Lagrone v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad

67 Miss. 592
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 Miss. 592 (Lagrone v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lagrone v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad, 67 Miss. 592 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Woods, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The earnestness with which counsel for appellant press for a reversal has led us to give the controlling question involved a thorough re-examination. We find that the determination'of a single proposition will prove conclusive of the whole case, and we shall therefore confine ourselves to that.

On the case presented by appellant’s pleadings, were the section-master and appellant fellow-servants ? If this question is answered affirmatively, there is at once an end to the contention, for it is apparent in each count of the declaration, that the injury complained of resulted from the negligence of the section-master. It follows, therefore, that if the section-master and the appellant were fellow-servants, there can be no recovery in the case.

We might with safety and propriety decline to say more than that appellant’s declaration shows by unequivocal statement that the injury complained of was the result of the negligence of the section-master, at a time when he was simply engaged in manual labor with appellant. Both were engaged at that time, in the ordinary work of simple day laborers in track repairing. The appellant was holding and the section-master was striking a bent fish-bar with a view to straightening and fitting it for its purposed use. It seems to us that this plain and brief recital, by every rule of law, is ample to demonstrate that appellant’s injury -was the effect produced by the negligent act of a fellow-servant.

That the question under consideration is in apparent incertitude, owing to conflicting opinions entertained by many courts of last resort in the United States, is certainly and lamentably true. But we think it may be confidently affirmed that this incertitude arises, not from any disagreement as to the reason and right of the general rule first declared in this country by the supreme court of South Carolina in the case of Murray v. The S. C. R. R. Co., 1 McMullan, 385, and adopted in this state in the case of N. O., J. & G. N. R. R. Co. v. Hughes, 46 Miss. 258, when the subject was first considered by this court, but from a vacillating spirit which has striven to bend the rule in its application to the exigencies of particular cases. This incertitude, too, we make no doubt, arises in [597]*597part from the vague and indeterminate definition originally employed in declaring the signification of the word fellow-servants. To be sure, the most consummate use of language will fail in giving a definition which may meet at a glance every possible case, that may arise in actual life. But to continue to say that, “ all who are co-working in the same common enterprise, under the same common master, and receiving compensation from him” are fellow-servants, is to leave the standard so uncertain itself as to invite every variety of contention under it. To attempt to reduce the rule to greater clearness and exactness by adding, as is often done, that “ difference in compensation, or in departments, or in rank,” does not have any determining effect, in seeking to ascertain who are fellow-servants in any particular case, improves the force and weight of the original definition, but still leaves the field of contention open to every rash and adventurous litigant.

In all the cases determined by this court for nearly twenty years past, what element has entered into and exercised controlling influence upon the judgment of the court in declaring who are fellow-servants? The element of co-operation, actively and personally exercised to the accomplishment of one common end. If we shall say, then, in addition to the definitions already given, that “all employés of the common master, engaged in merely operative service connected with the carrying on of the business of running trains” are fellow-servants, we will have made a definition and created a test by which nearly every case involving the doctrine under discussion, that has ever been in this court, was readily determinable —a definition and a test so clear and simple as to make nine-tenths of all the cases constantly occurring in railroad life and service, practically, self-determining.

The leading case in this state, that of the N. O., J. & G. N. R. R. Co. v. Hughes, 49 Miss. 258, and one uniformly and unbendingly adhered to in all subsequent causes before this court, while not resting upon the language herein employed, yet nevertheless does rest upon the sound principle that employés engaged in the operative department of a railroad (in that case the relationship between a section-master and a locomotive engineer was the question) were [598]*598fellow-servants in such sense as that an injury to one resulting from the negligence of the other would not impose liability upon the common master. From this wise, just and well-established rule this court has never departed nor, in its application, swerved.

It is only a few weeks since Judge Campbell, as the organ of this court, in the case of the L. N. O. & T. Ry. Go. v. Petty, ante, 255, employed the very language we have used in supplementing the usual definitions of the word fellow-servants, and, as we had fondly (it appears vainly) hoped, had made the rule so plain in Mississippi that a “ way faring man,” though a super-sanguine suitor, “need not err therein.”

Appellant and the section-master were co-working in the same common employment, under the same common master, and receiving compensation from him, and were engaged in merely operative service connected with the carrying on of the business of running trains, though the section-master was superior in rank to appellant, and appellant was actually under his direction and control, and were, not only under our decisions, but by the best authorities elsewhere, and by every rule of right and reason, fellow-servants in such sense as to preclude any recovery from the common master for the negligence of either toward the other.

The case at bar is thoroughly covered by and in perfect harmony with the judgment of this court in the unreported case of Sykes v. The Ga. Pacific Ry. Co., determined at the April Term, 1889, of this court. In that case the allegations of the declaration were, that Sykes was employed by one Catón as a laborer in a track-laying gang; that Catón was the representative of the company at the time of Sykes’s employment, and so remained up to the time of Sykes’s receiving the injuries complained of; that Catón had power and authority to hire Sykes, and the other laborers employed in that work, and to discharge them at his discretion; that Catón had control, likewise, of the construction train employed in hauling timbers, etc., to be used in the construction of the road; that Sykes and the other laborers were bound to obey Caton’s orders; that Catón ordered him to get on the train and unload cross-ties at [599]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Miss. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lagrone-v-mobile-ohio-railroad-miss-1890.