Howard v. Union Traction Co.
Howard v. Union Traction Co.
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs in their statement of claim set forth that the traction company was a corporation engaged in the business of carrying passengers for hire, and the gas company was a corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing and supplying gas. They further averred that the plaintiffs were passengers on the car of the traction company on August 7,1899, and that the traction company undertook to carry them safely, and that as they were in the act of getting off from the car, one of them, the wife, was thrown by a block of wood which was placed across a trench which had been recently dug and filled up by the gas company, and which was left in a defective and dangerous condition, and that she thereby sustained a severe injury for which the present action was brought. It was further alleged that the plaintiffs were directed to get off the car at a defective and dangerous place, and that therefore the injury sustained was the result of the joint negligence of both defendants. To this statement of claim the defendants demurred, chiefly on the ground that the injury complained of was not the result of any joint act of the defendants, and therefore they could not be sued as joint tort feasors. The learned court below sustained the demurrer.
We are very clear that upon the cause of action as stated in the claim there ivas no community of fault by the two defendants in the act which occasioned the injury. The statement of claim alleges that the injury was caused by the block of wood placed and maintained by the gas company in a defec
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Howard v. Union Traction Company
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Negligence—Parties—Joint tortfeasors—Street railways— Gas company.| An action cannot be maintained against a street railway company and a1 gas company, as joint tort feasors, upon a statement of claim which al-j leges, that the plaintiff in alighting from a street car was thrown by block of wood which had been placed across a trench recently dug and filled up by the gas company, and which was left by it in a defective and dangerous condition. An averment that the conductor directed plaintiff to get off the car at a defective and dangerous place, does not in connection with the allegation of negligence against the gas company show a united negligent act of both companies, nor the same act in any sense. There was no community of fault by the two defendants in the act which occasioned the injury, and neither defendant had the least participation in, or control over, the negligent act of the other.