White v. Arizona Eastern Railroad

229 P. 101, 26 Ariz. 590, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 196
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
DocketCivil No. 2171
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 229 P. 101 (White v. Arizona Eastern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Arizona Eastern Railroad, 229 P. 101, 26 Ariz. 590, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 196 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

— This is an action for damages for death. The facts necessary for a decision of the questions involved, taken from the complaint, are as follows: The plaintiff’s intestate, a truck driver in the employ of the Union Auto Transportation Company, Lightning Delivery Company, and J. A. Horton, who together, it is alleged, were operating a freight stage line by means of gasoline trucks, was on July 27, 1922, driving one of said trucks when it and a locomotive engine belonging to the defendant Arizona Eastern Bailroad Company, and moving on its track between G-lobe and Maimi at what is known as Kaiser Crossing, collided, almost instantly killing plaintiff’s intestate. It is alleged the accident was caused by the negligence of the intestate’s employers and the defendant railroad company in the following manner: That the truck deceased was driving was equipped and provided with insecure and insufficient brakes to enable deceased properly to control and stop same; that the condition of the brakes rendered truck unsafe for the purposes for which it was intended, and that previous to the accident the deceased’s employers had negligently and oppressively required deceased to work continuously and long-hours, without sufficient, or any, sleep or rest; that he was overtired, and by reason thereof and because of the condition of brakes was unable to properly operate truck in the highly dangerous situation in which he was placed by the negligence of defendant railroad company; that there were green trees at or near the railroad crossing which partially obstructed the view of approaching locomotive, and that defendant railroad company’s servants in charge of the locomotive failed to blow the whistle or to give any [592]*592other adequate warning, and that by reason of suoh inadequate warning, the partial obstruction caused by the green trees, the tired and worn-out condition of deceased, and the insufficient and unsafe brakes on truck, there was a collision between the truck and the locomotive.

We will refer to the employers of the deceased as the “stage line” defendants in contradistinction to the railroad defendant.- The three corporation defendants filed separate pleas in abatement, but in the same words, setting forth that the complaint showed on its face a misjoinder of parties defendant. Horton, the other defendant, raised the same question by demurrer. The demurrer and pleas were sustained, and the complaint dismissed. From the judgment of dismissal the appeal is taken.

The contention of appellant is that the facts set out in the' complaint do not show a misjoinder of parties defendant, but on the contrary show that decedent came to his death by the joint or concurrent negligence of the “stage line” defendants (his employers) and the railroad company, and that therefore the defendants are jointly and severally responsible for the injury.

We think beyond question the complaint shows the accident in which deceased met his death was the result of two separate, distinct, and independent causes, one being a faulty brake and a debilitated physical and mental condition, due to overwork and lack of sleep, for which his employers were responsible, and the other the negligence of the railroad company. These causes not only have different sources, but do not coincide in time or place. The act or omission of the “stage line” defendants, as set forth in the complaint, antedates the accident some time.- Their act consisted in turning over to a worn-out and exhausted employee the truck without suffi[593]*593cient brakes at a time prior to the collision, and in which act the other defendant (the railroad company) had and took no part, and conld by no principle of law we are familiar with be responsible for. Likewise the “stage line” defendants conld not be charged with the negligence of the railroad company in permitting its right of way at crossing to become obstructed by brush or trees, and in its failure to ring bell or adequately warn at crossing. These acts and omissions of duty were personal to the defendant railroad company and no one else.' The negligences laid at the door of these separate defendants as the bases of a claim for damages sustained in the accident described were not current or joint, but separate, distinct, and independent of each other.

Because unconnected, unrelated acts of different persons or corporations accidentally or fortuitously may have influenced an injury and damage, it does not necessarily follow that such persons or corporations are joint tort-feasors. If A. beats C.,- and B., while O. is wounded and worn from such beating, acting independently of "A., administers another beating to C., from which he dies, A. and B. are not joint tort-feasors and jointly liable for G’s death, although C. might not have died had B. not beaten him. There must exist some community of purpose or wrong or fault to give rise to joint liability. This we think is the settled rule. To constitute a joint tort the wrong must be joint. A tort may be committed by one person or by several, but the tort is always single. The general rule on this point we think is very well stated in Dickson v. Yates, 194 Iowa, 910, 917, 188 N. W. 948, loc. cit. 951, wherein it is said:

“Only when two or more persons act in concert of action to commit a common tort are they joint tortfeasors. If the tort of two or more parties is several when committed, it does not become joint by reason of [594]*594the union of the consequences of the several torts in producing an injury. . . .
“Although joint tort-feasors are jointly and severally liable, it is hard to conceive a tort ‘at once joint and separate.’ Ramsey v. C. R. & M. Ry. Co. et al., 135 Iowa, 329, 112 N. W. 798. When two or more parties act each for himself in producing a_result injurious to the plaintiff, they are not jointly liable. . . .
“There must be concurrent action, a co-operation or concert in the accomplishment by the wrongdoers of the particular wrong in order to make them jointly liable. If each person acts independently of the other the fact that they acted simultaneously is not sufficient to establish joint liability. ...”

The appellant claims the facts of this case take it out of the general rule and place it within the rule announced in Cuddy v. Horn, 46 Mich. 596, 41 Am. Rep. 178, 10 N. W. 32. We do not think so. That was a case wherein plaintiff was drowned, while a passenger on the boat “Mamie,” by collision with the boat ‘ ‘ G-arland”; it appearing that the employees operating both of said boats were at the time guilty of negligence. In holding that the plaintiff might sue the owners of the boats jointly, the court employed this language, which, as applied to the facts of the case, is a correct statement of law:

“An act wrongfully done by the joint agency or co-operation of several persons will render them liable jointly or severally The injury done in this case resulted from a collision caused by the contemporaneous act of two separate wrongdoers, who, though not acting in concert, yet by their simultaneous wrongful acts put in motion the agencies which together caused a single injury. And for this the injured party could receive but a single compensation. It is the fact that they all united in the wrongful act, or set on foot or put in motion the agency by which it was committed, that rendered them jointly liable to the person injured.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 101, 26 Ariz. 590, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-arizona-eastern-railroad-ariz-1924.