all such negligences or omissions of duty is, in cases of private agency, ‘respondeat superior.’” “The distinction, thus propounded, between misfeasance and nonfeasance, between acts of direct, positive wrong, and mere neglects by agents as to their personal liability therefor, may seem nice and artificial,
However, this rule has been criticized and limited by many text-writers. In 1 Jaggard on Torts, 288, 289, it is said: “The thinness and uncertainty of the distinction between the misfeasance, malfeasance, and nonfeasance leaves an exceedingly unstable basis on which to rest an important principle of liability. It would, .indeed, seem to be a fair criticism on the subsequent reasoning that the courts have, in applying the distinction, engaged in a solemn game of logomacy. Thus, in Bell v. Josselyn (1855),
Our courts have in later decisions adopted a rule limiting considerably the distinction between nonfeasance and misfeasance. Cobb, J., in delivering the opinion of the court in Southern Ry. Co. v. Grizzle, 124 Ga. 735 (
In the case of Carter v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 84 S. C. 546 (
We recognize that the broad statement that an agent or servant is liable for a misfeasance, but not fife a nonfeasance, has long been an accepted principle in this State and until comparatively recent times has been followed by our courts. As will be seen from the more recent Georgia cases heretofore cited, this principle has been criticized and limited.' The tendency, however, has been nominally to adhere to the letter of the principle, but to say that a nonfeasance in most instances amounts to a misfeasance. Judge Wade, in Southern Ry. Co. v. Sewell, supra, quotes approvingly this language : “If an agent never does anything towards carrying out his contract with his principal, but wholly omits or neglects to do so, the principal is the only person who can maintain an action against him for the nonfeasance, but if the agent once actually undertakes and enters upon the execution of a particular work, it. is his duty to exercise reasonable care in the manner of executing it, so as not to cause any injury to third persons which may be the natural consequence of his acts [or failure to act], and he can not, by abandoning its execution midway and leaving things in a dangerous condition, exempt himself from liability to any person who suffers injury by reason of having left them without proper safeguards.” The duty owed the master by the servant is generally one of contract. His nonfeasance may be a breach of this contract. The violation of a duty a servant owes a third person is a tort, whether it be a so-called misfeasance or nonfeasance. When the servant assumes to act for the master, his duty to third persons, so far as relates to the proper performance of the obligations assumed for and in behalf of the master, is, to the extent of such assumption of duty, the same as that, of the master, and his failure to perform makes him liable as the master, provided, of course, his failure to perform can be said to be the proximate cause of the injury. He can not justify himself as Cain did of old by asking, “Am I my
.Taking the present petition under consideration, it is a joint action against both the employer and the employee for concurrent acts of negligence. It alleges that it was the duty of the defendant railroad company at all times to keep its right of way reasonably clear and free of dry grass and weeds and other easily ignitable substances; that, recognizing this duty to the public, it was one of the duties of the section foreman, B. C. Poppell, to keep the said right of way clear; that the defendants partly performed this duty by,“ just preceding the time in question, burning over and freeing from easily ignitable material the greater portion of the right of way in the area in question,” but did not complete this duty by clearing off the small strip where the fire caught, which strip was not more than a quarter of a mile in width; that the defendants actually cleared this portion of the right of way of trees and high bushes, “by reason of which dry grass could and did grow in large quantities thereon and had grown and had accumulated in said area, and said portion of said right of way was so covered at the time of and preceding said fire;” that there was nothing to prevent the defendants from clearing said portion of the right of way. The defendant Poppell had control of a dangerous situation which he might have contemplated would be dangerous in the normal course of human events. It was his positive duty to the plaintiff not to injure his property. His failure to act may be considered the sole juridic cause of the injury. See, in this connection, Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Daniels, 8 Ga. App. 775 (
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The question of the removal of a case to the Federal court is determined by the facts set forth in the plaintiff’s petition and not by the- conclusions alleged therein; and it is for the court to determine from the facts alleged whether a cause of action is set out against the resident defendant. See, in this connection, Brown v. Massachusetts Mills, 7 Ga. App. 642 (67
