49 So. 180 | Miss. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
The point most seriously pressed upon us by the learned counsel for appellant is that a hand-car is within the principle of section 193 of the Constitution of 1890. The cases of Bal
When we said in the case of Bradford Construction Co. v. Heflin, 88 Miss., at page 361, 42 South., at page 182, that “said section 193 of our constitution applies to railroad corporations proper which are engaged in the business of common carriers transporting freight and passengers, and to such employees when injured whilst doing work in some manner connected with the operation and use of the railroads,” we meant by the word “railroads” railroads proper—commercial railroads carrying freight and passengers. To our minds the proposition that a hand-car is inherently dangerous is one that cannot be supported on reason or principle. Hand-cars are no more inherently dangerous than other modes of transportation not in any way donnected with railroads proper, and not used on the rails of
Learned counsel for appellant, in an exceedingly strong brief, has referred us to many decisions, chiefly in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Texas, Kansas, and Alabama, holding that a hand-car is within the various acts t>f the legislature in those particular states. But ■ none of those acts in any of those states are couched in the same language as is contained in section 193 of our constitution. The Kansas act is set out in Union Trust Company v. Thomason, 25 Kan. 3, and is as follows: “Every' railroad company organized or doing business in this state shall be liable for all damages done to any employee of such company in consequence of any negligence of its agents, or by any mismanagement of its engineers or other employees, to any person sustaining such damage.” The court in that ease held that it embraced hand-ears. That may have been a proper construc
The state upon whose decisions the learned counsel for appellant chiefly relies is the state of Iowa, and the case which he presses upon us most strongly is the ease of C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v. James Artery, which was first decided by the circuit court of the United States for'the Northern District of Iowa, and afterwards affirmed by the United States Supreme Court. See 137 U. S. 507, 11 Sup. Ct. 129, 34 L. Ed. 747. The statute of Iowa in that case construed, first passed in 1862, and after-wards modified by Code 1873, § 1307, is as follows: “Section 1307. Every corporation operating a railway shall be liable for all damages sustained by any person, including employees of such corporation, in consequence of the neglect of agents, or by • any mismanagement of the engineers or other employees of the corporation, and in consequence of the willful wrongs, whether
In Labatt on Master and Servant, vol. 2, in an elaborate note, to wit, note 4, p. 2114, the author has collected, with discrimina
AVe think, after a most careful consideration of this case and all the decisions that have been cited, especially in view of the very careful construction of our section 193 of the Constitution of 1890, which we have made in the three cases first referred to in this opinion,. that a hand car in no proper sense be held to be inherently dangerous, within the principle saving section 193 of our Constitution from unconstitutionality. So to interpret our constitutional provision would be to expose that provision, in our judgment, to- the condemnation of the supreme court of the United States, on the reasoning of that court in many cases, resting the constitutionality of statutes like section 193 of our Constitution of 1890 on the ground of the inherent danger attending the operation of a steam railroad proper, operated by the highly dangerous agency 'of steam. The construction which we have heretofore put upon this section of our Constitution was so placed upon it to secure
The case of Norfolk & Portsmouth Traction Co. v. A. C. Ellington, Adm’r, etc., 108 Va. 245, 61 S. E. 779, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 117, is a Virginia case, very ably reasoned, in the course of which Whittle, J., speaking for the court, held that an electric street railway was not within their constitutional provision, Avhich was tantamount to holding that it was not inherently dangerous, since their constitutional provision, like ours, rests'upon the inherent dangerousness of the operation of steam railroads. The opinion is a masterly one, and this holding is strongly persuasive of the correctness of our view that under our Constitution, from which the Virginia Constitution is taken, a hand car is not inherently dangerous.
The case of Morris v. Railroad Co., 88 Miss. 539, 41 South. 267, is supposed by learned counsel for appellant to have been decided under section 193 of the Constitution; but this is a mistake. That section Avas not referred to in the briefs of either counsel in that case, nor in the opinion of the court. If that case liad been decided under section 193 of the Constitution, it was manifestly overruled by the Heflin case, supra, which was decided after the Morris case. "We do not understand the learned counsel for appellant to contend at all in this case that the plaintiff was not a fellow servant with Sims and the rest of the crew on the leArer car with Sims. Manifestly, under the decisions of
But this case cannot be aided by the Morris case, in that view. The facts of this ease, on this precise point, distinguish it plainly from the Morris case. Here Givens was not injured in. consequence of the order of Sims, ratified by Shields, the foreman of the crew, treating it, as plaintiff’s counsel does, as the order of said foreman Shields. It was a perfectly proper order to have been given, and a perfectly proper order to have obeyed, and Givens was not injured because of his obedience to that order; but he was injured manifestly by the gross negligence of Sims, the subhoss, a mere subordinate. It was this negligence of Sims, or those with him on the lever car, in not checking up that car, which caused the injury to the appellant; not the order of Shields to the appellant to get off and stop the push car. In the Morris case the injury was inflicted by the direct order of the superintendent himself. Here the order of the superintendent had nothing to do with the injury—was a mere condition of the injury, the causa sine qua non; but the gross negligence of Sims was the causa causans, and his act imposed no liability on the company, since he was a mere subordinate and fellow servant, in our opinion, with the appellant. It is the misfortune of the appellant in this case that his injuries should have occurred at a time prior to the passage of the act attempt
On Const. § 193, and law, as it stood when this injury occurred, and under both Constitution and said laws as they have been interpreted in the three cases, supra, cited at the beginning of this opinion, the action of the learned court below was correct, and the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.