delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant in error, who was plaintiff in the trial,court,, sued to recover damages caused by an injury, resulting in the death of-her intestate, whilst serving as. an engineer on an. engine of the defendant company in-the State of Montana-After the cause was put at issue a jury was waived by a. written stipulation, and. it ivas submitted to. the court for-judgment on an agreed statement of facts. .The ffacts stated established that the accident was caused by a switch negligently left open by the conductor of another train on the-same road-. The trial^court, considering that the engineer-on one. train was not a fellow-servant of the conductor on another train of the same road, gave judgment for the sum of the damage, which was fixed in the. statement of facts.' On error to the trial court the Circuit Court of Appeals, for the Eighth Circuit, although holding that the relation between the 'engineer on óne train and the conductor on another was that of a fellow-servant, yet affirmed the judgment on the ground that, by the statute law of M&ntana, the common law rule as to the relation of master and servant was modified, hence the liability existed. The statute referred to- *364 is found in tbe Compiled Statutes of the State of Montana of 1887, and reads as follows:
“SectioN 697. That in every case the liability of the corporation to a servant or employé, acting under the orders of his superior, shall be the same- in case of injury sustained by default or wrongful act of his superior, or to an employé not appointed or controlled by him, as if such servant or ■employé were a passenger.”
Pending this writ of error prosecuted to the judgment of affirmance rendered' by the Circuit Court of Appeals, the validity of the statute of Montana upon which that court based its decree was drawn in question before the Supreme Court of the State of Montana, where it was held that the statute was void under the constitution of the State because it applied only to domestic corporations, and therefore operated a discrimination against such corporations.
Crisswell
v.
Montana Central Railway Co.,
'"ít follows, necessarily, that the judgment must be
Reversed,- and ordered that judgment be entered 'in favor of defendants.
