43 Minn. 496 | Minn. | 1890
The controversy in this case grows out of an attempt by the Fargo Southern Railroad Company to make a crossing over the track and road-bed of the defendant at Wahpeton, Dakota. The plaintiff was foreman of railway repairs and construction for the defendant,' and was directed by it to repair its track, which had already been cut and injured at the place in question, and to prevent the Fargo Company from interfering with the track of his company, and to protect the same from further injury or molestation. These instructions were obeyed by the plaintiff, and while he was so engaged he was arrested upon a warrant issued out of the district court of Dakota territory, for contempt in violating an injunction order previously issued by that court in a suit of the Fargo Company against this defendant. This order commanded the defendant company, its agents, attorneys, and assistants, and each of them, to desist and refrain from doing or causing to be done any act or thing which would in any manner interfere with or prevent the Fargo Company from building its road over the land in dispute upon which the proposed crossing had been attempted. The order was duly served upon the defendant, but plaintiff alleges that he had no notice of it, and was not informed of its existence by the defendant, but that the defendant concealed from plaintiff the fact of the issuance of the order, and in defiance thereof issued further orders to the plaintiff to repair and preserve intact the defendant’s track, and di
It is proper to say that the defendant’s answer takes issue upon many of the allegations of the complaint upon which the plaintiff relies to support the liability of the defendant. But at the trial the defendant moved for judgment on the pleadings, and the motion was granted; and this appeal brings up for consideration here the propriety of that decision. For the purposes of the motion, the truth of the allegations in the complaint was necessarily assumed, while the averments in the answer not admitted by the reply were to be taken as untrue or not established. Upon that motion, however, the orders dismissing the injunction proceedings against the defendant and its agents, including this plaintiff, together with the stipulations of
The complaint alleges that the defendant exposed the plaintiff, in the manner recited, to the danger of an arrest for a contempt, without notice to him, and that it knew that the plaintiff would be liable to be subjected to such danger. We may infer, from the conceded facts and the peculiar circumstances, that some proceedings would be likely to be taken to prevent or punish a violation of the injunction by defendant’s servants. And so, if the defendant had, as is alleged, reason to expect such results to its servants while in good faith engaged in its service, without notice of the injunction, it would seem right and just that they should be indemnified for the injuries suffered by them as the result of their obedience to defendant’s orders. And the defendant’s liability does not depend upon the ultimate determination of the question as to which of the contending parties is legally right in respect to the title of disputed property, or the legality or propriety of the injunction order, or the sufficiency of the service thereof. The master may not expose his servant to danger from a wrong-doer or trespasser without proper warning. Moore v. Appleton, 26 Ala. 633; Baxter v. Roberts, 44 Cal. 187. The proposition upon which plaintiff relies to sustain his
Order reversed.