17 Mont. 189 | Mont. | 1895
The defendant contends that the court erred in submitting to the- jury the question whether the de fendant or the Great Northern Railway Company was operat ing that part of the railroad involved in this controversy at the time plaintiff was injured, and that, the court having submitted the question, the evidence did not warrant the finding of the jury that the defendant was operating it. This was an issue raised by the pleadings. The plaintiff alleged in his complaint that the defendant was operating the road, and the defendant, in its answer, denied it, and alleged affirmatively that the Great Northern Railway Company Was operating the line at the time of the injury. So we think there was not only no error in submitting this question to the jury, but that, under the pleadings, the court was required so to do. And in- this connection it is proper to remark that the court submitted it most favorably to the defendant in the instructions given.
The record discloses some conflict in the evidence upon which the jury acted in arriving at the conclusion that the defendant was operating the road at the time in controversy. But it seems to be unnecessary to notice at length this conflict in the evidence. It is evident that the plaintiff was employed by the authorized officers of the defendant company; that he was paid by the defendant for his services; that the posted orders and bulletins in the bulletin books at the stations on the road showed that the defendant was operating the road, through its officers, at the time in controversy. It may be true that there was some private arrangement between the- two companies by which the defendant was operating the road for the
We are of opinion that there is sufficient evidence to support the verdict in this respect. And .besides, the district court passed upon this question on the motion for a new trial, and we see no abuse of discretion in its ruling to justify us in reversing its action. We think it clearly appears that the injuries received by plaintiff resulted from the negligent manner of operating the train on which he was employed.
The train had no headlight, or at least no sufficient oné. The conductor, knowing the defective condition of the headlight, should have wired from Floweree, a station on the road, to Great Falls, the headquarters, for permission to bring in his train withput one. The conductor, on arriving at the yard limits at Great Falls without a headlight, should have sent out a flagman to see that the main track was clear before entering. The evidence warranted the finding of the jury that there was negligence. The question whether these acts were the negligent acts of the defendant, or whether the defendant is responsible for such acts of negligence, will be discussed hereafter.
Having arrived at the point and conclusion that plaintiff was injured as a result of the negligence of the persons in charge of the train on which he was employed, we think it unnecessary to discuss the questions raised as to the negligence of the engineer of the switch engine which ran into the train on which plaintiff was employed, and which caused the collision from which his injuries resulted, especially so as it is inferable from the evidence that there would not have been a collision if the train on which plaintiff was working had been supplied with a headlight. It is fair to conclude from the evidence that the engineer of the switch engine could and would
The really serious and important questions which confront us on this appeal are those involved in the settlement of the law applicable to the case by the district court. The defendant requested the court to give the jury the following instructions:
“(11) Where a person enters into the service of the railroad company he thereby undertakes to run all the ordinary risks to the employment, including his own negligence or unsJdllfulness and that of his fellow servants who are engaged in the same line of duty, provided the company has taken reasonable care and precaution in engaging and retaining competent servants to discharge the duties assigned to them.
“(12) If you believe from the evidence that at the time of the accident in question the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant as a brakeman on one of its freight trains, and that while so employed, and in the line of his duties, he received an injury resulting from the negligence or want of ordinary care of the engineer in charge of the locomotive which was drawing the train upon which the plaintiff was employed, then the court instructs you, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff and such engineer were fellow servants in the same grade or line of service within the meaning of the law; and the defendant, if otherwise without fault, would not be liable for such injury.”
The court modified the first of these instructions by striking out the words in italics, and refused the second altogether. We presume the court struck out of the first instruction the words “including his own negligence or unskillfulness” for the reason that the instructions given by the court fully, and favorably to the defendant, covered the ground of the plaintiff’s own negligence and unskillfulness. The court struck out of said instruction the words, “and that of his fellow servants who are engaged in the same line of duty,” and refused the
The action of the court in respect to these instructions was confessedly'based upon the opinion that section 697, p. 817, Comp. St. 1887, which reads as follows: “That in every case the liability of the corporation to a servant or employe acting under the orders of his superior, shall be the same in case of injury sustained by default or wrongful act of his superior, or to an employe not appointed or controlled by him as if such servant'or employe were a passenger,” — constituted the law fixing the liability of the defendant in the case, and that the declarations of law as requested were in conflict with that statute. This statute is, therefore, brought before this court for the first time for judicial interpretation.
