17 Mo. 121 | Mo. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
The city of St. Louis contracted with Peter Brooks, for the construction of the Biddle street sewer. The general right was reserved in the contract, to the city engineer, to inspect the work, and watch the progress of its execution. The contractor was, for a consideration agreed upon, to furnish the materials and do all the work, including the necessary excavations. In the progress of the work, a deep trench was cut, and the plaintiff’s intestate, Richard Barry, in bis petition, charged that, as be was carefully walking in the night time down Biddle street from Broadway to the boat on which be was employed, be fell into the trench and broke bis leg; that be was a stranger in the city and the accident occurred without any negligence on bis part, but on account of the gross negligence of the defendant, in not furnishing lights or other warnings of the exposed condition of the street. At the instance of the plaintiff, the court instructed the jury that the city was liable for any injury the plaintiff bad sustained by the negligence of the contractor, in not putting up sufficient barriers to warn or guard persons against the danger of attempting to pass down Biddle street in the neighborhood of the excavation. The propriety of this instruction raises the main question for the consideration of this court.
The defendant, in Rapser v. Cubitt, was employed to make certain alterations in a house, including the preparation and fixing of gas-fittings. He made a sub-contract with B., a gas-fitter, to execute this portion of the work ; in the course of doing it, through B.’s negligence, the gas exploded and injured the plaintiff; and for this injury, the suit was brought. Held, that B. was a contractor under the defendant and not his servant, and that the action could not be maintained, but the plaintiff must seek his redress against the gas-fitter.
The Court of Exchequer, in Quarman v. Burnett, says : “ the liability, by virtue of the principle of relation of master and servant, must cease, where the relation itself ceases to exist, and no other person than the master of such servant can be liable, on the simple ground that the servant is the servant of another, and his act the act of another ; consequently, a third person, entering into a contract with the master which does not raise the relation of master and servant at all, is not thereby rendered liable.”
In the case of Allen v. Hayward, the defendants were appointed commissioners under an act of parliament, for improving the navigation of a certain water course. They let out a part of the work to a contractor, with a provision in the contract, that the work should be done in such a manner as the defendants’ surveyor, from time to time, should direct; in the construction of the work, the contractor built a dam, which was so negligently made that it gave way, and the plaintiff’s land was flooded; but the court held the defendants not liable.
In the case of Reedie, also Hobbitt v. London N. W. Railway Co., the defendants, having authority, by their char
The case of Knight v. Fox & Henderson, is a very recent case, and reviews many of the authorities on this subject. The London and Blackwell Railway Company, for the purpose of making a branch line of their road, entered into a contract with Brassey to make it. Brassey entered into a sub-contract with the defendants to do a portion of the work. The defendants had, in their general employment, Cochrane, a surveyor, to manage their business in London, at a fixed annual salary ; on their obtaining the sub-contract from Brassey, they made a contract with Cochrane to supply the scaffolding necessary for the work, they agreeing to furnish the materials, including lights, for which they agreed to pay Cochrane a sum independent of his annual salary. In the prosecution''of the work, it became necessary to erect a scaffold with one of its poles resting on a sleeper attached.to the pavement of the highway; a single light was placed there at night, to warn passengers of this obstacle, and being insufficient for that purpose, the plaintiff fell over the pole and broke her leg. It was attempted to distinguish this case from many others bearing on the subject, because the defendants were bound to furnish the materials and the necessary lights, but the court held, that Cochrane was
In some of the English cases, a distinction was taken between fixed and personal property, but in many of the late cases, the propriety of the distinction is denied. See Milligan and Wedge, Allen and Hayward, Reedie v. London N. W. Railway Co. In our opinion, the question as to liability is is not controlled or influenced by any such distinction, or any such consideration.
The counsel, in all the cases to which we have referred, seeking to maintain the position contended for by the plaintiff in this present case, have relied upon the case of Bush v. Steinman, 1 Bos. & Pul. 403, and it has been pressed with zeal by the plaintiff’s counsel in this case. That case, apart from its age, is not entitled to much respect. Its correctness has been so often doubted, if not denied: it has been so much limited, modified and explained, that it has no longer the weight of an authority. I feel not inclined to yield to it, in the face of so many more recent cases, illustrated by very able judges in England, and enforced by the most satisfactory reasoning.
The case of Lowell v. Boston and Lowell Railroad Co., 23 Pick. 24, cited by the plaintiff, was against a private corporation, not a municipal one. The point was virtually conceded in the argument, and the court, in a few words, disposes of it, upon the authority of Bush v. Steinman.
The case of Mayor of New York v. Bailey, 2 Denio, 433, cited by the plaintiff, was reviewed by this court in Gurno v. City of St. Louis, 12 Mo. Rep. There the city of New York engages, under a special act of the legislature, in the construction of the Croton Waterworks, as a private corporation, in a private enterprize for emolument. It was not undertaken by the city in its municipal character, or in the discharge of any legislative functions, and the court of errors held, that the corporation was liable for the acts of its agents employed to do its business for its own private benefit, the same as any other corporation or individual would be. Many cases
In the case before us, the city, in order to protect and preserve the health of its citizens, by its corporate powers, passes an ordinance to construct a sewer within its corporate limits— a mere sanatary measure — not going miles beyond its corporate limits and engaging in a private enterprize to make money, although it may redound to the benefit of the citizens of the city, as the city of New York did, in constructing the Croton Water Works. Under this ordinance, a contract is made. The contractor is to furnish every thing — the street in which the sewer is to be built is given up to him, the city retaining the right and power to suspend the work, to watch over its execution, &e. It was the duty of the contractor to have put up the necessary barriers to warn persons of the danger. During the progress of this work, the possession of the sewer was neces
Other points were assigned for error and pressed by the. counsel for the appellant; but they will not be noticed, since the main question we have considered disposes of the case.