Colorado & Southern Railway Co. v. Western Light & Power Co.

214 P. 30, 73 Colo. 107
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 5, 1923
DocketNo. 10,076
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 214 P. 30 (Colorado & Southern Railway Co. v. Western Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado & Southern Railway Co. v. Western Light & Power Co., 214 P. 30, 73 Colo. 107 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Western Light & Power Company, having been compelled to pay a joint judgment of $10,000 rendered against it and the Colorado & Southern Railway Company by the district court of Boulder county in an action by Edward Hoyle against both of them, wherein the complaint charged each of them with separate acts of negligence which resulted in a collision of the railway company’s coal train with the power company’s street car at the intersection of their tracks in Boulder, Colorado, and caused the death of Hoyle’s wife and daughter, who were passengers in the street car at the time, thereupon brought the present action against the railway company to recover indemnity in the amount paid in satisfaction of the joint [110]*110judgment and, in a separate count, or cause of action of the complaint, for the destruction of its street car. In a trial before a jury there was a general verdict for the plaintiff on both causes of action, and the judgment upon this verdict is brought here for review by the defendant.

The theory of the plaintiff power company is, that though the unreversed Hoyle judgment is conclusive that each of the defendants was guilty of negligence that contributed to the accident, yet, as between themselves, there was not, and upon that record there could not have been, a determination as to which of them, if either, was solely and primarily its producing cause; therefore, if, as alleged in the complaint here, and as found by the jury at the trial, the collision which resulted in the death of the injured parties in the Hoyle case, was primarily, solely and proximately caused by acts of negligence of the railway company, positive, active and subsequent in time to the merely passive, negative . and antecedent negligence of the power company, that the negligence of the wrongdoers was different in kind and the power company less culpable than the railway company, which had the last clear chance, but failed to avail itself thereof, to avoid the accident, the case falls within an exception, or is not subject, to the general rule that contribution or indemnity may not be had by one joint wrongdoer of another for an injury done by their concurrent acts.

The contention of the defendant railway company as shown by the several defenses of its answer in which the points are appropriately made, are: General denial, negligence, and contributory negligence of plaintiff; that plaintiff, and not defendant, had the last clear chance to avoid the collision and failed; that in the Hoyle personal injury case, plaintiff power company was adjudged guilty of negligence proximately contributing to the accident resulting in the death of the passengers, and that question was not, and is not, open to review or consideration in this case; and if the verdict established such negligence, this operates as a bar or estoppel on the power company to [111]*111claim either indemnity or contribution in this or any other action, and upon the same principle the estoppel applies to the recovery of damages asked in the second cause of action for destruction of the street car; that by the terms of an indemnity contract between the parties, the same operates as a bar to both causes of action in the complaint.

These objections, which appear in appropriate separate defenses of the answer, and the errors assigned to rulings of the court during the trial; refusal to order a non-suit, and to direct a verdict for the defendant, the adverse rulings on defendant’s objection to testimony, and to the instructions given, fairly present questions for our determination.

The foregoing statement shows that plaintiff, to escape the general rule, alleges facts which it says brings the case within the exception. There is no question as to the general rule, which prevents one wrongdoer from recoveryl over of indemnity or contribution from another wrong-doer. The parties are in accord as to that, but disagree about the exceptions. The difficulty, we think, is not so much in stating the correct rule or principle of law applicable to indemnity or contribution as in applying it to the particular facts. If, therefore, neither the former judgment in the Hoyle case, nor the indemnity contract, is a bar to this action, and if the court committed no error in its rulings during the trial, or in its instructions, the judgment here should be affirmed if the exception exists and the case, as made, falls within it.

We shall first discuss the two pleas of estoppel, separately pleaded; the one, based upon the former Hoyle judgment, the other, upon the indemnity contract.

The first really involves two propositions: “One, whether there is an exception, as asserted by plaintiff, to the general rule; the other, the effect of the former Hoyle judgment, if the exception exists.

As to the first proposition, the authorities, if not in real, are in apparent, conflict. To attempt a reconciliation would be fruitless. In a recent case, Ellis v. The C. [112]*112& N. W. Ry. Co., 167 Wis. 392, 167 N. W. 1048, the court declared that one of two wrongdoers may, in a proper case, like the one before it, have contribution from the other. In the opinion is a spirited review of some leading English and American cases. The action there was for contribution. While indemnity may not in all respects be subject to the same rules, what is stated in the opinion applies equally to both kinds of redress. After adverting to the general rule, the opinion states the exception which we think controls the present case. The Wisconsin court said that in England the rule against redress “is confined to cases where the person seeking redress must be presumed to know that he was doing an unlawful act.” In other cases, where there is no willful or conscious wrong, redress may be allowed. In the American authorities the court said there is a lack of harmony. Some of the courts, in some of the cases, declare the general rule and apparently without an exception, and in other cases, in the same court, an exception is recognized in cases like that before us, which some courts, as in New Hampshire, say is not an exception to, but that cases ordinarily designated as an exception do not fall within the rule. Possibly some of the apparently inconsistent statements in the opinions may be reconciled by applying the almost universal rule that general statements in an opinion are to be interpreted in the light of the particular facts of the case in which they are made. Even so, it would seem that the doctrine is not uniform.

In the Ellis case, supra, the court referred to the Union Stock Yards Co. v. C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 196 U. S. 217, 224, 227, 25 Sup. Ct. 226, 49 L. Ed. 453, 2 Ann. Cas. 525, an indemnity suit, which was there, as here, strongly relied upon as against redress by way of indemnity or contribution. There the Wisconsin court said that the facts in the Stock Yards Case were quite different from the facts then before the court, but if. they could not be distinguished, which the court thought doubtful, the federal decision would not be followed. As the Stock Yards Case [113]

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Bluebook (online)
214 P. 30, 73 Colo. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-southern-railway-co-v-western-light-power-co-colo-1923.