Story v. Concord & Montreal Railroad

48 A. 288, 70 N.H. 364
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 48 A. 288 (Story v. Concord & Montreal Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Story v. Concord & Montreal Railroad, 48 A. 288, 70 N.H. 364 (N.H. 1900).

Opinions

Whether justice and convenience required separate trials was a question of fact determined by the ruling of the presiding justice. Eames v. Stevens, 26 N.H. 117, 121. *Page 368

The Boston Maine Railroad having been discharged by a verdict in their favor, to the direction of which by the court no exception appears to have been taken, the only question is whether, upon the facts stated, the verdict found by the jury against the Concord Montreal Railroad should stand. As the case is presented to us, the Concord Montreal Railroad are the sole defendants.

It appears that the plaintiff, a locomotive fireman in the employ of the defendants, was injured while in the course of his duty because of a defect in the track, as he alleges, over which, by direction of his employers, the locomotive upon which he worked was passing. The track claimed to be defective was not a part of the defendants' railroad, but was owned and kept in repair by another railroad corporation which had exclusive control over it. The plaintiff knew these facts. The use of this track by the defendants was rightful, but the precise terms upon which they enjoyed such use did not appear. At the trial the defendant' motion that a verdict be ordered for them was denied. The first question considered under the defendants' exception to the denial of this motion is whether the fact that the alleged defective track was neither owned, managed, nor kept in repair by the defendants, to the plaintiff's knowledge, relieves them of liability for non-performance of the master's duty to provide suitable and safe appliances for the use of the servants in his employment.

"This duty may be, and in case the employer is a corporation must always be, discharged by agents and servants, and the agent or servant charged with its performance, whatever his rank of service may be, stands in the place of the employer, who thereby becomes responsible for his acts and chargeable with the negligence of such agent or servant." Jaques v. Company, 66 N.H. 482, 484; Pierce R. R. 369. As the employer is not discharged by delegation this duty to a servant or a number of servants, the delegation of the duty to a corporation as servant or agent would not relieve him. What the contract for the use of the Boston Maine track by the defendants was, is immaterial. Neither road, by agreement with the other, could relieve the other of any liability as to third persons which the law imposes. Under whatever names they were styled in their agreement, if there was one, the undisputed fact of the rightful use by the defendants of a portion of the Boston Maine tracks, cared for and repaired by the Boston Maine, established that the Boston Maine were the agency employed by the defendants in the performance of their duty of furnishing a safe and suitable track for their employees. Having either by express agreement or by permissive use of the Boston Maine track employed that corporation as their agent in the performance of *Page 369 their master's duty, the defendants thereby become responsible for the acts and chargeable with the negligence of such agent; and as the corporation thus made the defendants' agent and servant could act only through their agents and servants, the defendants became responsible for the acts and chargeable with the negligence of the individual employees of that corporation, who were personally charged with the duty of inspection and repair owed by the defendants to their servants.

Murch v. Railroad, 29 N.H. 9, was an action by a passenger of the Northern Railroad to recover for injuries alleged to have resulted to him from a defect in the track of the Concord Railroad, of which, at the point and time of the alleged injury, the Northern Railroad was in permissive use. In the decision of the questions thereby arising this court said (p. 35): "By using the railroad of another corporation as a part of their track, whether by contract or mere permission, they [the Northern] would ordinarily, for many purposes, make it their own, and would assume toward those whom they had agreed to receive as passengers all the duties resulting from that relation as to the road; and if accident resulted to such passengers from any failure of duty of the owners of the road, for which they would be responsible if the road was their own, their remedy over would be against the owners."

In that case the plaintiff's claim against the Northern Railroad arose from his contract of carriage. In the present, the plaintiff relies upon the obligations implied in his contract of employment. Fifield v. Railroad,42 N.H. 225. Though the requirements of the contract in the case of a passenger and an employee differ in degree, the principle upon which the claim of each is founded is the same, — the failure of the other party to the contract to exercise such care is demanded by the relation mutually assumed. As stated by Knowlton, J., in Engel v. Railroad, 160 Mass. 260,263: "The duty of a railroad corporation to furnish for its employees safe tracks, cars, locomotive engines, and other machinery, tools, and appliances with which its business is to be carried on, is similar in kind to its duty to passengers in these respects, although the degree of care required is less. In either case, its duty is the same when the tracks . . . are hired, or used under a license from others, as when they are owned by the employer." Spaulding v. Granite Co., 159 Mass. 587; Wisconsin etc. R. R. v. Ross, 142 Ill. 9; Stetler v. Railway, 46 Wis. 497, — S.C.,49 Wis. 609; Little Rock etc. R'y v. Cagle, 53 Ark. 347; Smith v. Railroad, 18 Fed. Rep. 304.

It is suggested that since the defendants' trains were rightfully using the Boston Maine tracks that corporation owed to the defendants and their servants the duty of maintaining the track in *Page 370 a reasonably safe and suitable condition for use — a duty arising not out of contract, nor from the relation of master and servant, but which the law imposed upon the grounds of public safety. It may be assumed that this claim correctly states the law. Pierce R. R. 274; Sawyer v. Railroad,27 Vt. 370; Merrill v. Railroad, 54 Vt. 200; Snow v. Railroad, 8 Allen 441; Robertson v. Railroad, 160 Mass. 191; Nugent v. Railroad, 80 Me. 62. But the liability of the owner of the track, if established, does not relieve the defendants of their master's duty. "In many instances several parties may be liable in law to the person injured, while as between themselves some of them are not wrongdoers at all." Nashua Iron and Steel Co. v. Railroad, 62 N.H. 159, 160. As the case now stands there is no question of joint liability. The Concord Montreal are the sole defendants. That parties are not jointly liable for an injury, because not jointly negligent, does not establish that they are not severally liable. Mulchey v. Society, 125 Mass. 487; Parsons v. Winchell, 5 Cush. 592; Shearm Red. Neg., ss. 244, 248; Busw. Pers. Inj., s. 31.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 288, 70 N.H. 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/story-v-concord-montreal-railroad-nh-1900.