Tke motion to dismiss tb© complaint and for judgment of nonsuit appears from brief of defendant’s counsel to be intended to raise again tbe question whether the lessor company, the North Carolina Railroad Company, the defendant herein, is liable “for all acts done by the lessee in the operation of the road,” as was held in Logan v. Railroad,
The issues excepted to are those suggested for cases of this nature in Denmark v. Railroad,
We will now consider tbe second and third prayers for instruction, which were:
2. If tbe jury believe that tbe intestate of plaintiff was killed by tbe wanton, willful and malicious act of one of tbe employees of the railroad company, then tbe company would not be liable, and tbe jury should respond to tbe first issue, “No.”
3. If tbe jury find that tbe intestate’s death was caused by tbe wanton and malicious act of tbe fireman, and that his act was not done in tbe furtherance of tbe business of tbe defendant, they should find tbe first issue in favor of tbe defendant, “No.”
Tbe assumption in these prayers that tbe defendant is not liable if tbe plaintiff’s intestate was killed by tbe wanton, willful and malicious act of one of tbe employees of tbe defendant, and especially if such act was not done in furtherance of tbe business of tbe -defendant, can not be sustained. The true test is, was it done by such employee in tbe scope of tbe discharge of duties assigned him by tbe defendant and while in tbe discharge of such duties. “In furtherance of tbe business of employer” means simply in tbe discharge of tbe duties of tbe employment, and tbe Court properly told tbe
In the present case, whether the child jumped off because ordered by the brakeman or by reason of the hint of a lump of coal -whizzing by his head, or was actually struck and knocked off, this mode of getting him off the moving car was tortious, and the defendant is liable for the injury caused thereby. 14 Am. & Eng. Enc., 822, 823, and cases cited in the .notes thereto; Pierce on Railways, 278 279;
It is true the child was on the tender in violation of a town ordinance, as the defendant contends, but the penalty for this was' a small fine and not a license to the defendant’s servant to cripple him or kill him.
The defendant, however, earnestly contends that if the servant’s act was malicious the company is not liable for negligence. If that theory ever obtained, the above authorities show that it was contrary to reason and has been duly and fully exploded. Besides, the company is not charged in this case with malice because of any alleged malice of its agent, and whether, if it was, it could be held liable for punitive damages is not before us. It is certainly liable for compensatory damage for the injury sustained from the tort of its servant.
■ The brief of the learned counsel for the defendant strenuously insists that a case of this kind can not be understood by the Court and justice properly administered unless we translate the action back into one of the old common law forms of actions, and that when that is done it would be seen that the plaintiff can not sustain his demand. This suggests the precedent of the physician, who, in a difficult case, proposed to give his patient something to throw him into fits, on the
Here the plaintiff’s intestate was admittedly run over and killed by the defendant’s train. Upon the uncontroverted facts of this case, the brakeman, as a matter of law, was acting in the scope of his general employment, and the Court properly instructed the jury that if the boy was made to get of the car (though he was there wrongfully) by the act of the brakeman, whether malicious or not, while the train was moving, so that the boy was killed in consequence of so doing, the defendant was liable for the damage caused by the negligent conduct of its lessee in thus operating its train.
The defendant further excepted “to the charge as given.” This is a “broadside” exception which can not be consid
The last exception, which is for refusal of judgment in favor of defendant upon the findings of the jury, needs no consideration beyond what is involved in the preceding discussion.
Affirmed.
