28 S.C. 401 | S.C. | 1888
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for the alleged killing of certain of his cattle by the negligence of the defendant company in running its trains. There was some testimony of a very indefinite character tending to show that the defendant company had leased its road to the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, which latter company was operating the road at the time of the alleged killing of the plaintiff’s cattle. The Circuit Judge granted a motion for non-suit upon the ground that after the lease of the road the defendant could not be held liable, and from this judgment of non-suit the plaintiff appeals upon the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be repeated here, as the sole question for us to determine is whether the defendant is relieved from liability by its voluntary lease of its road to another company. While the testimony as to the fact of the lease is not very full or clear, yet the counsel for respondent has, very properly, waived any objection on that ground, for the purpose of presenting squarely the legal question involved.
It is not to be denied that there is some conflict of authority
As was said in one of the cases, if it were othertvise, a railroad company, by leasing its road to irresponsible persons, might enjoy all the benefits conferred by its charter, and practically leave the public generally, as well as individuals, without any of the protection which the obligations imposed upon the company by its charter, as well as the general law of the State, were designed to afford. Accordingly we find it laid down by Mr. Justice Davis in the case of Railroad Company v. Brown (17 Wall., at page 450), as “the accepted doctrine in this country, that a railroad corporation cannot escape the performance of any duty or obligation imposed by its charter or the general laws of the State by a voluntary surrender of its road into the hands of lessees.” This doctrine was recognized and affirmed by this court in National Bank v. Railway Company (25 S. C., 222), although the court in that case, not because any doubt was entertained as to the soundness of the doctrine just laid doAA'n, did state, merely as an additional reason for the conclusion there reached, that the contract there was made with the lessor, and not with the lessee. The cases cited by the counsel for appellant in his argument here shoAV that the courts of many of our sister States have adopted the same view.
The Circuit Judge seems to rest his conclusion upon the ground that inasmuch as under the charter of the defendant company
The counsel for respondent in his argument here has attempted to draw a distinction between the liability of a lessor for an injury sustained by reason of some omission of duty resting upon the lessor, as, for example, from the defective condition of the track or of a bridge existing at the time of the lease, and an injury
Whether the plaintiff may not have been entitled to elect to proceed against the lessee as the person or corporation actually doing the act complained of, or whether the defendant company may not be entitled to have recourse upon its lessee in case it should be held liable to the plaintiff in this action, are questions which do not arise upon this record, and have not, therefore, been considered.
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the case be remanded to that court for a new trial.