94 Kan. 590 | Kan. | 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff sued to recover for damages to a grain elevator caused by negligence of the defendant in operating its trains. The elevator stood on the right of way of defendant and a freight car got off the track and was pushed through the elevator building. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant appeals.
The answer alleged that defendant had leased to the plaintiff, at a yearly rental of $6, a portion of its right
The sole question in the case is whether or not the provision of the lease exempting the railway company from liability is valid. The plaintiff seeks to avoid the effect of the provision on the ground that it is against public policy, and argues that the erection of elevators along its right of way is something which becomes necessary to every railway in order that it may furnish adequate facilities to the public; that if the plaintiff had not made the lease and erected the elevator, the company would have been required to.do so in order to furnish facilities ■ to shippers of grain* The defendant’s contention is that this clause of the lease in no manner relieved the railway company from any public duty; that one of the principal considerations for the license to build and maintain the warehouse on its right of way was the provision exempting the company from such damages; and that the public had and has no interest whatever in the question which of the parties to the lease should be held responsible for such damages.
The question can not be considered a new one. Leases of this character are being made every day by common carriers throughout the country. In 3 Elliott on Railroads, 2d ed., § 1236, it is said:
“But where property is placed on a railway right of way by virtue of a contract in which the owner releases the railroad company from any and all liability
In Hartford Ins. Co. v. Chicago &c. Railway, 175 U. S. 91, 44 L. Ed. 84, the defendant leased a tract of land, being part of its depot grounds, for the purpose of erecting and maintaining a cold-storage warehouse, the lessee paying an annual rent of $5, in advance, and upon the express condition releasing the railway company from all liability or damage by reason of injury to or destruction of any building placed thereon by fire, or from damage done by trains or cars running off the track. The supreme court of the United States said in that case:
“No one had the right to put a warehouse or other building upon the land of the railroad corporation without its consent; and the corporation was under no obligation to the public, or to the partnership, to permit the latter to do so.” (p. 99.)
The court held that the principal consideration in the contract for the license to build and maintain the warehouse on this strip of land was the stipulation exempting the company from liability to the licensee for any such damages, and the public had no interest in the question which of the parties to the contract should be responsible for such damages to property placed on the land of the corporation. The court distinguishes a case of this kind from that where a railroad company transfers its entire property and franchises to another corporation and seeks to relieve itself from the duties imposed upon it by its charter. Another case in point is Griswold v. Ill. Cent. R’y Co., 90 Iowa, 265, 57 N. W. 843. In the opinion it was said:
“Much as the public may have been interested in the convenience of such a place of business, it had no interest as to who should carry the hazard incident to that property being located as it was.” (p. 272.)
The only Kansas case at all like this is Railroad Co. v. Blaker, 68 Kan. 244, 75 Pac. 71, where the court without-deciding that the rule referred to in the foregoing authorities should be followed, held that such an exemption “was not a license, however, negligently to set out fires which might burn the elevator and pass over the right of way, destroying other property.” • (p. 248.) There was a similar provision in the lease by which Blaker & Company assumed the risk of destruction by fire of property on the right of way, and the decision merely went so far as to hold that the company would still be liable for damages to other property belonging to the lessee to which the fire spread after it had started in the leased premises. The question here was not expressly decided.
No case has been cited and we have found none where similar exemptions have been declared in contravention of public policy, and we are constrained to adopt the reasoning of the supreme court of the United States and the Iowa court, and vto hold that the provision in this lease can not be said to be void on the ground of public policy.
Section 6998 of the General Statutes of 1909, making railroads in this state liable for all damages to personal property arising from any neglect on the part of the company is invoked by the plaintiff. That section would apply were it not for the stipulation in the lease exempting the company from such liability, and the only thing we have to determine is whether the contract exempting the company is contrary to public policy. The cases of K. P. Rly. Co. v. Peavey, 29 Kan. 169, Railway Co. v. Fronk, 74 Kan. 519, 87 Pac. 698, and Sewell v. Railway Co., 78 Kan. 16, 96 Pac. 1007, are not in point, for the reason that they all involved liability for injuries to employees, and it was held that because of the interest which the state has in the lives, health
Our conclusion is that it does not, and therefore the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer and to enter judgment for the defendant.