117 Ga. 414 | Ga. | 1903
The sole question in this case is whether a street-railroad company is a “railroad company” within the meaning of the Civil Code, §§ 2297, 2323, making railroad companies liable to one servant for injuries inflicted by a fellow-servant. The importance of the question, the fact that it has never been directly decided by this court, that the decisions outside of this State are in some conflict, and that the courts of Texas and Minnesota have reached a conclusion different from ours, make it proper to refer to the authorities at some length. We think the conflict is more apparent than real, and that a close examination will show that there was always present some special reason for holding that a street-railroad was not a railroad within the meaning of the statute under consideration.
A statute giving a laborer a lien on railroads does not apply to a street-railroad, since the fee of the street on which the track is laid is in the city. Front Street Cable Road v. Johnson (Wash.), 11 L. R. A. 693. Street-railroads are not within the jurisdiction of the California railroad commission. The court reached this conclusion on general principles, though the act itself was limited to companies owning railroads “ other than street-railroads.” Board R. Comrs. v. Market St. Ry. Co., 54 C. L. J. 268. A horse-railroad is not a railroad within the meaning of a statute which provides that every engine or train shall be brought to a full stop before crossing a railroad. Taft, J., in Byrne v. Kansas City R. Co., 61 Fed. Rep. 605. A statute referring to any railroad corporation whose line is wholly or partly within Montana, or reaches the boundary thereof, and giving a judgment for injury to the person a lien superior to a mortgage on the property, evidently refers to lines extending for long distances, and does not include street-railroads. Mass. Loan & Trust Co. v. Hamilton, 88 Fed. Rep. 588. The franchise to use the streets being granted by legislative or municipal authority, and the tracks being laid on established streets and usually restricted to the bounds of the city, statutes providing for condemnation of rights of way have little or no reference to street-railways using electricity or horse-power. Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Simon, 10 L. R. A. 251. Compare South & North R. Co. v. Highland Ave. Co. (Ala.) 24 So. Rep. 114. In Kentucky a street-railroad is said to be, in a technical and popular sense, as different from an ordinary railroad as a road and a street, or as a bridge and
In Funk v. St. Paul Ry. (Wis.), 29 L. R. A. 208, it was said that ■a. statute making every railroad company liable for injuries inflicted by reason of the negligence of a fellow-servant did not include street-railroads operated by cable, the court holding that it could recur to the history of the time when the statute was enacted, " and when the words of a statute are not explicit, the intention is to be collected from the context, from the occasion and •necessity of the law, from the mischief felt, and the object and remedy in view. . . It is a matter of common knowledge that street-cars operated by cable or electricity are more readily managed than those operated by steam, where long passenger and freight-trains with their weight and momentum are not so easily controlled. A street-car is generally run separately, rarely with more than two or three coupled together. . . They do not run so rapidly, their movements are easily and quickly checked. . . Nor do street-railways carry freight. . . Especially is the danger in coupling their cars entirely absent. . . The words in the law ■of 1887 make a railroad corporation operating the railroad in this State liable for damages ‘ when sustained within this State.’ They undoubtedly aim at the railroads operated by steam where their lines extend beyond the jurisdiction of the State. It is true these restrictive words would include railroads operated by steam wholly within the State, but they were inserted to prevent the bringing of suit where the injury was sustained upon railroads out of this State but where the lines of the same railroad came within the boundary of our own State. Hence the words ‘ when sustained within this State’ evidently referred to railroads operated by locomotivesj and it was such railroads the legislature had in contemplation when this term was used. . . Through our territorial and State legislation the term ‘railroad’ has acquired a definite and well-understood meaning, and it has never been understood to include street-railroads.” In the concurring opinion of Mitchell, J.,
The foregoing citations are the strongest we find in support of the contention of the plaintiff iu error. Opposed to them are cases from New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Alabama, and Kentucky. The New York general railroad law of 1850 was held to include horse-railroads, though the act-referred to other motive power. In re Washington Street Ry., 115 N. Y. 442. A street-railroad using dummy engines is a railroad within the meaning of the Alabama statute requiring trains to stop within 100 feet of a track crossing. Birmingham Ry. Co. v. Jacobs, 92 Ala. 202 (Stone and Clopton, JJ., dissenting). A dummy line, whether operated within or without the limits of a municipality, and although exclusively engaged in carrying passengers, is a railroad within the meaning of the statutes prescribing certain precautions for the prevention of accidents on railroads. Lurton, J., in Katzenberger v. Lawo, 90 Tenn. 235. Street-railroads are within the Pennsylvania act relating to merger. Hestonville v. Phila. Ry., 8 Pa. St. 210. A horse-railroad is within the exception of the Massachusetts statute providing that insolvent proceedings may be instituted against any corporation except railroad and banking companies, though at the time of the passage of that statute no company had been established in that State for the purpose of laying rails on the public highways and running horse-ears thereon. Central Bank v. Worcester Horse R. Co., 13 Allen, 105. The Kentucky statute making railroad companies liable for negligence is applicable to any kind of railroad, whether impelled by horse or steam-power. Johnson v. Louisville R. Co., 10 Bush, 231. The similarity of urban and intra-urban railroads to the ordinary steam railroad, the rapidity of their movements, the enlargement of their cars, the marvelous increase in their business, have compelled the courts to recognize, if not the identity, at 'least the clase resemblance between the two; and while the reasoning may not in all respects support our contention, it was held in Stillwater & M. St.
