170 Ind. 94 | Ind. | 1908
Appellee’s decedent, an employe of a traveling show company, was fatally injured in a collision while being hauled by appellant in a car belonging to his employer.
The complaint alleges that the John H. Sparks Show Company was engaged in giving exhibitions in towns and cities of Indiana, and to enable it to transfer its employes, animals and property from one place to another, owned and had in use four railway cars, properly fitted up and arranged for the business; that the decedent was an employe of the show company, which company had a contract with appellant to haul said show cars from place to place over its railroad; that the show company having concluded a performance at Veedersburg, and loaded all its property and employes on its said ears, the defendant, by its employes, while engaged in making up a train, took said cars from the siding onto the defendant’s main track for the purpose of hauling them to Crawfordsville; that the plaintiff ’s decedent, as. one of the employes of said show company, was lawfully upon and in- one of said show cars, and while said ears were lawfully upon the tracks of the defendant, the defendant, by its employes, negligently ran one of its engines and ears against the car occupied by the decedent, with great force and violence, whereby said show, car was crushed and the decedent fatally injured, without fault of the decedent or his next of kin.
Appellant’s demurrer to the complaint being overruled, it answered in two paragraphs: (1) the general denial; (2) that at the time and on the occasion alleged in the complaint the defendant was not acting as a common carrier,' and sustained no such relation to John Henry, Jr.; that the car on which the latter was injured was not at the time used for common carriage, or public conveyance, but, with the other show cars, was employed in the private business of said show company in housing, storing and transporting its employes, property, animals and effects from point to
"The above-described ears must conform to the requirements of the laws of the United States as to height of draw-bars and their equipment with grab irons, automatic draw-bars and air-brakes. * * †
The ears are to be loaded and unloaded by the party of the second part [show company]. * * *
The engineers, conductors and brakemen to be provided by the party of the first part shall be sober and reliable. * * *
The party of the second part shall assume all responsibility for damages to persons or property which are hereby transported at its sole risk, and it further agrees to indemnify and hold said railroad company harmless on account of any claim for personal injuries or damage to property. ’ ’
It is further averred in the answer thát the consideration of said contract was, as stated herein, that the defendant should and did assume no liability whatever for damages or injuries to said show company, at whose sole risk it agreed said transportation should be furnished, and who, by said agreement, provided and stipulated that this defendant should be held harmless on account of any claim for personal injury; that John Henry, Jr., occupied said car on said occasion and at said time,- and his only relation to this defendant was under and by virtue of said contract,
But it is argued that appellee’s decedent was not a party to any contract relieving appellant from any liability for its negligence. To this it is suggested with greater force that the decedent was not a party to any contract, with appellant for his carriage. He had made no effort to procure transportation from the railroad company. He had bought no ticket. He had tendered no fare to the appellant. He had entered the show car for passage to Crawfordsville with the knowledge that he had obtained from appellant no right to be carried upon the 'railroad. As a legal proposition, he was required to know that the car which he had entered .would not be hauled to Crawfordsville under the legal rules which usually govern transportation by a public carrier. He was likewise bound to know that the car would be drawn to its destination under some private arrangement between his employer and the railroad company, and that whatever right he had to be carried over the railroad arose from the contract or agreement made by his employer with appellant. His right could not rise higher than its source. Being an employe of the show company, his right to transportation had been purchased, or stipulated for, by his employer. When he entered the showman’s service, and accepted the method of transportation provided for the employes, the acceptance was subject to all the conditions upon which it rested. In other words, he could not accept the benefit provided by his employer and put aside the burden.
In Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Mahoney, supra, the plaintiff was an employe of the Adams Express Company, and sued the railroad company for personal injuries alleged to have
But it is argued by the appellee that the law as declared
So far as it was the decedent’s contract, it was with the railroad company, in effect relieving it, as a private carrier, under a special agreement,, from liability for accidents, from all sources, affecting him. The decedent was not an employe of the railroad company. His contract was not with his employer releasing a third person from liability for negligence. Nor was it a contract of an employe with a third person releasing his employer from liability for negligence.
In any view that may be taken of the relation sustained by appellee’s decedent to the contract between his employer and the railroad company, it cannot be said to fall within the inhibitions of the act of 1901, supra, and must, therefore, be held to be governed by the 'principles pf the common law. Under this holding the railroad company’s second paragraph of answer set up a good defense.
The judgment is therefore reversed, with instructions to overrule the demurrer to the second paragraph of answer, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.