Upon the undisputed facts of this case it is clear that the placing of the embankment in question in the traveled part of a public highway over which hundreds of teams were passing daily, without taking the slightest precaution to warn or protect travelers who might have occasion to approach it on a dark night, was an act of gross and inexcusable negligence. Indeed, so patent is this fact that the defendants, instead of controverting it, seek to escape responsibility by invoking the rule which exempts a party from liability for the negligent act or omission of an independent contractor who has undertaken the performance of certain work for the 'benefit and at the instance of the party with whom he contracts.
That such a rule does exist there can, of course, be no question, for the books record numerous precedents in which it has been asserted and applied (Blake v. Ferris, 5 N. Y. 48; Pack v. Mayor, 8 id. 222; Storrs v. City of Utica, 17 id. 104; King v. N. Y. C. & H. R.R. R. Co., 66 id. 181; Herrington v. Village of Lansingburgh, 110 id. 145; Roemer v. Striker, 142 id. 134; Berg v. Parsons, 156 id. 109) ; but whether or not it has any application to the present case is quite another matter.
In some of the earlier cases, and notably in that of Blake v. Ferris (supra), the rule is very broadly stated, but so much doubt has been expressed in many of the more recent decisions as to the propriety of its application to such a state of facts as exists in the present case, that we hardly feel warranted in attaching to it the force and importance which the defendants’ counsel claims it should receive.
It would be quite an interesting study to review and analyze the doctrine enunciated in Blake v. Ferris, in the light of succeeding adjudications, were it necessary to do so in order to sustain the conclusion at which we have arrived in this case; but inasmuch as that conclusion is founded upon an exception to the rule, we shall simply advert to two or three cases in which a somewhat different construction than the one contended for is given.
In Storrs v. City of Utica (17 N. Y. 104) Comstock, J., in,
The law, as thus enunciated, it will be seen, is made to depend upon the principle that the defendant, being a municipal corporation, and charged, as such, with the performance of a public duty, cannot escape liability by interposing a contract made with a third
But without dwelling longer upon this feature of the case, it will suffice, for the purpose of this review, to indicate that, in our opinion, the important question which demands our consideration is dependent for its solution, not upon the general principle upon which the doctrine of respondeat superior rests, for it was expressly held by the trial court that, as between the defendants the Terminal Railway Company and the firm of Smith & Lally, the relation of master and servant or of principal and agent did not exist, but rather upon a principle which is somewhat exceptional in its character.
In the case of Berg v. Parsons (supra), after adverting to and adopting the rule laid down in Blake v. Ferris, as we understand and have endeavored to define that rule, it was said (p. 115): There are certain exceptional cases where a person employing a contractor is liable, which, briefly stated, are : Where the employer personally interferes with the work, and the acts performed by him occasion the injury ; where the thing contracted to be done is unlawfulwhere the acts performed create a public nuisance; and where an employer is bound by a statute to do a thing efficiently, and an injury results from its inefficiency.”
Obviously this case falls within neither the first nor second of the exceptions above stated, and we do not feel at liberty to regard the obstruction to the highway, which was created by the defendants, as in the nature of a public nuisance, inasmuch as that question was
As has already been stated, the right to interfere with the highway had been granted by an order of the Supreme Court, and that order enjoined, as a condition of the grant, that the railway company should comply with the requirements of the statute and restore the highway to such state as not to unnecessarily impair its usefulness. Thus it will be seen that whatever license the railway company had to enter upon the highway for any purpose was in fact conferred by a statute (General Railroad Law, Laws of 1890, chap. 565, § 11) which imposed upon it a certain duty; and if that duty involved care and vigilance in the prosecution of the work, as well as a substantial restoration of the highway when the work was completed, it necessarily follows that the case falls directly within the last exception to which reference has just been made.
We have seen that a duty rests upon a municipality to keep its streets in a reasonably safe condition for the use of the public, and that it cannot escape the responsibility which that duty involves by contracting with some irresponsible person to perform work in a public highway which is of a dangerous character. This much was expressly decided in the case of Storrs v. City of Utica (supra) and it is now a well-settled rule of municipal law in this State. (2 Dillon Mun. Corp. § 790 et seq.; Brusso v. City of Buffalo, 90 N. Y. 679; Pettengill v. City of Yonkers, 116 id. 558; Scanlon v. City of Watertown, 14 App. Div. 1.)
