43 Iowa 406 | Iowa | 1876
The defendant asked the court to give the following instructions:
“ 1st. The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish by evidence that defendant is a corporation operating a railroad, and if you find from the evidence that defendant was engaged only in the business of filling in the road-bed, constructing side-tracks and riprap, such business would not constitute defendant a corporation engaged in operating a railroad; and in absence of proof that defendant was connected with the railroad whereon the injury complained of occurred, then you will find for the defendant.
“ 2d. The mere fact that the defendant used a train of ears, propelled and operated by a steam locomotive, for the purpose only of hauling gravel or other material to fill up the trestle work where the injury complained of took place, does not prove that defendant was engaged in operating a railroad.”
These instructions the court refused to give, and instructed the jury as follows:
“4th. If you find that the defendant, at the time of the injury complained of, was operating the train in question on its own account for the purpose of constructing the railroad in question, then, for the purposes of this suit, you will find that it was operating a railroad.”
“ 6th. If you find that the defendant, at the time of the injury, was operating the train in question on its own ac*408 count, and that the plaintiff was an employe of defendant on said train, and that by the negligence of the defendant he was thrown from the train and injured, and that he did not by his own negligence contribute to the causes which produced his injuries, then he is entitled to recover.”
The giving of these instructions, and the refusal to instruct as asked, are assigned as error.
The appellant contends, in the first place, that the defendant was not engaged in operating a railroad within thé meaning of the statute. The statute upon this question is section 1307 of the Code, and is in these words: “Every corporation operating a railway shall be liable for all damages sustained by any person, including employes of such corporation, in consequence of the neglect of agents, or by any mismanagement of the engineers or other employes of the corporation.”
The defendant was not operating the railroad in the sense of doing the business for which it was designed, the carrying of passengers and freight. It was merely running trains over it as a part of the means employed in building it. That there is a marked difference between the general management of the business and finances of a railroad and the running of a special train over it in repairing or constructing it by a company which does not control it, but is an employe or contractor under the company which controls it, cannot of course be denied. If we were to throw out of consideration the spirit and object of the statute, and look only to a critical construction of its language, we might concede that it would bear the meaning which the appellant would put upon it. The legislature, however, has seen fit, in consideration of the exceptional hazards of the business of operating a railroad, to abrogate in respect to. that business the common law rule that an employe cannot recover against his employer for an injury received through the negligence of a co-employe. The running of a special train over a railroad is operating it in some restricted sense. Eor such purpose, as well as in the general business of the road, a number of persons must be employed, each dependent for his safety upon the skill and fidelity of the
Affirmed.