After this citation of foreign authorities, it will be proper to examine the state of our own decisions on the subject. We think the constitution, statutes, and decisions of this State .recognize that the word “railroad” is generic, and includes street-railroads, narrow-gauge roads, horse-car companies, dummy-lines, and street-railroads operated by electricity. Whether a particular statute applies to any one of these various forms of railroads is to be determined from the language of the statute, from the context, or from the intent of the lawmakers. See Gyger v. Phila. City Ry., 136 Pa. St. 96. Street-railroads were not within the general corporation act of 1881 (Dieter v. Estill, 95 Ga. 370), because the provisions requiring the articles of association to state the places and the counties to and through which it was to run, fixing'the right of way at 200 feet, and authorizing the maintenance' and construction of docks, stations, etc., indicate that the legislature was dealing with railroads other than street-railroads. So in Savannah Ry. v. Savannah, 112 Ga. 164, a street-railway company doing a city business was held to be as much subject to city taxation as an omnibus company, though an ordinary steam-railroad operating between different places would not be subject to such a tax. They were both railroads, though one could be taxed on intra-city business, while the other was exempt from municipal tax on intra-city business. The terms of the act providing for county taxation of railroads show that it was evidently intended to apply to those roads running from one county to another, and not to those doing business in and near a single city. Pol. Code,
The Civil Code, § 2334, provides that all railroad companies shall be sued in the county where the cause of action originated; and while the point does not appear to have been distinctly made, its provisions were, in Devereux v. Atlanta Railway and Power Co., 111 Ga. 855, held to apply to the case of a street-railroad. In Price v. State, 74 Ga. 378, the act of 1837 (Penal Code, § 520), providing a penalty for obstructing a railroad, was held to apply to a street-railroad operated by horse-power, though no such species of railroad existed when the act was passed. In Perry v. Macon Consolidated Street Railroad Co., 101 Ga. 407, a minor, not a passenger, was injured, and the court applied the statutory presumption against railroad companies, citing Civil Code, § 2321. “ The presumption against a railroad company where an injury is shown to have been occasioned by the running of its cars, applies as well to street-railroad companies as to others.” Electric Ry. Co. v. Carson, 98 Ga. 654; Augusta R. Co. v. Renz, 55 Ga. 126, citing Civil Code, § 2321. Compare City Street Ry. v. Findley, 76 Ga. 311; Augusta R. Co. v. Randall, 79 Ga. 305 ; Holly v. Atlanta Street R., 61 Ga. 215, where the persons injured were passengers •and the plaintiff in error claimed' that the presumption was from common law, and not from the act of 1856. But even if that were so, it could by re-enactment have been made a statutory presumption. Certainly, even as to passengers, it is more extensive
The contention of the plaintiff in error is that if railroad can mean street-railroad, Civil Code, § 2297, does not apply to street-railroads, because the abrogation of the fellow-servant rule is therein shown to have been because railroad companies “ necessarily have many .employees who can not possibly control those who should exercise care and diligence in the running of trains.” It claims that this language shows that the legislature was considering a state of affairs applicable only to steam lines. This reason, given in section 2297, does not appear in the act of 1856, but was apparently codifiedfrom Judge Stephens’ opinion in Cooper v. Mullins, 30 Ga. 146. The rule and the act were codified in somewhat different language, and without any reason therefor being stated, in the Civil Code, § 2323. But even if the act of 1856 had stated a specific cause for its adoption, the operation of the statute need not have been coextensive with the reason given. The maxim, “ cessante ratione cessat ipsa lex,” is of great assistance in construing doubtful, impossible, and unreasonable provisions. But it should not override the express language of a statute. An act may originate from a desire to remedy a particular evil, and yet the language-may be so framed as to extend its provisions into a territory where the special evil does not exist. So, too, the language may be so framed as to pre-„ vent'its application in a territory where the same evil does exist. Pol. Code, § 4, par. 9. This is well illustrated in this very section changing the doctrine of fellow-servant; for this court, in holding that a receiver was not a railroad company, and therefore not within the language of section 2323 (3036), said, “It would be uncandid to deny that, to a certain extent, the same reasons of public policy and private justice which call for the protection of operatives on a railroad when the owners or lessees are in possession apply when receivers are in possession,” etc. Henderson v. Walker, 55 Ga. 483; Robinson v. Huidekoper, 98 Ga. 306; Ellington v. Beaver Dam Co., 93 Ga. 53. Conversely the section has been construed to apply to those working on bridges and in railroad machine-shops, though these cases were not within the evil sought to be corrected. Thompson v. Central R. Co., 54 Ga. 509; Central R. Co. v. Gleason, 69 Ga. 203 ; Georgia R. Co. v. Ivey, 73 Ga. 499 ; Georgia R. Co.
So while street-railroads may not then have been so dangerous, they were still railroad companies and within the purview of the law. They are not outside of the policy underlying the statute. They had tracks, and had or might have had bridges. The utmost diligence on the part of the driver might not have enabled him to guard against the negligence of other fellow-servants who were charged with the duty of keeping the track in repair. While there might not be as many injuries occasioned by the negligence of a fellow-servant in street-car service, yet the language of the statute was broad enough to take in these few instances as they arose. If th'e legislature used language which was broad enough to include street-railroads, and if to some extent they were within its spirit, even though not as much so as steam-railroads, the courts have no right to.pare down its meaning and say that the law does not apply to the employees of a street-railroad. The word “railroad” in 1856 was generic, as it is now, and broad enough to take in the new species as they arose from time to time. There may not have been any street-railroads in Georgia in 1856, but the legislature must have known that horse-power had been the first motive pow.er used in hauling cars on rails, and was even then being used either in this State or elsewhere in hauling single cars through the streets of cities. The fact that a reason was given by the codifiers, in inserting the act of 1856 in section 2297, could not have been intended to announce a variable rule which would make the company liable in cases where an employee separated from his fellow-servants was injured, and not hable when he was on the same engine and injured; or apply where the injury occurred by the movement of a heavy train with great momentum, and not apply where only a single car was being slowly moved through a freight