98 P. 643 | Mont. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was commenced by Johnston T. Hagerty against Elliott H. Wilson and others to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff; as the result of the negligence of the defendants.
During 1904 the Hypocka Mining Company, a foreign corporation, was operating the Minnie Healy mine, in Meaderville, Silver Bow county. The defendant Wilson was the superintendent at the mine, and was actively in charge of the business of the Hypocka Mining Company in Montana. The Hypocka Company had a working arrangement with the Montana Ore Purchasing Company, by which the latter company furnished its electricians to the former to do electrical work in the Minnie Healy mine. In the course of its mining operations in the Minnie Healy mine, the Hypocka Company caused, to be opened a particular shaft, designated in the pleadings and evidence as the “Chippie” shaft. This shaft was a comparatively new one and had been properly timbered, but on account of the swelling of the ground, caused by disintegration of the country rock and a consequent movement of the ground, the shaft was so compressed that for several months before the accident to Plagerty the cage running in that shaft had frequently stuck on its descent. To such an extent had the usefulness of the shaft been impaired that some time before Hagerty’s injury occurred the shaft had been condemned, the engineers on the engine operating the cage had been taken from their work, and the shaft thereafter was used principally for the purpose of repairing
• There is not any disputed question of fact presented, for the defendants did not offer any testimony. A motion for nonsuit was sustained as to the Montana Ore Purchasing Company, and denied as to defendants Wilson and Ilypocka Company. The court was asked, but refused to give, instructions 4 and 9, but among others gave instruction No. 6. The instructions just referred to are as follows:
“No. 9. [Refused.] You are further instructed that, if you find from the evidence that the injury would not have occurred except for the incompetency or negligence of the engineer in charge of the engine operating the cage in the shaft, then the condition of said shaft was not the proximate cause of the injury, and your verdict should be for the defendant Wilson.”
“No. 6. [Given.] You are instructed that, if the injury to the plaintiff was occasioned solely by the negligence or incompeteney of the engineer in charge of the hoisting engine operating the cage in the shaft in which the injury occurred, your verdict should be for the defendant Elliott H. Wilson.”
The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants Wilson and the Hypocka Mining Company, and, from the judgment entered thereon and from an order denying him a new trial, Wilson appeals.
We think that the proposed instruction No. 4 above was properly refused. Wilson’s own testimony, offered on behalf of plaintiff, discloses that he knew the condition of the “Chippie” shaft; knew that the cage stuck occasionally; knew that the sticking of the cage would endanger life or limb if -it got away as it did on the occasion of Hagerty’s injury; knew that men were going down the shaft between January and August, 1904, and, in fact, had gone through there occasionally himself. He knew, also, that Hagerty was working in the shaft on the day before he was injured. Under these circumstances the offered instruction was not applicable to the facts of the case. The determining factor is not whether Wilspn knew that Hagerty was making the particular trip which he did when he was injured, but whether he knew, or ought to have known, that
We think, also, that offered instruction No. 9 above was properly refused. No. 6, given, completely covers the same ground. There is not any difference between the two instructions in principle. The difference is in verbiage only. No. 6 merely gives emphasis to the fact that, if the negligence or ineompetency of the man operating the engine was the sole cause of the accident, then Wilson should be exonerated. No. 9 means the same thing.
But the principal contention arises over the refusal of the trial court to grant Wilson’s motion for a nonsuit. It is suggested that the evidence fails to disclose any negligence on the part of Wilson. It does appear that Wilson had spared neither pains nor money to keep the shaft open. He says that he had done all that could be done, except to close down the mine and retimber the shaft. But this conclusion of his is hardly justified by the evidence. There were other shafts adjoining the “Chippie” shaft, and in which the trouble did not appear, or, if it appeared at all, to a much less degree, and, these shafts being accessible one from the other at the different stations, men could have been lowered through one of the other shafts and brought up to the place of work through the “Chippie” shaft, as it appears that the cage would not stick in its ascent. But, even if the closing of the mine was a last recourse, we are not prepared to say that it was not Wilson’s duty to resort to it, rather than to invite this man to work in a known place of danger. The question whether Wilson exercised reasonable care to provide a reasonably safe place for the man to work was fairly submitted to the jury.
