175 Mo. 337 | Mo. | 1903
— This appeal is in this court by virtue of dissent of one of the judges of the St. Louis Court of Appeals. It was argued and submitted, but owing to the fact that a case growing out of the same fire was pending in the Court in Banc, it was deemed best to await the opinion of the whole court on some of the questions involved in both appeals.
The opinion of the Court in Banc will be found reported in Wabash Railroad Co. v. Ordelheide, 172 Mo. 436.
The pleadings and agreed statement of facts upon which this case was determined in the circuit court and Court of Appeals are fully set out in the opinion of Judge Bland in the St. Louis Court of Appeals, 80 Mo. App. 357, and we adopt the same as follows:
‘£ The petition is as follows:
££ ‘Plaintiff spates that the defendant is a corporation duly incorporated under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Missouri, and was at the time of the grievance hereinafter mentioned, as such corporation, the owner and occupier of a certain railroad, together with depots, switches, side-tracks, and facilities for receiving and unloading freight, stock and goods, which said railroad runs through the counties of Warren and Montgomery, in the State of Missouri, and as said corporation was at said time operating, working, managing and running its said railroad by its agents, servants and employees, and using thereon its locomotives, engines, cars and trains. That on or about the 6th day of April, 1895, the plaintiff was the owner of a certain building, used as a warehouse, elevator or grainhouse, together ■ with horsepower, belting and all appliances and machinery necessary and requiring to run, work and operate the same, which said building, with the said horsepower, belting, appliances and machinery therein, stood adjoining or nearby the depots, switches, side-tracks, at or near the defendant’s station or depot at Wright City in said Warren county, all of
“Defendant answered as follows:
“ ‘Now comes the defendant in the above entitled cause, by its attorneys, and for its answer to the petition of plaintiff therein filed, admits that it,is and was on the 6th day of April, 1895, a corporation duly incorporated under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Missouri. Defendant denies each and every other allegation contained and set forth in plaintiff’s petition. For other and further answer to the petition of the plaintiff, defendant says that on or about the first day of November, 1892, the plaintiff herein entered into -a certain written and printed agreement with the defendant for the lease of certain ground then belonging to the defendant in Warren county, Missouri, in said agreement described, for the purpose of erecting thereon a certain grainhouse, said agreement expiring, under its terms, on or about the 31st day of October, 1897, which said agreement was in words as follows, to-wit:
“ ‘ “This agreement, made and entered into this first day of November, A. D. 1892, by and between the
“ ‘Further answering defendant says that for the various considerations named in ■ said agreement the plaintiff herein agreed to assume, and by said contract did assume all risk of fire to his property, then or thereafter to be located upon defendant’s land as aforesaid, from any cause whatever; and that- under said agreément, for said consideration, the plaintiff further assumed all risk of fire from every cause, and undertook and agreed to hold and keep harmless the defendant from any and all damages whatsoever from fire or any cause to any building or buildings that might be erected upon said land, or their appurtenances and contents. Wherefore, defendant says that plaintiff ought not to have or maintain this case, and, having fully answered, prays to be discharged with its costs. ’
“The issues were submitted to the court on the following agreed statement of facts, to-wit:
“ ‘First. That the property sued for is correctly described in the petition, and was of the value therein stated, and was destroyed by fire on the day, at the place, and in the manner alleged in the petition.
“ ‘Second. That the lease between the parties' thereto, E. F. Ordelheide and the defendant Wabash Railroad Company, dated on the‘first day of November, 1892, running five years from the date thereof, was executed by said parties as therein set forth, and that a correct and true copy of said lease is set out in the defendant’s answer herein, and proof thereof is hereby dispensed with in this case.
“ ‘This agreement shall constitute a part of the record in the above entitled cause, and may be introduced in evidence in support of a demurrer, motion to strike out, reply, or other pleadings to be hereafter filed by the plaintiff in said cause or upon trial thereof. ’
“The petition alleges and the agreed statement of facts admit that the building of' plaintiff was constructed on defendant’s right of-way under a contract in which plaintiff expressly stipulated that the plaintiff ‘would assume all-risk of fire from any cause whatsoever;’ that the warehouse was destroyed by fire negligently put out by defendant’s servants. The stipulation is comprehensive enough to include within its terms fire caused by defendant’s own negligence, but plaintiff insists that, however broad the language, it ■can not cover defendant’s negligence, because a common carrier can not contract against its own negligence, such a contract being against public policy and therefore void.
“In Insurance Co. v. Railroad, 74 Mo. App. 89, Judge Smith, in a most satisfactory opinion, ruled that a contract of lease substantially like this was not violative of public policy. He says ‘None of the property so destroyed was in process of transportation by de
A similar contract was sustained in Rutherford v. Railroad, 147 Mo. 441.
The Court of Appeals in this case through Judge Bland, after a review of the authorities on this subject, held this contract did not contravene public policy, and this court, in Banc, in Wabash Railroad Co. v. Ordelheide, 172 Mo. 436, held this identical contract was not against public policy, not being a contract with a passenger, employee or shipper with regard to a contract of carriage, nor contravening any -duty devolved upon it by law to its employees.
Section 1111, Revised Statutes 1899, which renders every railroad company liable for damages, irrespective of negligence, to every person whose property may be injured or destroyed by fire communicated directly or indirectly by locomotive engines in use on said railroad, expressly authorizes the railroad companies to procure' insurance against such damages.
In Wabash Railroad Co. v. Ordelheide, 172 Mo. 436, this court, in Bane, held that this contract was one of indemnity against loss occurring by fire set out by the engines of defendant, and it was not against public policy to allow it to make such a contract with plaintiff. We are satisfied with the reasoning and conclusions reached by the Court in Banc in construing
We deem it unnecessary, in view of these decisions, to repeat the reasons given at length.
‘ ‘ The company had the option to lease or to refuse to lease, and if it did lease to plaintiff and stipulated for indemnity from damages caused by its negligence in firing the property of" plaintiff placed upon its right of way by its permission, that contract in no way relieved it from the discharge of any duty to the public, or to any passenger or shipper or any employee that the law or public policy imposed upon it.”
It results that the judgment of the circuit court must be and is reversed.