14 Pa. Super. 635 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
In 1870 the Pittsburg & Birmingham Railway Company was duly authorized by an ordinance to use and occupy Smithfield street in the city of Pittsburg for their street railway, the city reserving the right to grant at any time to any passenger railway the privilege of using the tracks of the Pittsburg & Birmingham Railway, upon payment to that company of a proportionate share of the cost of laying the same. A few months later the city, by an ordinance, granted to the Federal Street & Pleasant Valley Passenger Railway Company the right to use the tracks of the Pittsburg & Birmingham Passenger Railway along a part of Smithfield street, upon condition, .... and to pay their proportion of the cost of construction and maintenance of said tracks upon such terms as might be agreed upon by the companies. Subsequently the two street railway companies entered into an agreement, which was duly
The court instructed the jury as follows : “ It seems to me that under the circumstances, this switch being allowed for the benefit of the defendant company, the contract with the Birmingham company not making any special provision of it, it being substantially one construction, and being a necessary switch to bring these two roads together, it was substantially a part of both roads, each of the roads using it and connected by it are liable for its proper maintenance as far as the public are concerned, no matter what their private agreement might have been among themselves as to who should do the work and who should pay for it.”
In the contract between the compames it is specifically admitted that they are hable under the ordinances to keep this street in perpetual good order and repair from curb to curb. The immediate cause of the injury was the continued negligence of each and both. While the primary duty of doing the work, as between themselves, was on the Birmingham company, the neglect or refusal of that company to agree to the terms proposed by the Pleasant Valley company, as to the time and manner of making admittedly necessary repairs, cannot be used as a shield to protect the latter company from its own neglect of duty as to this switch. It cannot be that if the Birmingham company persisted in its refusal to make a necessary repair to this switch, that the Pleasant Valley company would not have been justified in doing the necessary work. The duty of each company to the public was much higher and more important than the adjustment of financial equities between themselves. The rule often recognized is, that when an injury has resulted from the concurrent negligence of several persons, they are
The judgment is affirmed.