Harden v. . Railroad

40 S.E. 184, 129 N.C. 354, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 S.E. 184 (Harden v. . Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harden v. . Railroad, 40 S.E. 184, 129 N.C. 354, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 85 (N.C. 1901).

Opinion

COOK, J., dissenting. The plaintiff was a brakeman in the service of the Southern Railway Company (lessee of defendant), on a freight train, and was injured in making a coupling between a box-car and the shanty-car "with a link and the oldstyle draw-head." The shanty-car was not equipped with automatic couplers, nor was the train fully equipped with Janney couplers, or other modern self-coupling devices, and the Court charged the jury, citingGreenlee v. Railroad, 122 N.C. 977, 65 Am. St. Rep., 734 — since followed in Troxler v. Railroad, 124 N.C. 189, 70 Am. St. Rep., 580, and other cases — as follows: "If you find that the freight train was not fully provided with modern self-acting couplers, and that the plaintiffwould not have been injured had the cars been so provided, you will find the first issue `Yes' and the second issue `No.' " The Judge followed the decisions of this Court, and, without repeating the argument therein, it is sufficient to say that we re-affirm our former rulings holding a railroad company responsible for injuries to its employees which would not have occurred if there had been provided by it those humane devices protecting the lives and limbs of its employees, which are in general use. The reports of the United States Intercommerce Commission, issued by the authority of the Federal government, show the reduction of many thousands annually in the number of employees killed or maimed in coupling cars since the introduction of automatic couplers (which now is compulsory under the act of Congress as to all interstate roads). This should *Page 356 be a sufficient answer to all complaints as to our former ruling. If the lives and limbs of employees can be saved by such provision of improved appliances, public policy and humanity require the Courts to exact liability for failure to furnish them.

The principal point made, however, is in the effort to induce this Court to overrule a still longer line of decisions which hold this lessor, the North Carolina Railroad Company, liable for the act and defaults of its lessee, the Southern Railway Company. The charter of the North Carolina Railroad Company, Laws 1848-9, Chap. 82, sec. 19, authorize the company "to farm out its right of transportation over said railroad, subject to the rules above mentioned." There are no other words from which a right to lease the road can be inferred. As at the date of the charter railroads were comparatively new, and the popular idea was that a railroad company was to maintain the road-bed and "farm out" rights of transportation over it, as was the case with canal companies, and is to-day the case with express companies and many "fast freight" and "through lines," it was thought by many that these words did not authorize, and were not intended to authorize, a lease of its entire property, which lease had the effect to take it out of a "State system" running from the mountains to the seacoast under State control, and make it a part of an interstate line running North and South, under the control of foreign corporations, to the utter destruction of the "State system" intended by the charter of the defendant. The authority to lease, based upon the permission "to farm out its rights of transportation," came before this Court in State v. Railroad,72 N.C. 634, and that expanded construction was sustained by a divided Court, Judge Settle writing the opinion, Judge Bynum dissenting in a remarkably able opinion. Judge Rodman did not sit. If it were a new question, this Court might possibly hold with Judge *Page 357 Bynum as to the reasonable construction of the meaning of the words "to farm out the right of transportation," but the lessee would rely upon the fact that it took its lease relying upon the construction placed by this Court upon the meaning of those words. But it also made its lease subsequent to the decision of this Court — often since repeated — that those words did not allow the lessor to rid itself, by any lease made under authority conferred by those words, of liability for any acts or negligence or torts committed by the lessee as to the world, its passengers or its employees, the latter being held in effect to be simply sub-employees of the lessor, employed by its agent for the operation of the road, its lessee.

In Aycock v. Railroad, 89 N.C. 321 (1883), it had been held, Smith, C. J., the authorities "fully sustain the proposition that the defendant company leasing the use of its road or permitting the use of it by another company, remains liable for the consequences of the mismanagement of the train in charge of the servants of the latter and the injury thence resulting, to the same extent as if such mismanagement was the act or neglect of its own servants operating its own train," citing the authorities.

In Logan v. Railroad, 116 N.C. 940, this very charter of the defendant company was elaborately considered, and in an able opinion by Mr. Justice Avery, concurred in by the entire Court, it was held that no lease made by virtue of the above-cited words — there being no clause of exemption granted to the lessor — would exempt the defendant from liability for the wrongful acts, defaults or negligence of its lessee, and hence that the lessor company was liable for injuries sustained from the negligence of its lessee by a section hand employed by such lessee.

This decision was rendered by this Court at February Term, 1895, and the lessor and lessee, both aware of the construction placed by the Court upon a contract by lessor to *Page 358 "farm out its right of transportation" on 16th August following executed the lease under which the lessee is now operating the defendant's road. Both parties had that decision in view, and provided for the liability of the defendant for all the acts and defaults of its lessee by a stipulation in said lease (which lease is filed as a part of the record in this case) for a deposit of "not less than $175,000 in cash, or its equivalent, to be applied" to the performance of the stipulations in the contract to be performed by the lessee, and among them "to any judgment or judgments recovered in any Court of the State or of the United States when finally adjudicated, for any tort, wrong, injury, negligence, default or contract,done, made or permitted by the parties of the second part, its successors, assigns, employees, agents or servants for which the party of the first part shall be adjudged liable, whether the party of the first part is sued jointly with or separately from the party of the second part," and further provides to what agents of the lessee notices of such suits shall be given by the lessor when sued singly, and for the renewal and maintenance of said sum whenever diminished by such application of any part thereof.

The lease was made subsequent to the decision of the Logan case. Both lessor and lessee knew of the continuing liability of lessor under any lease authorized by the words "farm out," as construed by this Court, and stipulated, in view of such liability, a deposit being put up, to be maintained at a fixed sum to guarantee the lessor, the defendant herein. If the lease is valid because made subsequent to the decision of a divided Court in State v. Railroad, 72 N.C. 634, it does not lie in the mouth of the lessor to contend that it does not remain liable for all acts of its lessee in the operation of its road under a lease made subsequent to the decision of a unanimous Court in Logan v. Railroad

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.E. 184, 129 N.C. 354, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harden-v-railroad-nc-1901.