63 Ky. 114 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the court:
This appeal presents, for the first time, to the appellate court of Kentucky, a new and unsettled question, involving the legal liability of railroad companies for damages resulting to an inferior from the negligence of a superior employee, while engaged in different spheres of employment in the common service of any sneb corporation.
The appellee, while employed by the Louisville and Nashville railroad company, as a common laborer, in loading and unloading its burthen cars engaged in carrying for its road cross-ties and iron, was required, with a co-laborer of the same class, to assist its engineer in righting in Bowling Green, Kentucky, a locomotive which seemed to be out of order, and the steam being up, the front wheels jacked, the bind wheels unscotched, the engineer on top, and the appellee
For that irreparable loss, dooming him to hopeless poverty and dependence, the appellee sued the appellant for tort, and recovered a judgment for $5,000 damages, as assessed by the >iy-
The appellant denies that its engineer was guilty of culpable negligence, and insists, also, that, as he was competent and trustworthy, it is not responsible to his co-employee for his negligence, however gross.
The circuit court instructed the jury, that, if they believed that the accident resulted from the gross negligence of the engineer, the appellant was liable for it in this action.
After full and careful consideration, wé are satisfied that the engineer was guilty of soine negligence. The degree of it was a question of fact which, on such apparently conflicting testimony, the jury had a right to decide, and, whatever dedaction may be most logical and consistent, we are also satisfied that the circumstances, as detailed by all the witnesses, authorized the jury to find that his negligence was gross;” an elaborate analysis of all the facts would not, therefore, be either useful or pertinent in this opinion.
But the appellant assumes that the appellee’s own fault contributed to the catastrophe, and it thereupon insists that the co-operation of even the gross negligence of the engineer will not sustain the action. The assumption is not sufficiently maintained, nor is the conclusion from it altogether unexceptionable or true.
The engineer does testify that he directed the appellee and his associate in the work to “block” the wheels, and says that such a precaution would have prevented the accident; but others, who heard all that was said, and saw all that was done on that occasion, do not corroborate, but, by strong implication, negative his statement of that fact, rather discredited by the incredible omission, and by his failure to see that danger, so imminent in his opinion, was not averted by a security so obvious to him and so easy to them; and his
But, had the appellee been guilty of negligence, nevertheless, the injury might have been avoided by the proper care of the engineer, and is, therefore, attributable to his gross negligence. In such a case, both principle and preponderating authority seem to decide that such a remediable fault of the person injured should not exonerate the wrong-doer from legal liability for the damage, which, without gross negligence, he could have prevented, and was as much bound by law to prevent in that as he would have been in any other case.
In running its locomotive and its passenger and burthen cars, a railway corporation is required by law to observe, at least, ordinary care, vigilance, and skill, so far as strangers may be affected by the employment of a motive power so tremendous and destructive as unregulated or carelessly or unskillfully regulated steam; and, as in every class of cases of bailment or trust, the requisite Care is proportioned to the danger of neglect and the difficulty of conservative management; ordinary care in many classes of cases might be ordinary neglect, and ordinary neglect might be gross neglect in steam operations on a railway. In all those operations, tbe invisible corporation, thongh never actually, is yet always constructively, present through its acting agents, who represent it, and whose acts, within their representative spheres, are its acts. Had the appellee been a stranger, the appellant
Nor can we,perceive how public policy could be subserved by the irresponsibility of the corporation in such a case. Such exemption, if known, might possibly stimulate the subordinates to a more vigilant observance of the engineer’s conduct; but why should they be left to depend on that which could be of little, if any, avail to prevent the unskillfulness or negligence of a superior above their dictation or control ?
In undertaking the perilous service, they might be presumed to risk the hazards necessarily incident to their employment; and, as they could not expect infallibility in the management of the locomotive and its running train, and, as they knew that the most faithful and skillful managers may occasionally lapse into common blunders and ordinary negligence, the law might imply an agreement to risk their possible occurrence. But the corporation, being under an implied obligation to provide sound and safe cars and engines, and a competent and faithful engineer, his subordinates cannot reasonably be presumed to expect or to hazard his gross negligence, which borders on fraud and crime; and it seems to us, therefore, that, while the corporation may not be responsible to them for his ordinary negligence, both justice and policy require that it should be held liable for his gross negligence as its chief and controlling agent in the management of its running train. Assurance of protection to this extent not only appears just and reasonable, but, by inspiring more confidence, would enable the corporation to obtain and keep better employees, and at cheaper rates. This doctrine, therefore, instead of its converse, seems to be suggested by reason and commended by policy. But, in this respect, employees,'like the appellee, in a distinct and altogether different department of service, stand in an essentially different category.
In their employment, having nothing to do with the cars or the running of them, they, like the corporation’s mere wood-choppers, are comparative strangers to the engineer and his running operations, and seem to be entitled to all the security of strangers. They may be presumed to know no more than
The only consistent or maintainable principle of the corporation’s responsibility is that of agency. “Qui facit per alium facit per se.” It is therefore responsible for the negligence or unskillfulness of its engineer, as its controlling agent in the management of its locomotives and running cars, and that responsibility is graduated by the classes of persons injured by the engineer’s neglect or want of skill — as to strangers, ordinary negligence is sufficient — as to subordinate employees, associated with the engineer in conducting the cars, the negligence must be gross — but as to employees in a different department of service, unconnected with the running operations, ordinary negligence may be sufficient. Among common
This is the only. doctrine we can recognize as consistent with the enlightened and homogeneous jurisprudence of this clearer day of its ripening maturity; and, looking through the mist of the adjudged cases and elementary dicta, we can see no other fundamental principle which can mould them into a consistent or abiding' form. That principle is the only safe clue to lead the bewildered explorer to the light which shows the sure w.ay of right, and proves the true doctrine of American law.
We feel authorized to conclude that the appellant was legally liable to tlie appellee for the injury done to him by ' the gross negligence of its engineer; that the court, on the trial, gave to the jury the true, and only true law; and that the verdict was authorized by both the law and the facts; and we would overstep the judicial line by interfering with such a verdict in such a case, on the ground of alleged exorbitance* indicating neither passion, partiality, nor prejudice.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.