Manifestly, as it seems to us, the obligation assumed by a railroad company when it takes possession of a highway for the purpose of effecting a crossing thereof is analogous for the time being to that which pertains at all times to a municipality in its care of its streets, and we are consequently of the opinion that the statute under which
It is true that the statute does not in express terms declare that when carrying its line of road across a public highway a railway company must guard and protect the traveling public from such damages as may reasonably be anticipated from its interference with the highway ; but it does confer the right to excavate, fill in and change the grade of the highway, and this necessarily involves some obstruction and inconvenience to travelers thereon. If, therefore, in the conduct of its operations the obstruction is unnecessarily dangerous, or if it is permitted to remain for an unreasonable length of time, or if while it remains it is not properly guarded, it becomes a public nuisance, and certainly it is not the policy of the law to sanction the creation or maintenance of a nuisance which would be a constant menace to life and property. (Woodman v. Met. R. R. Co., 149 Mass. 335 ; Mundy v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 75 Hun, 479.)
In Conklin v. N. Y., Ont. & W. R. Co. (102 N. Y. 107, 112), the court, in discussing the rights' and duties conferred upon railroad corporations by the statute we are now considering, says : “ In the process of restoration they simply stand in the place of the highway commissioners, having for. the purpose of the restoration and so far as needed, all their official rights, and charged with all their duties.”
Again, in Rauenstein v. N. Y., L. & W. R. Co. (136 N. Y. 528, 534), it was said: “ It is thus evident that the source of the power to change the grade of the street to permit of carrying it over the railroad crossing, is in the general or public law; which creates a duty in that respect, which is transferred from the local authorities to the shoulders of the railroad company; in the performance of which it stands in the place of the local authorities.” And the rule which we think must govern in cases of this character is nowhere more clearly stated than by Traux, J., in Flynn v. N. Y. Elevated R. R. Co. (49 N. Y. Super. Ct. 60). He says: “ It would not, I conceive, be denied * * * that whoever, a natural person or corporation, is authorized to disturb the surface or bed of a highway, whether by way of privilege or duty, must in doing it use ordinary
These authorities, and many more of like import, make clear, as "we think, the general proposition that in every case where a person or corporation is permitted by statute to interfere with, or temporarily obstruct, a public highway, such permission carries with it and imposes upon the person or corporation a corresponding duty, from the full performance of which there is no escape.
The execution of the particular work, to facilitate which the license is given, may be delegated to a contractor, and he may, as between himself and his principal, undertake to perform the duty which rests upon the latter, but the obligation still remains where it originally resided, and cannot be so delegated as to relieve the licensee from the consequences of his failure to perform (3 Elliott Railroads, § 1063; Downey v. Low, 22 App. Div. 461; Johnston v. Phoenix Bridge Co., 44 id. 581), and if this proposition is one of general application, it is obviously relevant to the facts of this case.
The railway company, in order to construct the line of road, availed itself of the statutory privilege to interfere with and materially obstruct a much-traveled highway, in doing which it disregarded the plainest mandate of duty and carried on its ojDerations in a manner which was grossly negligent. In consequence of the manner in which the work was performed and the complementary duty left unfulfilled, the plaintiff has received a serious personal injury, for which she seeks to charge all the defendants, upon the principle that they are joint tort feasors; and to permit either or all of them to escape the consequences of their negligence and shield themselves behind the rule which is invoked in their behalf, would, we believe, be an unauthorized application of that rule.
One or two other questions of minor importance are perhaps entitled to some consideration.
It is said that the amount of damages awarded by the jury, viz.,
At the conclusion of the charge of the learned trial court the counsel for the defendants Smith & Rally requested the court to instruct the jury that those defendants were under no obligations by reason of their contract with the Terminal Railway Company to guard any work they did in the street. This request was granted and the jury were so instructed, to which ruling the counsel for the company duly excepted, and subsequently he requested the court to charge the exact converse of the proposition. This latter request was, of course, refused, and another exception was taken. It is now contended that these exceptions present such prejudicial error .as requires a reversal of the judgment.
Without passing upon the question of whether or not the rulings excepted to were erroneous, it is sufficient for the purposes of this review to suggest that the requests in response to which they were made related solely to the relations and obligations existing between the defendants themselves, as to which the plaintiff occupied the attitude of a disinterested party. The defendants, if liable at all, were liable as joint tort feasors; and the plaintiff ought not to suffer if perchance the trial court at the request of one of the defendants
We have examined the other exceptions, but find nothing in them requiring specific mention ; and our conclusion of the whole matter is that the judgment and order appealed from should he affirmed.
All concurred, except Laughlin, J., not sitting.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.