Wabash Railroad v. Kelley

52 N.E. 152, 153 Ind. 119, 1898 Ind. LEXIS 1
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1898
DocketNo. 17,694
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 152 (Wabash Railroad v. Kelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wabash Railroad v. Kelley, 52 N.E. 152, 153 Ind. 119, 1898 Ind. LEXIS 1 (Ind. 1898).

Opinions

Howard, J.

Appellee was a fireman on one of appellant’s freight engines. On August 2, 1893, while his train was running from Del Ray, Mich., to Ashley, Ind., and while he was engaged in his duties cleaning his engine, he slipped and fell from an alleged defective step on the engine, and the wheels ran over and crushed one of his feet. It is alleged in the complaint filed by appellee that the company “had undertaken, at the time it employed plaintiff, and as a part of the contract of his employment, and did on said day undertake, to provide surgical and medical attendance and’ care to the plaintiff, as the same should be rendered necessary [121]*121by casualty and accident, and to treat him for sucb injuries received while in its service.” Accordingly, immediately after his said injury, appellant took appellee to the Emergency Hospital, in Detroit, where his foot was amputated by a Dr. Maire, a local surgeon acting for appellant’s medical division. Afterwards, on August 5, 1893, appellee was removed by appellant to Peru, in this State, and placed in the hospital located there, and connected with appellant’s railroad. This hospital was then in charge of one Dr. Higgins, as local surgeon, under Dr. Morehouse, chief surgeon of the hospital department of the Wabash Railroad Company. On August 9, 1893, Dr. Higgins reamputated three or four inches more of appellee’s leg. On November 2, 1893, Dr. Morehouse removed Dr. Higgins on account of his indulgence in the use of drugs; and, in December following, an additional amputation was performed on appellee’s leg by a Dr. Griswold, appointed by Dr. Morehouse to succeed Dr. Higgins. About an inch and a quarter more of the bone of the leg was removed in this third amputation.

In appellee’s complaint damages were sought both for the negligence of appellant in the use of the defective engine step and other acts alleged to have caused the accident, and also by reason of malpractice on the part of Dr. Higgins in the second amputation, and other treatment of the wounded leg. The jury found for appellant as to the original accident and for appellee as to malpractice by Dr. Higgins, and assessed damages in the sum of $6,500.

The sufficiency of the complaint is questioned under various assignments of error. The defect indicated is that it appears from the complaint that the company exacted from appellee, without his written consent given, a part of his wages to be used for the maintenance of a hospital, contrary to the provisions of §§2300, 2301 Burns 1894 (Acts 1885, p. 123). Appellant has retained appellee’s money and has placed the same in its treasury as a part of its funds for the care of its sick and disabled employes; but contends that, as appellee [122]*122did not give his written consent to such retention, he has, therefore, by reason of appellant’s said wrongdoing, no right to the benefit which appellant promised him in return for the money so exacted. We do not think the complaint shows any agreement on the part of appellee to violate the statute in question. It is alleged, simply, that the appellant had undertaken, as a part of the contract of employment, to provide surgical and medical attendance and care to the appellee, as the same should be rendered necessary by casualty and accident, and to treat him for such injuries received while in its service; that, consequently, on the happening of appellee’s injury, appellant was in duty hound to furnish him such medical and surgical services; and that appellant, recognizing its said duty, did send appellee first to the Emergency Hospital at Detroit, and then to the hospital at Peru, to receive the care and attention originally promised. Such undertaking to provide surgical and medical care is not, by the statute, made void as a part'of 'the contract of service. The provision of the statute is that it shall be unlawful for a railroad company “to exact from its employes, without first obtaining written consent thereto in each and every instance, any portion of their wages for the maintenance of any hospital, reading-room, library, gymnasium or restaurant.” If the appellant did, indeed, exact any such contributions without the written consent of appellee, — which does not appear from the complaint, — that was not a wrong for which appellee can be held liable. It was the act of appellant; and it is a familiar principle that one cannot take advantage of his own wrong.

As to the deductions from appellee’s wages, it appears from the complaint that appellee had no voice in the matter, but that appellant had “for seven years [the period of appellee’s service] deducted and taken from his monthly wages the sum'of fifty cents per month, with which to reimburse and recompense itself for expenses and charges incurred or rendered necessary in treating or providing surgical and medical [123]*123treatment for plaintiff.” It would be strange, indeed, if appellant, while retaining this money, could now claim that appellee had no right to the promised benefit from the money so retained, for the reason only that appellant had no right, so to retain it. Even if such unlawful retaining by appellant could, in any way, be considered as a contract on the part of appellee, still, as said in 9 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 910, “an innocent party, defrauded by a guilty one, may have redress as to him.” The law is aimed at the wrongdoer. So it was said, in Stockwell v. State, 101 Ind. 1: “The general rule is, that contracts in violation of law are void, but this rule will not be extended and applied to a case like this, so as to enable the wrongdoer to take advantage of his own wrong against an innocent party.” And, in Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 134 Ind. 215, 20 L. R. A. 405, Judge Coffey writing the opinion, it was held that a foreign insurance company, which had insured property for an- agreed consideration, could not, in case of loss, avoid payment on the ground that it had wrongfully omitted to comply with the statute regulating foreign insurance companies. “The law ceases with the reason thereof,” as said in Deming v. State, 28 Ind. 416. In that case many instances are given and authorities cited, showing that it is a grave error to regard the rule- here relied upon “as a merely arbitrary rule, applicable to all contracts which are prohibited by statute.” It is the wrongdoer himself, the violator of the statute, who is prohibited from reaping any benefit from his own wrong. In Winchester Electric Light Co. v. Veal, 145 Ind. 506, cited by counsel, the party who sought .to recover under the violated statute was himself a principal wrongdoer in the violation of the statute. It is not shown here, either in the complaint or by the evidence, that the appellee was guilty of any violation oí the statute in suffering a part of his wages to be retained by the appellant.

The first reason given to show that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial is substantially the same as [124]*124that urged against the sufficiency of the complaint; that is, that, under the statute above cited, appellant had no right, without appellee’s written consent, to make deductions from his wages in order to reimburse itself for care given or to be given to him in case of sickness or accident. We think we have shown this reasoning to be unsound. Appellant may not thus visit its own wrong upon the head of appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 152, 153 Ind. 119, 1898 Ind. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-railroad-v-kelley-ind-1898.