It is suggested, also, that, if the negligence or ineompetency of Greenleaf was the cause of the injury, Wilson cannot be held liable therefor, since Greenleaf was not the servant of Wilson, but was the servant of the Hypocka Company. We agree with this, and it appears to us that the trial court also adopted that theory, and gave emphasis to it in instruction No. 6 above. But
But it is further suggested that, at most, Wilson was guilty of nonaction or omission of duty in failing to have the shaft in working order,'or in not forbidding its use to men not acquainted with its character, and that such omission or nonaetion amounts only to nonfeasance, for which he is not liable to a third person, but, if liable at all, he is only liable to the Hypocka Company, his principal, and that the maxim respondeat superior applies. If Wilson’s misconduct in permitting the shaft to be out of repair and in permitting its use while in such condition amounts only to nonfeasance, then the contention of his counsel may be well founded. But we are not able to agree with them in their conclusion. Some of the cases cited by counsel for appellant seem to bear out their theory and to justify the conclusion they reach. The courts and text-writers have not always been accurate in defining the terms “nonfeasance” and “misfeasance,” or in discriminating between them. As applied in eases of this character, we think the term “nonfeasance” refers to the omission on the part of the- agent to perform a duty which he owes to his principal by virtue of the relationship existing between them; but, whenever the omission on the part of the agent consists of his failure to perform a duty which he owes to third persons, then, as to such third persons, his omission amounts to “misfeasance,” for which he is responsible. We think this conclusion is based upon reason and authority.
Mechem in his work on Agency says: “Some confusion has crept into certain cases from a failure to observe clearly the distinction between nonfeasance and misfeasance. As has been seen, the agent is not liable to strangers for injuries sustained by them because he did not undertake the performance of some
In 1 American and English Encyclopedia of Law, second edition, 1132, it is said: “Where the injury results * s * from such an omission of duty or act of negligence on the part of the agent as partakes of the character of a misfeasance, the agent is personally liable to third persons; the actual perpetrator of the positive wrong not being permitted to relieve himself from liability by showing that the wrong was done while he was acting in the course of his employment as agent for another.” And, as an instance wherein nonaction or negligence was held to amount to misfeasance, the writer of the text cites the case of Baird v. Shipman, 132 Ill. 16, 22 Am. St. Rep. 504, 23 N. E. 384, 7 L. R. A. 128. In that ease it appears that one Goodman, a resident of Hartford, owned land in Chicago with a house and barn situated thereon. The appellants, real estate agents in Chicago, were Goodman’s agents, and as such had control of his property there. The property.was leased to a Mrs. Wheeler, and at that time a large door to the barn was in a very insecure condition, which fact was known to the agents, who agreed to have it repaired, but failed to do so. An expressman seeking to deliver goods on the premises was killed by the barn door falling
Did Wilson in fact owe a duty to Hagerty? In Cameron v. Kenyon-Connell Com. Co., 22 Mont. 312, 74 Am. St. Rep. 602, 56 Pac. 358, 44 L. R. A. 508, it is said: “Because directors are themselves agents it is none the less true that they owe a common-law duty to third persons. If they violate that duty, they are responsible, whether the violation is the result of a wrongful omission or commission. * * * Relationship of contract to a corporation neither adds to nor subtracts from a man’s duty to strangers to so use his own property, or that under his control, as not to injure another.” The record in this case would seem to justify the same statement as that contained in the opinion of the Illinois court above: That Wilson had the same control at the Minnie Healy mine, so far as the management was concerned, as the owner, the Hypoeka Company, would have had if it had been a natural person residing here and attending to the management himself.
