Louisville, New Orleans & Texas R. R. v. Conroy

63 Miss. 562
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 63 Miss. 562 (Louisville, New Orleans & Texas R. R. v. Conroy) 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
Louisville, New Orleans & Texas R. R. v. Conroy, 63 Miss. 562 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Cooper, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In Railroad Company v. Norwood, 62 Miss. 565, we held the engineer to be the servant of the railroad company, though the train in his charge was at the time of the injury sued for in the service of an independent contractor who was doing certain work in the details of which the company had no interest. In that case the controversy was between the railroad company and a citizen, whose mule had been killed by the negligent running of the train, and liability was fixed upon the company. In the case now before us the question is as to the liability of the company for an injury inflicted by the negligence of the engineer upon a laborer employed by the contractor, and who at the time of the injury was in the prosecution of the work for which he had been engaged.

It appears from the statement of McDonald, the contractor, that he had made a contract with the company to excavate a certain cut on its line of road, for which it was to pay him at the rate of sixty cents per cubic yard of earth removed, and in addition was to furnish him with a construction train of twenty cars and an engineer to manage the same. This train was required by the company to be upon the side-track fifteen minutes before the schedule time of each of its trains, and was prohibited by its written orders from running at a greater rate of speed than fifteen miles per hour. The full measure of the contractor’s control over the engineer and train, as stated by him, was that- when the train was loaded with dirt, my foreman, Shea, gave a signal, and the engineer pulled the train- out to the place of deposit, and when the laborers had thrown [567]*567the'dirt off the signal was repeated and the. train was backed down to the works. The rate of speed at which the train went or came was something with which I had nothing to do, and 'did not try to control • that was controlled by the company in the manner indicated. The engineer was selected by the company, and it alone had the right to discharge him. It paid him his wages, but charged them úp to me and deducted the amount from the sum due me. I had the right to complain of the engineer, and the company, if it saw fit, might substitute another, but was not bound to do so.” The appellee was one of many laborers employed by the contractor and paid by him. Their duty was to load the cars with the excavated earth and to go with it to the place at which it was to be deposited and unload the train. The train in one of its trips was being backed at a rate of from twelve to fifteen or twenty miles per hour, and ran over a cow, which resulted in several cars being thrown from the track, and the plaintiff, being on one of them, received the injury to recover for which this suit is brought.

The appellant denies responsibility on the ground that the engineer was a fellow-servant with the plaintiff, who is, therefore, precluded from recovering for an injury arising from his negligence, and upon the further ground that having engaged in a dangerous service, known to be such, he assumed the risk incident to it, and volenti fit non injuria. The correctness of the decision in R. R. v. Norwood is not challenged by the appellant, but reliance is placed upon a class of decisions, few in number, in which it seems to be held that the servants of an independent contractor and those of his principal, if engaged in a common work, are as between themselves fellow-servants within the rule which denies recourse against the principal for an injury resulting from the negligence of his servant.

This seems to be the established doctrine in Massachusetts. Johnson v. City of Boston, 118 Mass. 114 ; Harkins v. Standard Co., 122 Mass. 400. It is difficult to determine just what was decided in the case of Cox v. R. R. Co., 21 Ill., relied on by appellant, or the ground upon which the decision was made. In that ease the company had contracted with Bennett & Scott to deliver a [568]*568certain quantity of woo.d at various stations along its line. Plaintiff’s intestate was employed by the contractors to assist in loading and unloading the cars by which the wood was to be transported, and a part of the wood having been so placed on a car as to project over its side, it struck against the cars of another train, and the intestate was thrown from the car with the wood and killed. The car carrying the wood was a part of a train under the charge of a conductor and engineer furnished by the company.

The court in one part of its opinion says : “ We shall consider for the purposes of this case that all the parties, as well Bennett & Scott as their hired hands, were employees of the company. We consider it as proved that all persons on the train were employed by the company in the same service.” If the facts warranted this, the case is in harmony with the general current of authorities on the subject. But again, the court found as a fact that the accident was caused “by the unskillful manner in which the wood was loaded upon the cars, in doing which the deceased was an actor.” If this was true, the company was not liable, because the negligence was not that of their servant, the engineer, but of the deceased and his colaborers. But the court, continuing, reversed its position and declared that “all the hands hired by Bennett & Scott, who were contractors to furnish the wood, and who had control of the engine and train, were engaged in the same business,” etc, thus indicating that the engineer and the laborers were fellow-servants to the contractors, and if they were the company was not liable, because the engineer was not its servant.

But the doctrine of the Massachusetts court is supported in its fullest extent by the case of Wiggett v. Fox, 11 Ex. Rep. 832. In that case the plaintiff’s intestate had been injured by the negligence of the servant of a principal contractor, he himself being in the service of a sub-contractor and engaged in work on the same building. The court, by Alderson, B., said: “ Here both the servants were, at the time of the injury, doing the common work of the contractors, the defendants, and we think that the sub-contractor and all his servants must be considered as being, for this [569]*569purpose, the servants of the defendants whilst engaged in doing work, each devoting his attention to the work necessary for the completion of the whole, and working together for that purpose.” It was also said, here the workman comes into the place to do work knowingly and avowedly with others. The workman, as was suggested in Priesly v, Fowler, may, if he thinks fit, decline any service in which he apprehends injury to himself, and in cases in which danger is to be apprehended he is just as likely, probably more so, to be acquainted with the risks he runs than the common employer would be.” It would seem, therefore, that Wiggett v. Fox determines that the servants of two independent contractors engaged in the same common work are inter se fellow-servants, and also that one who engages in dangerous work cannot recover from the master for the negligence of his servant engaged in the same general work. But in Abraham v. Reynolds, 5 Exchequer 142, Martin, B., said he had consented to the judgment in Wiggett v. Fox

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Bluebook (online)
63 Miss. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-new-orleans-texas-r-r-v-conroy-miss-1886.