Lesher v. Wabash Navigation Co.

14 Ill. 85 | Ill. | 1852

Catón, J.

By the eleventh section of their charter, the Wabash Navigation Company were authorized to enter upon certain premises including the plaintiffs’, and take therefrom timber, stone, and other materials necessary and proper for the construction of their works. And the owners of the premises were authorized to file a petition in the circuit court, and have the value of the materials taken, and damages occasioned by reason of the taking of the same assessed, for the amount of which, a judgment should be rendered in favor of the owner, and against the company. For the purpose of erecting a portion of the works authorized by their charter, the company entered into a contract with the Culbertsons for the erection of a lock and dam at the Grand Rapids of the Wabash river, by which the Culbertsons were to furnish all the materials and do all the work for a price specified in the contract to be paid to the company. In the execution of the work, the Culbertsons entered upon the plaintiffs’ land and took therefrom a considerable amount of timber which was necessary and proper for the construction of the work, and applied it to that purpose without objection by the plaintiffs, who subsequently filed their petition in the circuit court, for the purpose of having their damages assessed in the mode pointed out by the defendants’ charter, claiming to recover the same from the defendants, and the only question presented for our consideration is, whether the company is liable.

The contractors were none the less the servants of the company because they were doing the work by contract, and for a stipulated price. The work was still done by the company, and under the authority of their charter. The privileges which the charter conferred upon the company to enable them to execute the work, devolved upon the contractors for the same purpose. The very erection of the dam across the river, was an obstruction to its navigation, and would have been unlawful but for the authority conferred by the charter. Had the Culbertsons been prosecuted for a damage occasioned by reason of such obstruction, they would immediately have sought protection under the charter. So, too, had Lesher objected to their taking the material which they did take, they would have asrerted their right to do so under the charter, and must have been protected in that right to the same extent that the company would have been, had they prosecuted the work without the intervention of contractors. If it was necessary for the company to take private property to enable them to prosecute the work for. the public good, it was equally so for the contractors. Had a cause of action accrued to an individual by reason of the obstruction erected in the river, the company whose work it was, would have been liable as much as if they had erected it with their own hands. If they are liable for one act done under the charter by the Culbertsons, they are equally so for another. It is no answer to say that the contractors were bound by their contract to furnish all the materials at their own expense, and for which they were to recover a full compensation. The public were not bound to know the relations existing between the company and their servants. It was enough that they saw them engaged in the ^erection of the works of the company, and under the direction of the company’s engineer. The person who was injured by 'reason of acts done by those in the employ of the company, and in pursuance of their charter, had a right to look to the principal, who alone had authority to direct the acts to be done, for compensation, and was not bound to seek redress from every servant who cut a tree or removed a stone. Were the rule otherwise, the company might, by the employment of irresponsible servants, compel the owner of the land to stand by and see it stripped of all that made it valuable, without a hope of remuneration. They would derive the benefits secured by their charter, protected from the liabilities which it imposes, It is not necessary in the decision of this case, to say whether the company would have been liable for the tortious acts of the contractors, which were not authorized by the charter, for there is no pretence here but that the acts for which compensation is now sought of the company, were expressly authorized by the charter to be done. It may be true that it is the duty of the contractors to pay these damages, as they were bound by their contract to furnish the materials; and if so, they will be liable over to the company for the damages which the company necessarily has to pay for the acts of the contractors, but this ultimate liability of the contractors does not relieve the corporation from their primary liability to pay the damages occasioned to individuals by the exercise of the chartered rights of the company, and in the mode, too, which the charter provides.

Irrespective of the resolution passed by the board-of directors of the .company, on the 15th day of May, 1848, recognizing the authority of the contractors to exercise the rights conferred upon the company to take materials necessary for the construction of the works, we are of opinion that the company is liable for the damages occasioned by the acts of the contractors which were authorized by the charter to be done by the company. As to the persons who have thus sustained damages, the contractors were the servants of the company, and their acts were the acts of the company.

The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause remanded.

Judgment reversed.

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