In harmony with the declaration of this court in the Cameron Case above is the doctrine announced by the supreme court of Massachusetts in Osborne v. Morgan, 130 Mass. 102, 39 Am. Rep. 437, where, after considering and overruling a former decision of the same court, it is said: “The principal reason assigned was that no misfeasance or positive act of wrong was charged, and that for nonfeasance, which was merely negligence in the performance of a duty arising from an express or implied contract with his principal or employer, an agent or servant was. responsible to him only, and not to any third person. It is often said in the books that an agent is responsible to third persons for misfeasance only, and not for nonfeasance. And it is doubt
In Campbell v. Portland Sugar Co., 62 Me. 552, 16 Am. Rep. 503, the court said: “It is the actual personal negligence of the agents which constitutes the constructive negligence of the corporation. The corporation acts through and by them, and they act for the corporation, and, when their acts or neglects result in injury to third parties, they are equally responsible with their principals. ”
The supreme court of Georgia in Southern Ry. Co. v. Reynolds, 126 Ga. 657, 55 S. E. 1039, announced the same rule in the following language: “When once an agent enters upon the performance of his contract with his principal, and, in doing so, omits or fails to take reasonable care in the commission of some act which he should do in its performance, whereby some third person is injured, he is responsible therefor to the same extent as if he had committed the wrong in his own behalf.”
" In Ellis v. Southern Ry. Co., 72 S. C. 465, 52 S. E. 228, 2 L. R. A., n. s., 378, the supreme court of South Carolina, after an extended review of the authorities, said: ‘ ‘ The true rule deducible from the authorities is that the servant is personally liable to third persons when his wrongful act is the direct and proximate cause of the injury, whether such wrongful act be one of nonfeasance or misfeasance.” In Lough v. John Davis & Co.,
In Southern Ry. Co. v. Grizzle, 124 Ga. 735, 110 Am. St. Rep. 191, 53 S. E. 244, the court said: “Where an agent fails to use reasonable care or diligence in the performance of his duty, he will be personally responsible to a third person who is injured by such misfeasance. The agent’s liability in such cases is not based upon the ground of his agency, but upon the ground that he is a wrongdoer, and as such he is responsible for any injury he may cause. When once he enters upon the performance of his contract with his principal, and in doing so omits or fails to take reasonable care in the commission of some act which he should do in its performance, whereby some third person is injured, he is responsible therefor to the same extent as if he had committed the wrong in his own behalf. (See 2 Clark & Skyles on Agency, 1297 et seq.) Misfeasance may involve also to some extent the idea of not doing, as where an agent engaged .in the performance of his undertaking does not do something which it is his duty to do under the circumstances, or does not take that precaution or does not exercise that care which a due regard to the rights of others requires. All this is not doing, but it is not the not .doing of that which is imposed upon the agent merely by virtue of his relation, but of that which is imposed upon him by law as a responsible individual in common with all other members of society. It is the same not doing which constitutes actionable negligence in any relation.”
In 1 Jaggard on Torts, 289, the author, after referring to the conflicting decisions upon this subject, says: “The futility of such reasoning on the word ‘nonfeasance’ appears fully from the lack of definiteness of the meaning to be given the term. This solemn legal jugglery with words will probably disappear if the nature of the duty incumbent upon the servant be considered. If the servant owe a duty to third persons derived from instrumentality likely to harm or otherwise, and he violates that duty, he is responsible. His responsibility rests on
Finally, it is earnestly contended that the negligence or ineompetency of Greenleaf was the active and efficient cause of the injury, and that but for such negligence or incompetency the injury would not have occurred, even conceding that Wilson was negligent in permitting the shaft to remain out of order, and in permitting its use while in such condition; or, in other words, that Wilson’s negligence was not a proximate cause of the injury. But we cannot concede that the mere fact that a skillful engineer, acquainted with the habits of this shaft, who knew that the cage was likely to stick and was constantly on the lookout for such an occurrence, could have stopped the engine in time to prevent the cable from running into the cage, does as a matter of law stamp the act of Greenleaf as one which broke the chain of causation between Wilson’s prior negligence and Hagerty’s injury, or insulated Wilson’s negligence from the plaintiff’s hurt, and thereby discharged him (Wilson) from all liability therefor. We think that the question whether Wilson’s negligence was a proximate cause of the injury was one of fact, which was properly submitted to the jury.
We find no error in the record. The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.