Clement v. Canfield

28 Vt. 302 | Vt. | 1856

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redeield, Ch. J.

The only question here is, whether the defendant, being the lessee of the Rutland & Washington railroad, and running the same, under his lease, no cattle guards at a certain farm crossing adjoining the road being made and maintained according to the requirements of the general railroad act, and injury being sustained by the plaintiff through the defect of such cattle guards, is liable for such injury.

The provision of the general railroad law is, that all railroads shall maintain fences and cattle guards, at all farm crossings, for *304the security of the landowners, and until such fences and cattle guards shall be duly made, the corporation and its agents shall be liable for all damages which shall be done by their agents, or engines, if occasioned by the want of such fences and cattle guards.” The question is, whether a lessee can run a railway in defiance of this provision of the general law of the state. If that is so, it certainly shows the statute very defective, and liable to be evaded by a very hollow device. But it does not seem to us there is any difficulty in extending the statute to every one who runs the road, under or by permission of the company, until such fences and cattle guards are erected. The word agent is a very extensive term, and may be fairly applied to almost any one who performs the office of another. This lessee, in one sense, certainly, is the agent of the company. He is performing their functions, and clothed with them prerogatives, or he could not be allowed to take tolls, or freight and fare upon the road, or to run engines where he does, probably. In this sense he is the agent of the company. And having, as such agent, acquired the powers and prerogatives of the company, is it anything unreasonable that he should, while exercising such powers and prerogatives, be subjected to the same liabilities which the law imposes upon the company and their agents who destroy property ? But it is said that a lessee is not of the class of agents referred to in the statute. That the statute probably refers primarily to those agents of the company who are under their control, like engineers and conductors. But does not the very relation in which the term agent is used, in this statute, show that the legislature must have adopted that most extensive term for the very purpose of reaching any and all persons who might acquire the right to run the road, under the powers conferred upon the corporation ? Any other construction would seem to be contrary to the fair use of the term agent, with reference to the subject matter. I am well aware that, a lessee is not the agent of the corporation for all, or for most purposes. But in this sense, inasmuch as they execute these important public functions, under and by virtue of the franchises conferred upon the corporation, they may fairly be regarded as their agents, for the purpose of exposing the corporation to liability for allowing their road to be run before it was properly fenced and guarded, as was held in Nelson *305v. The Vt. & C. R. Co., 26 Vt. 717; and equally for the purpose of exposing themselves to liability, under the statute, for running engines upon the road and killing cattle, through defect of cattle guards.

The principle of the case is much the same as in Baxter ats. Vermont Central Railroad, 22 Vt. 365, where the defendants are made liable for the acts of the contractor in claiming right of eminent domain.

And the declaration, alleging that the defendant became and was liable for all damages caused by his running the road, through defect of cattle guards, is well enough. This is the very liability which the statute imposes upon the company, and upon all its agents, who run the road, or assist in doing so, whereby damage accrues. It is true that the statute imposes, primarily, no duty upon any one but the corporation, to build fences and cattle guards. But every one is made liable, who runs the road, by or under the authority of the corporation, for all damages caused through defect of such cattle guards. It was, therefore, the duty of the defendant to see to it, that such cattle guards existed, while he run the road, or to accept the other alternative of the statute, by paying all damages caused through the defect.

Judgment affirmed.

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