53 Md. 110 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal presents the single question, whether, the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore are liable, in damages, to the appellee, for 'injuries received by him, while West street, one of the streets of the corporation, was undergoing repair, by reason of the neglect of the con
The appellant contends, that inasmuch as the work was being done by an independent contractor, pursuing an employment wholly independent of the city, who was free to exercise his own judgment as to the mode of conducting the work, and the assistants he was to employ, that the rule of respondeat superior does not apply, and that the contractor alone is responsible, if anyone is. In reply the appellee admits, that ordinarily as a condition precedent to holding superior amenable, the relation of master and servant must be shown to exist, and that in the case of a contractor employing others to do the work these sub-employees cannot be strictly regarded as servants of the city; but he insists that another rule applies which fixes the responsibility of the city in this case. That rule he
This is a question upon which there is some conflict of authority, and is therefore not entirely free from difficulty.
The cases of Barry vs. St. Louis, 17 Missouri, 121, and Painter vs. Mayor, 46 Pa. St., 213, cited by the appellant strongly sustain their position, hut the weight of authority is the other way, and upon full examination we think that sound reason and proper public policy do not sustain the decisions in Missouri and Pennsylvania on the subject. The case of Storrs vs. The City of Utica, (17 N. Y., 109,) is precisely analogous to this case and lays down the law, as we think, in accordance with sound principle. In that case there was a sewer to he built, and the city let out the contract of building it. In making the sewer an excavation was made in the street which was left open in the night-time, without guards, lights or warnings of the danger it created. Plaintiff drove into it and was injured. Defence was made that the contractor was liable and not the city; hut this defence was not sustained by the Court and plaintiff recovered against the city. On appeal the Supreme Court affirmed Judge Pratt’s ruling, and on further appeal to the Court of Appeals, that Court affirmed the decision. Judge Comstock, in delivering the opinion of the Court, puts the decision on the express ground that the obligation rested on the municipal corporation to keep the streets in a safe condition for travel. He says “although the work may he let out by contract, the corporation still remains charged with the care and
The Court properly instructed the jury, in the first prayer of the plaintiff, “ that it was the duty of the defendant to take proper precaution, by proper guards, signals, lights or other warnings, to warn persons of the impassable condition of the street, so as to prevent injuries to persons passing along said street, and.if the jury further find that the defendant, and those employed by it in repairing and re-curbing said street, did not use ordinary care in providing such precautions, and that the plaintiff in con-sequence of such neglect to provide such precautions, was thrown from his hack, while driving Avith ordinary care along said street, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.” Eo defect in the plaintiff’s second prayer respecting the measure of damages has been pointed out, and the Court ■sees none. The defendant’s first prayer was properly
Judgment affirmed with costs.