The counsel for the defendant contends that under the common law the defendant corporation had performed its whole duty to the plaintiff as its employe when it had used ordinary and reasonable care in providing (1) safe machinery, (2) furnishing a safe place to work, and (3) competent fellow servants to prosecute the common employment; and that the statute in question does not increase or change the defendant’s liability at common law; that it does not change the common law in relation to fellow servants; that it- does not establish the superior servant doctrine and enlarge the common-law liability -of the defendant in any respect, and was not so intended by the legislature.
The learned counsel of defendant, in his able and exhaustive -brief, has cited numerous authorities in support of the common-law rule applicable in such cases; but these authorities do not attempt to discuss the effect of such legislation as is here involved upon the common-law rule. It cannot be disputed that the common-law rule has been modified, if not changed, both in England and in many of the American states, by recent legislation on the subject. So we think we may omit a discussion of the common-law rule, and look to the course and effect of modern legislation on this subject.
But we are not without further light and assistance in the interpretation of the statute under discussion. It has been the subject of direct construction by two of the most respectable courts of the country.
In the United States circuit court of the Northern district of Iowa, in the case of Ragsdale v. Railroad Co., 42 Fed. 383, a case involving directly the construction of this statute, and its effect upon the common-law rule insisted upon in this case, Judge Shiras, delivering the opinion of the court, said : ‘‘On part of plaintiff it is further claimed that the statute of Montana, in force when the accident happened, modifies the comm on-law rule in regard to the liability for the acts of fellow servants,” and, after quoting the statute, he continues : ‘ ‘ This statute does not go to the length of abrogating the general rule that the master is not liable to an employe for the consequences of the negligence of a coemploye, but it does enact, in effect, that a superior is not a coemploye with an inferior, and that one may be a superior, as compared with another, even though the former does not control the latter. The enactment is based upon the known fact that, in carrying on the business of railroading, there are recognized grades-among the numerous classes of employes, and, while they are-all working for a common master, and for an ultimate common result, they are practically not all coservants. The pres
After sustaining the demurrer in the case, as shown above, the defendant amended its answer, and alleged that plaintiff’s injuries were the result of the negligence of the engineer of
In the circuit court of appeals, Eighth circuit, in Northern Pac. R. R. Co. v. Mase, 11 C. C. A. 63, 63 Fed. 114, decided July 16, 1894, — a case involving directly the interpretation of the Montana statute under discussion, and its effect upon the common-law rule, — Judge Sanborn, speaking for the court, said: ‘ ‘The result is that the right of recovery in this action, if it exists at all, must rest in the statute of Montana, ’ ’ and, after citing the statute, proceeded as follows : ‘ ‘ This séction is found in a chapter of the general laws of Montana relating to railroad corporations, and it seems to affect the liability of such corporations only. It goes without saying that the purpose of this statute was to extend the liability of railroad companies to their servants for the negligence of servants of a higher grade. It is equally clear that the pronoun ‘ him ’ in the clause, ‘ or to an employe not appointed or controlled by him,’ refers to the employe’s ‘superior,’ and that the intention of the legislature was to extend the liabilities of the companies for the negligence of superior servants for the benefit of two classes of employes, viz : those injured by the default or wrongful' act of a superior employe under whose orders they
We think from the interpretation given to the statute in question by the above authorities that it cannot be doubted that the common-law rule contended for by defendant was modified and changed thereby, and that such was the intention of that legislation. And it is no less plain that this statute establishes the principle that there is a difference in the grade of the employes engaged in a common employment, and gives a right of action to a servant injured through the negligence of a superior employe or servant against a master, when such injured servant is without fault or negligence on his part. In view of the extent to which the common-law rule has been carried, the enactment of such legislation is not surprising, nor are we prepared to reprobate the wisdom of the policy of establishing a legislative rule that relaxes the rigor of the common-law in such cases. Having arrived at this conclusion, we see no error in the action of the court in this respect.
The defendant contends that the evidence shows that plaintiff was injured as a result of his own carelessness and negligence. This was a question of fact for the determination of the jury. It was submitted to them by the court under instructions remarkably favorable to the defendant. We think the evidence supports the finding that his injuries did not result from his own negligence. We think the evidence clearly establishes the allegation that the plaintiff was injured through the negligence of the conductor and engineer of the train on which plaintiff was employed. As they were the superior employes of the plaintiff, and the plaintiff having been found to have been without fault or negligence, the negligence of such superior employes was the negligence of the defendant.
We have considered the many assignments of error in the record, relating principally to the admission of certain evidence. We think these, and all other assignments not treated above, immaterial, and without merit. The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.