Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1903

Wieder v. Bethlehem Steel Co.

Wieder v. Bethlehem Steel Co.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania · Decided March 23, 1903 · Brown, Deaf, Fell, Mestrezat, Mitchell, Potter
205 Pa. 186; 54 A. 778; 1903 Pa. LEXIS 545

Wieder v. Bethlehem Steel Co.

Opinion of the Court

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Potter,,

The plaintiff in this case was employed for several years by the Bethlehem Iron Company, at its works in the borough of South Bethlehem. In the spring of 1899, an impression became current in that community that on or about May 1, the plant of the Bethlehem Iron Company and the control and operation of its works would pass into the hands of another corporation, to be known as the Bethlehem Steel Company. The plaintiff never received any definite notice as to any such change upon the part of his employer, but was under the prevalent impression in that regard. He met with an accident upon May 17, 1899, which he alleged was due to the. negligence of his employer and under the belief that he was at the time of the accident in the employ of the Bethlehem Steel Company, he brought this action against it to recover damages for his injury.

At the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence a certified copy of the lease, between the Bethlehem Iron Company and the Bethlehem Steel Company, dated May 25, 1899, but not executed or acknowledged until June 24, and June 26, 1899.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the trial judge held that the terms of the lease were controlling as to the date of the transfer between the two companies, and that from the lease itself and the evidence in the case, it appeared that on May 17, 1899, there had been no transfer whatever to the Bethlehem Steel Company. He therefore entered a judgment of compulsory nonsuit.

*190The first and principal error here assigned is the refusal of the court below to take off the judgment of nonsuit. • Error is also assigned to the exclusion as testimony of the statements of the plaintiff, that he went into the employment of the Bethlehem Steel Company on May 1, 1899, by reason of the lease; that he knew that he was transferred as an employee from the iron company to the steel company upon that date, because the newspapers of Bethlehem announced the change would be made at that time; and for the further reason that he saw that the names on the locomotives and on other places about the works were changed about the first of May.

These statements were properly rejected. The opinion of the plaintiff with regard to the change in ownership was immaterial. His bare belief, with regard to the fact, even though founded upon reasonable cause, could not make the defendant liable. His first statement, which was stricken out, was based upon his own construction of the meaning and terms of the lease. There is no evidence to show that he ever saw the lease until long after the accident, and in any event its interpretation, and the effect to be given to it, Avere for the court.

In entering the judgment of nonsuit, the trial court was controlled by the fact that the lease was not executed for several days after the accident, and by the evidence of the officers of the steel company called by the plaintiff, from which it appeared that the steel company did not take possession of the works of the iron company until the final execution of the lease in the latter part of June.

It is undisputed that at the time when the accident occurred, the change was in contemplation, and had been for some time previous. Such a change, however, in so far as its physical aspect was concerned could not be made at once. The properties of a large plant were to be transferred, and the change in name upon signs here and there, and upon the stationery, was of no importance in so far as indicating the precise date of the transfer was concerned. That remains as a simple question of fact, and with respect to it, we can find nothing in the evidence from which it may be fairly inferred that the steel company were in control of the plant, or that plaintiff had entered into its employment at the time of the accident.

The testimony of the officers and directors of the steel com*191pany, who were examined^ by the plaintiff with regard to the execution of the lease, shows that it was not executed, until after the day of its date, which was May 25. Their testimony was also uniformly to the effect that the iron company continued to operate the plant until the execution of the lease.

The official notice of the change was issued upon June 26, 1899, in which it was announced that the Bethlehem Steel Company had taken the lease of all the property of the Bethlehem Iron Company, and that all officers, employees and agents of the iron company would be continued by the steel company, with their present powers and duties until further notice.

The lease itself had been placed of record in the recorder’s office of Northampton county upon June 80, 1899, and was open to the inspection of the plaintiff. He did not begin this action for more than a year thereafter. If he was then in any doubt with regard to the identity of his employer at the time of the accident, it would have been but the part of ordinary prudence to have made inquiry as to the fact from the defendant company. If he had done so, and had been misled in any way by the reply, the question of estoppel might have arisen. But he did not do this, and the defendant company was not bound to assume that he was ignorant of the true situation. The lease was a matter of public record, and there was no duty upon the part of the defendant company to volunteer further information to one who had the means of access to the record. The plaintiff had been for years in the employ of the Bethlehem Iron Company, and it is admitted that he had never received any notice, direct or indirect, from his employer, as to any change taking place. He would therefore have been perfectly justified in assuming that no change had occurred at the time of the accident, and in holding the Bethlehem Iron Company responsible for any neglect of duty to him in the course of his employment at that time.

It is true that the twelfth clause of the lease provides that the transfer of the possession of property under it shall be regarded as taking effect on May 1, 1899, and that all business transacted by the said iron company on or after that date, shall be for and on account of the said steel company. But this cannot be regarded as in any way shifting the liability of the iron company for a tort committed by it. Nor did it relieve the *192iron company of its primary responsibility for any act of negligence upon its part. It was nothing more than an agreement that as between the two companies, the rental accrued to the iron company from May 1, and the profits from the business went to the steel company from the same date, and that the latter company was bound to assume the obligations of the iron company and pay for all damages occasioned by the operation of the works after that date. This twelfth clause of the lease did not create any contractual relation of employer and employee between the plaintiff and the steel company. He remained in the employ of the iron company until the actual transfer occurred. If there was negligence resulting in injury to the plaintiff upon May 17, it was that of the iron company and was something for which it must respond directly in an action of tort.

We know of no authority which would justify the bringing of an action of tort against any other than the party which committed it. Agreements to indemnify against legal liability for the commission of a tort, are common; but the legal liability must be established by suit brought directly against the wrongdoer. We cannot find in this case anything more than the surmise of the plaintiff, to justify him in believing that any change in his employer had occurred at the date of the accident. For years previously he had been employed by the Bethlehem Iron Company. He had received no notice of any change. Why should he then assume the fact of a change ? Had he made his claim against his old employer, everything would have favored the correctness of his assumption as to its liability. With his eyes open, and in the exercise of his own discretion, the plaintiff chose between the iron company and the steel company, and saw fit to make the latter defendant in this suit. The result was unfortunate, for the evidence failed to vindicate his choice. It was not shown that the steel company was his employer at the date of the accident, or that it owed him any duty at that time. Manifestly the wrong company was named as defendant.

The assignments of error are all overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.

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