13 Or. 436 | Or. | 1886
This was an action to recover damages for personal injuries resulting in death, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant and its agents.
The defendant, after making the usual denials, set up in substance this defense: That pursuant to an agreement made and entered into between the defendant and the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company, the latter agreed to build the defendant’s line of road, etc.; that before the times alleged in the complaint, the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company had constructed for the defendant the line of road mentioned in the complaint between Yaquina City and the city of Corvallis, but at the times stated the same was not entirely completed or finished; and that the said Oregon Pacific Railroad Company was, during all the times stated, still engaged in building and constructing the defendant’s said railroad, and still had the same in its possession, as well as the track and rolling stock thereon, and was, at the time of the accident by which Winnie P. Lakin lost her life, engaged in running and operating said road, and that the said Oregon Pacific Railroad Company, and not the defendant, in fact sold to said Laura Lakin the ticket upon which the said Winnie P. Lakin was traveling at the time of her death; and at the time, the said Winnie P. Lakin was a passenger on the road and cars occupied, used, and operated by said Oregon Pacific Railroad Company, its officers, agents, and servants, and not the defendants, etc.
In this state, the right to become incorporated is secured by a general law, and any persons may avail themselves of it by complying with its provisions. Under this general law, the corporation defendant was organized, and possessed no other powers or functions than the statute creating it confers, or such as are incidental to its existence. In New York, under a statute of similar purport, it has been held that the right of incorporation conferred under such general law, like a special charter, is in the nature of a contract; and that a railroad corporation organized under it has no authority, without the consent of the legislature, to lease its road, and that when it has done so, it is responsible to the public for the manner of operating the road; as to the public, those operating it must he regarded as agents of the corporation. In Abbott v. Johnstown etc. R. R. Co., 80 N. Y. 29, Church, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “The creation of a corporation to construct and ■operate a railroad is the exercise of a sovereign power, and includes the grant of important franchises. Such corporations have power to exercise the right of eminent domain, and various rights and privileges not possessed by natural persons. In return for which they are placed under obligation to perform certain duties to the public. It is true, in this state, that the right to become incorporated is secured by a general law, and any persons may avail themselves of it by complying with its provisions; hut the public are secured by a variety of
We must consider it, then, as the accepted doctrine in this country that a railroad company cannot escape the
The ease of Cunningham v. Railroad Company, 37 Tex. 509, principally relied upon by the defendant, does not meet the facts of the case here. There, the trains under the contract of the contractor were not being used for ■the purposes of traffic, but for the purposes of construction, when the injury occurred. We think there was error in overruling the demurrer, and the judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings.