Dunn v. Railway Co.
Dunn v. Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
after stating the case: There is no allegation or evidence tending to show that the cars which caused the injury were in any way defective. The negligence charged against the defendant company is in the way the cars were managed and operated, and it will be noted that the injury did not occur on the line of the defendant’s road, nor'was the defendant, nor were any employees of the defendant, in charge of the cars at the time of the injury. The plaintiff recognizes that these conditions would ordinarily protect the defendant from responsibility for the occurrence, and seeks *523 to bold tbe defendant liable on the principle established in Logan v. Railroad, 116 N. C., 940. But we do not think the principle can be applied to the facts of the case before us. In that important and well considered opinion, Mr. Justice Avery declares the doctrine that a railroad company, owning its road under and by virtue of a State charter, cannot escape responsibility for negligence in the operation of its road by leasing it to another company, unless its charter or some subsequent act of the Legislature expressly exempts the lessor road from such responsibility; and in this and in other decisions in which the doctrine is affirmed, it is held that both the lessor and the lessee in possession and operating the road are liable for the lessee’s actionable negligence.
But in no case, so far as we are aware, has it been declared or intimated that a lessee, who has assigned all his interest and who is not in any way engaged at the time in the management or operation of the road, can be held for his assignee’s misconduct.
Applying the doctrine of Logan's case, supra, and more correctly, perhaps, the doctrine in Aycock’s case, 89 N. C., 321, and assuming negligence to be established and that the plaintiff and his agent were free from blame, the facts would seem to disclose that the Asheville Street Eailway Company could be held responsible, because the cars were at the time upon their roadway by their consent, and the How-land Improvement Company, because its employees were in charge of and operating the cars. But there is no fact or principle of law which could attach responsibility for the occurrence to the defendant company. One element always involved in a question of negligence is the breach of some duty.
In Logan’s case and others of like import, it is declared that a railroad company which owns or holds its road under and by virtue of a State franchise is under a duty to the general public to see that its road is properly operated, and on *524 this principle, its lessee operating its road becomes its agent for whose conduct it is responsible in the performance of this public duty, and which it is not allowed to put aside except by express legislative sanction.
But no such duty arises to the defendant company on the facts of the present case. The injury, as stated, did not occur on -the defendant’s road, but on that of the Asheville Street Railway. The employees of the defendant were not engaged in operating the cars. The defendant had gone out of business, and the Howland Improvement Company, acting under a separate and independent charter which conferred upon it most ample powers and whose employees were in control of the cars at the time, was neither upon the defendant’s road nor in the exercise of the defendant’s franchise. It simply had in possession, and was using some of the personal property which the defendant company had formerly owned and had assigned, to-wit, the cars and the lease.
There was error in overruling the motion to nonsuit, and upon the testimony the action should have been dismissed. This will be certified to the court below that judgment may be entered dismissing the action.
Reversed.
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