13 Minn. 30 | Minn. | 1868
By the Court This is an appeal from an order denying a new trial.
It is urged by the defendant as a ground for a new trial, that “ those in charge of the boat, and those in charge of the engine, were engaged in the same general employment, to wit, that of transporting passengers and freight between St. Paul and Mankato, and the plaintiff, therefore, cannot recover.”
The railroad company is a corporation separate and distinct from the steamboat company. It was admitted that the defendant had an arrangement with the steamboat, by which the defendant was to carry passengers and freight to Belle Plaine, and the steamboat was to carry them from Belle
The plaintiff introduced and read to the jury a ticket admitted by the defendant to be such as was sold by it and the boat, pursuant to the above agreement, consisting of a general ticket from “ St. Paul to Mankato, Minn. Y. E. E. & N. W. C. Pkt. Co.,” with coupons attached, indicating the parts of the route traversed by the respective carriers, as above agreed. Upon this state of facts we are of opinion there is no such unity in fact, or legal identity between the railroad corporation and the packet company, as will render their respective employees servants of a common master; and the rule urged by the defendant’s counsel that a principal is not liable to one of his agents or servants for injuries sustained through the negligence of another agent or servant, when both are engaged in the same general business, is not applicable. It appears that the boat had moored at the track; with the knowledge atid without objéction from the railroad company, and that owing to high water the passengers could only pass to and from the town and boat by passing along the railroad track ; and that about this time there were persons upon and in the immediate vicinity of the track; tbe brakeman on
It is a well settled rule, that although the defendant may be guilty of negligence, unless there was some intentional wrong on his part, the plaintiff cannot recover for an injury to which he himself contributed. McMahon vs Davidson, 12 Minn. 372. This is the important question, it seems to us, in this case, and from a careful consideration of the testimony, we think, as the evidence now stands, it shows such negligence of the plaintiff as will prevent his recovering in this action. The plaintiff himself says that “ when the passengers started to come aboard, the locomotive and tender and two freight cars ran up the main track, and then down on the side track, without ringing any bell; the passengers were on the side track; they saw the engine, and had just time to get the passengers off the side track; the engine and cars continued running down the side track, and struck our staging, and slid it along the track, until it came against the car.which was standing on the side track below the staging ; they then started ahead, and ran up some distance, and came down again, and the staging cracked that time they struck it; they then ran up the track and stopped. I hallooed to the people on the shore, the railroad officials and others, and our captain
On his cross-examination the plaintiff testified : “The train had been below the road eight or ten minutes ; * * during the eight or ten minutes they ran down to the staging three times; the grade from the public road down to where the boat was is considered steep for a railroad ; it descended down to where the boat, was ; there was almost no gradé where the boat was ; I saw the cars back down the first time ; I couldn’t say if they struck the staging that time; after runping down that time they started forward, and went up forty or fifty feet, and then came down the second time; my impression is they
Captain Holmes testifies that the plaintiff was carpenter on the boat. “ It was his duty as carpenter to look after the staging.”
It appears from the testimony that the plaintiff was accjuainted with the steep grade ; that the ears had backed down on the side track to the boat three times within the ten minutes preceding the accident; that at one of these times the staging was broken by the cars; that a car stood on the track immediately below the staging; that he expected the train to back down again to take this car, and that either the staging would prevent its coupling, or if it did couple, that it would
The fact of standing on the rail road track with his back to a train of ears, under such circumstances, in the absence of anything showing necessity or excuse for it, is certainly negligence; there is no reason to believe that this staging might not have been extricated without the plaintiff or any one going on to the track at all, by other - means, and certainly no reason appears why he should place his back to the train. The fact that it was his duty to look to the staging, does not excuse the negligent manner by which he risked his life in its discharge. Who can say that if the plaintiff had exercised ordinary care by placing himself in a position where he could see, and better hear, the train, this accident might not have been avoided ?
With this conduct of the plaintiff, unexplained, we think the verdict should not be sustained ; but other evidence may be adduced which will show the necessity of, or remove the appearance- of negligence, from the conduct of the plaintiff.
The order appealed from is reversed, and a new trial granted.