The complaint contains no averment that Colvin was an incompetent person to drive the team in question, or that there was any defect in the teams, wagons, or appliances for making shipments of goods. It is alleged in the complaint that the driving of the team was a duty of servants employed by the express company, and it is conceded .that, were Colvin an ordinary hired servant of the company, the complaint would be defective in that it fails to charge the company with any negligence or breach of duty to plaintiff in employing him. So we have for determination the single question whether the mere fact that Colvin was the vice principal of the express company in the
This question has been determined both ways. The courts of some states hold that, if an employer put one servant under the control of another, such servants are not fellow-servants, and the master is liable if the subordinate servant is injured by the negligence of the other, without regard to the nature of the work or business in which they were engaged at the time. The circuit court applied this rule when it overruled the demurrer to the complaint.
Other courts adhere to the doctrine that whether the relation of co-employee or fellow-servant exists between different employees engaged in the same business for the same employer is not to be determined by the rank or grade of either servant, but by the character of the act being performed by them. “ If it is an act that the law implies a contract duty on the part of the employer to perform, then the offending employee is not a servant, but an agent, but as to all .other acts they are fellow-servants.” 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 834, and cases cited.
This court is unmistakably committed to the latter rule, to wit, that the liability of the master depends upon the nature of the act in the performance of which the injury is inflicted, .without regard to the rank of the offending employee. In Brabbits v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 38 Wis. 289, the company was held liable to an employee for injuries caused by the use of an engine out of repair which it was the duty of the foreman of defendant’s shops to repair, but which he negligently omitted to do. It was not determined that the foreman was a vice principal, but the company, was held liable on the express ground that it owed a duty to plaintiff to repair the engine within a reasonable time after it became defective, and hence that it was liable
In Howland, v. M., L. S. & W. R. Co. 54 Wis. 226, the plaintiff was employed as a shoveler. to aid in removing snow from the railway track. He was in a car drawn by an engine, and the work of clearing the track was in charge of a conductor, to whose orders the plaintiff was subject. At a certain point the conductor directed plaintiff to remain in the car and, as it was alleged, negligently attempted to run the engine and car through a snowdrift on the track. In so doing the car was overturned and the plaintiff injured. It was held that the conductor and plaintiff were fellow-servants in the common business of clearing the track, and that the railway company was not liable for the negligence of the conductor.
The above cases fairly illustrate the doctrine of this court on the subject under consideration. In the Brabbits Oase the company was held, on the principle that it is liable to one of its servants for the negligence of another in respect to any duty intrusted to the latter to perform, which at the same time is a duty the company owes to the injured servant, no matter how humble or subordinate the employment of the offending servant may be. The real effect of the rule is to make any servant of the company who is charged with the performance of any duty which the company owes its servants a vice principal in respect to such duty. The case of Schultz v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 48 Wis. 375, affords an apt illustration of an application of this rule.
In the Howland Gase the company was held not liable for the negligence of the conductor, who for many pur-' poses is held to stand for the company, and who had control of the plaintiff, because the alleged negligent act did not pertain to a matter in respect to which the company
The question here under consideration was not reached on the appeal in the first action for the alleged injury, and there is no significance in the circumstance that the court there gave no opinion upon it, but expressly declined to do so. In this case there is no direct averment in the complaint that the express company was negligent, or that Colvin was incompetent to drive the team, or that the company failed in any duty it owed plaintiff. It simply alleges facts which show that Colvin chose to drive the team, as he had undoubted authority to do, instead of allowing plaintiff or some other employee of the company to drive it, and that he drove it so negligently that the plaintiff was thereby injured. Under the above rule, these averments show that Colvin and plaintiff were fellow-servants in the particular business in which they were engaged, and hence that the company is not liable for the negligence of Colvin.
It results from the foregoing views that the complaint fails to state a cause of action against the express company, and that the demurrer thereto should have been sustained.
By the Court.— The order overruling the demurrer to the complaint is reversed, and the circuit court directed to sustain such demurrer.