150 Pa. 50 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff under instructions which are not now before us, and the court below entered judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto on a point reserved. The learned judge held that the railroad company defendant -was bound not only to build but to maintain the bridge. This conclusion is not challenged by the present appeal, and we must accept it as correct. But the learned judge further held that as the primary duty to the public to keep the highways in safe condition rests upon the township, the plaintiff’s action should have been brought against it and not against the railroad. This is the only question raised by this record.
.For the purposes of this case as now presented it might be
But it is desirable to consider the case upon a somewhat broader view. The basis of the opinion of the learned judge below, and the argument of the appellee, is that the township is liable to the plaintiff, and it seems to have been accepted without question that in such case the defendant was not liable. But this does not appear to us to be a necessary or just conclusion. It is opposed, in the first place, to the general rule that a party injured by the concurrent tort of two may sue either, and this right is not affected by any considerations of primary or secondary duties of the tort feasors as between themselves.
But, further, if the railroad is charged with the duty of maintaining the approaches of the bridge in a safe condition for travel, then it is the party ultimately liable; its duty in that regard is a duty absolute, not to the township merely but to the public, to be enforced generally by the supervisors as the representatives of the public, but specially for his own relief by any person specially injured by neglect of it. As against such person the failure of the township to enforce performance would not excuse the railroad. If the supervisors accepted the performance as sufficient and thought the bridge safe, that would not be a defence if the jury were of a different opinion. The township and the railroad are not in the relation of master and servant or principal and agent, nor in any position for the application of the rule respondeat superior. They are independent parties, each charged with a duty to the
Again, it is unquestionable that any one negligently leaving an obstruction in the highway is at once liable to a party injured: R. R. Co. v. McTighe, 46 Pa. 316. The municipality does not become liable until notice express or implied from lapse of time. To held that the liability of the obstructor ceased when that of the city began, would be to hold that a liability from a wrongful act might be escaped by a continuance of the wrong.
Turning now to the authorities, we have not found any decision upon the precise point, but the general drift of analogous cases seems to support the views already expressed. That the party who places or is responsible for permitting an obstruction in the highway is liable to one injured thereby, is very ancient common law, and has been uniformly held in this state from Beatty v. Gilmore, 16 Pa. 463 to Dickson v. Hollister, 123 Pa. 421; while the unsuccessful effort of municipalities to escape liability where there is another party who may be charged has aiready been alluded to (see Township of Newlin v. Davis, 77 Pa. 317; Dalton v. Upper Tyrone, 137 Pa. 18). I have not found in either line of decisions a single one which is rested upon grounds that would make the right of action against either party a defence for the other against the party injured. On the contrary, while this point is nowhere speeifi
Looking bejmnd our own state we find the law thus unqualifiedly stated in Dillon on Municipal Corporations (ed. 1890) : “ No person.....has the right to do any act which renders the use of the street hazardous, or less secure than it was left by the municipal authorities. Whoever does so.....is lia
In Elliot v. Concord, 27 N. H. 204, where the town was held liable in the first instance to the party injured it was said for the plaintiff arguendo; “Plaintiff may have a remedy against the town or the railroad corporation.” And this argument prevailed with the court, though the liability of the railroad company was not specially noticed in the opinion.
In Willard v. Newbury, 22 Vt. 458, Redfield, J., charged the jury : “ The town were liable to the plaintiff, and he was not obliged to look to the company, even if thejr had also been negligent and might so have become liable to any one suffering injury on that account.” This was affirmed by the court and it is plainly intimated that there was no doubt of the railroad’s liability. This was followed and affirmed in Batty v. Dux
It is quite clear to us, from our examination of the subject, »that the general consensus of judicial opinion, and the basis of the reasoning on which many of the decisions are rested, is that the party injured may, if he so elects, sue at once the active wrong-doer who is ultimately liable, and the absence of any express adjudication of the point is due mainly if not altogether to the absence of any serious doubt on that question and the fact that the real struggle has uniformly been by the towns to escape their primary liability.
Judgment reversed and judgment entered for plaintiff on the verdict.