134 F. 313 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California | 1904
(orally). Plaintiff alleges that she is the-widow of Charles A. Sessions, deceased, and that Nathan P. Sessions, also a plaintiff, is the son and only child of said Charles A. Sessions,, deceased. Plaintiff alleges: That she was entirely dependent upon her husband for maintenance and support. That she and her son and the defendants McGuire and Cole are residents of the state of California. That the defendant Southern Pacific Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Kentucky, doing business in the state of California, and that on December 20, 1902, the defendant company was engaged in operating trains upon-its railway lines between the city of Oakland, Cal., and the city of Fresno, in the same state. That on said December 20,1902, at the time of the occurrences set out, and at the time of the death of said Charles A. Sessions, the defendants McGuire, Dolan, and Cole were employed' by, and were employes and servants of, the defendant corporation, the defendant McGuire being a locomotive engineer, engaged in managing and running the locomotive engine attached to and being part of a certain passenger train of the defendant known as the “StocktonFlyer,” and the defendants Dolan and Cole acting in the respective capacities of conductor and brakeman upon a certain train operated by the defendant corporation and known as the “Owl” train, and that the-defendant Dolan was at said time in the management and control of the said passenger train known as the “Owl” train, and the defendant Cole was at the same time acting as passenger brakeman on the
The action was instituted in the superior .couift of. the .state of California in and for the county of Alameda, and thereafter the defendant Southern Pacific Company filed its petition for removal, allegingdts incorporation under the laws of the state pf Kentucky, and that the plaintiffs Ella A. Sessions andN. P. SeSsi°ns were and are residents and citizens of the state of California, and that there is in said suit a controversy wholly between citizens of different states. Defendant also sets forth in its petition for removal that in June, 1903, an action was instituted upon'the same claim as herein set out against this defendant in the superior court of the state of California in-and.for the county of Contra Costa, to .recover of this defendant, as the sole, defendant therein, the sum of $30,000, for the same damages, alleged to have been'susr tained by the same plaintiffs, Ella A. and N.. ]?• Sessions, on account of the death of the same Charles A. Sessions narned in the conqplaint on file in- this present suit, and that thereafter the said suit was, re-: moved to. the Circuit Court of the United States, and that petititioner, .when the action was, removed, fil.ed its answer in the Circuit Court of .the United States,- and .that said, suit .was, pending and undisposed of in the. Circuit.Court of.the-United- States until the 36th day of Sejptember, 19.04,’ on which date the plaintiffs; in said action dismissed said suit from the said Circuit Court of the United States; and immediately .after said dismissal, to wit,’ on. the. 39th day, of-September, 1904, plaintiffs brought this action in. the superior, court of th,e state to recover damages in the sum of $30,000, alleged to have been sustained by the said plaintiffs.on .account of■ the death of the,said Charles..4- Sessions named in the .plaintiffs’, cpmp.íai’nt, and: joined
An examination of the complaint fails to show the commission of a joint tort. The averments, taken together, are that the negligence was that of the servants who had control of defendant’s train when the collision occurred. No other representative of the corporation is charged to have been present or to have been associated with them; hence the argument of joint negligence of the servants and principal is the legal view of the plaintiffs, predicated upon the belief that the acts of the servants in control, being acts of agents and servants in the scope of their employments, were the acts of the defendant company, and that, therefore, the principal and agent become jointly liable in a single action. The plaintiffs rely principally upon the case of Railroad Company v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131, 21 Sup. Ct. 67, 45 L. Ed. 121. The rule that, where concurrent negligence is charged, the controversy is not separable, as laid down in the Dixon Case, must be regarded in its relation to the construction put upon the pleadings and the record in that particular case, and, when so regarded, the decision of the court is limited to the determination that the Court of Appeals of Kentucky was correct in denying a petition to remove where a complaint expressly averred that the death of the plaintiff was caused by the joint and concurrent negligence of all the defendants. The chief justice argued that the unusual rate of speed of the train, as averred in the complaint in that case, may have been permitted by some rule of the company itself, and, if so, the negligence was concurrent; not, as I understand it, however, by derivative negligence, but by direct omission or neglect, which wofild make the company concurrently liable with the employés in an entire cause of action. But'in the case under consideration there is no such allegation averring that the death of plaintiff was caused by the joint and concurrent negligence of all the defendants. The case is brought fairly within the principle of the Warax Case (C. C.) 72 Fed. 637, that “the liability of the master for the negligence of his servants in his absence, and without his concurrence or express direction, arises solely from the policy of the law which requires that he shall be held responsible for the acts of those he employs, done in and about his business, while the liability of the servant arises wholly from his personal act in doing the wrong.” The Supreme ■ Court upholds this principle, and, where its application may be made to
The motion to remand is denied.