Engelberg v. J. F. Prettyman & Sons

156 S.E. 173, 159 S.C. 91, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 18, 1930
Docket13042
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 156 S.E. 173 (Engelberg v. J. F. Prettyman & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engelberg v. J. F. Prettyman & Sons, 156 S.E. 173, 159 S.C. 91, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 182 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Stabler.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to be due to defendant’s negligent operation of its logging railroad, whereby plaintiff was injured in a collision, at a public highway crossing, between an automobile which he was driving and a logging train of the defendant. The fifth defense of the answer alleges that prior to the date of *93 the collision, the defendant had entered into an agreement with the McLeod Logging Corporation, a distinct and separate corporation in which defendant had no interest, whereby it leased its logging railroad to the McLeod corporation, and whereby, inter alia, the McLeod corporation agreed to log the defendant’s sawmill at a stated price; that under this agreement the McLeod corporation was an independent contractor, and as such was operating the railroad at the time of the collision; that defendant was not then'operating the railroad and is not responsible for the torts and delicts, if any, of the McLeod corporation, resulting in injuries to the plaintiff.

A demurrer was interposed to this defense, on the ground that it did not constitute a defense, “for the reason that the said defendant, under the statute law of South Carolina and the decisions of tlie Supreme Court, is a railroad corporation and as such cannot by such alleged contract as is set forth in said fifth defense escape liability for its negligence or recklessness.”

From an order of Judge M. M. Mann, sustaining the demurrer, the defendant appeals to this Court, the appeal raising these questions:

(1) Is the appellant a railroad corporation for the purposes of this suit?

(2) Is it liable for the delicts of the McLeod Lpgging Corporation, an independent contractor?

(3) Is it liable as a lessor railroad for the delicts of its lessee, the McLeod Logging Corporation?

To sustain its contention that appellant is a railroad corporation, respondent relies on Section 4763, Chapter 52, of the Civil Code 1922, and the interpretative cases of Crawford v. Mullins Lumber Co., 110 S. C., 318, 96 S. E., 494,. and Law v. Prettyman & Sons, 149 S. C., 178, 146 S. E., 815. Both of these cases involved liability under the so-called, fire statute (Section 4910, Chapter 52, Civil Code 1922), and in the latter the present appellant was held to be a railroad corporation for the purposes of that suit. The appellant, *94 while conceding that, by analogy of reasoning these cases might become authority in an action brought under some other section of Chapter 52 creating a liability against a railroad corporation, contends that the case here is one for negligence at common law, and that the definition of terms in Section 4763 would not operate to make it a railroad corporation in such a case. We think, however, that the decision of the question in the present case rests upon other grounds.

Section 4321, Chapter 50, Article 1, relating to business corporations, is as follows: “Corporations organized for any purpose under the provisions of this article shall have power to construct and operate a railroad, electric railway, tramway, turnpike or canal for their own use and purposes, and shall have the right to effect a crossing with any existing railroad or public road as is now provided by law for railroad corporations; but they shall have no power to condemn lands except for crossing any existing railroad or public road, as herein provided.”

The grant of a right to cross a public highway by means of a railroad, which involves the operation of dangerous instrumentantes, necessarily carriers with it a duty to observe due care for the protection of the public using the highway at the crossing. Such a duty. devolves upon the railroad under the common law, and the Legislature has seen fit to further enlarge that duty by requiring certain signals to be given, in a prescribed manner, at such crossings. Section 4903, Chapter 52, Civil Code 1922. It will be noted that by Section 4321 ordinary business corporations are granted the same right to effect crossings with public highways as railroad corporations, and it would seem to follow by clearest implication that they are also' burdened with the same duties and liabilities in so far as such crossings are concerned'. It would be an anomalous situation if an ordinary business corporation should be given the privilege of crossing public highways to the same extent and in the same manner as if it were a railroad corporation, but should *95 be absolved from the duties and responsibilities to the public with which such privilege is burdened in the hands of a ralroad corporation. This would be a discrimination lackng in appeal either to reason or to conscience, and we cannot believe that such was the intent of the Legislature.

A like question was passed upon in the case of Ex parte Bacot, 36 S. C., 126, 15 S. E., 204, 207, 16 L. R. A., 586, which involved a statute, generally similar to, but subsequently replaced by, Section 4321 above quoted. In that case it was attempted, in effect, to- enjoin a mining company from procuring a right-of-way for a private railroad; one of the grounds being that the proposed railroad would cross a public highway without authority to do so. On this point it was held that, as. the company had the power to construct and operate the railroad the general law .upon the subj ect of public highway crossings was applicable “to this proposed railroad as well as to others.” The soundness of that position cannot be questioned, and by the application of the same principle in the case at bar we can reach no other conclusion than that all general laws, whether common law or statute, relating to highway crossings by railroad corporations, are applicable in the case at bar to the appellant, which is therefore a railroad corporation for the purposes of this suit.

This conclusion having been reached, we have next to inquire whether the appellant can be held liable for the alleged delicts of the McLeod Corporation. Under the allegations of the fifth defense, this corporation occupies what may be considered a dual relationship towards the appellant, namely, that of an independent contractor and that of lessee — an independent contractor as to the work to be done in logging defendant’s sawmill, and a lessee as to the use of its railroad and equipment. The distinction is here of no practical importance, however, as the rules governing the liability of the appellant are the same in both cases.

*96 In National Bank v. A. & C. R. Co., 25 S. C., 216, which seems to be our leading case on this point, the Court said: “When a railroad or other corporation receives its charter from the State, conferring certain franchises, rights and privileges, it is upon the consideration that such corporation shall perform the duties and fulfill the obligations which it at the same time incurs. The fact that the corporation chooses to perform those duties and fulfill its obligations to the community through another, whether as lessee or otherwise, cannot release it from the obligations which it has assumed by the acceptance of its charter.

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Related

Carroll v. United States
87 F. Supp. 721 (D. South Carolina, 1949)
Seay v. Southern Ry. Co.
37 S.E.2d 535 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.E. 173, 159 S.C. 91, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engelberg-v-j-f-prettyman-sons-sc-1930.