For the reasons given in my opinion heretofore filed in this case, I think the court below properly sustained the demurrer.
Ross, J., dissented.
*174The following is the opinion of Mr. Justice McKee, above referred to, rendered in Department One on .the 24th of June, 1885.
McKee, J.Upon a general demurrer to the complaint in this case the defendant had judgment, from which the plaintiff has appealed.
The cause of action stated in the complaint is this: In the month of September, 1880, W. C. Brown, an engineer of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, while driving one of its locomotives attached to a train of passenger-cars over and upon a narrow strip of land and trestle-work known as the “Oakland pier,” which extended into the San Francisco Bay, and formed part of the company’s road from Sacramento to Oakland, was precipitated with the locomotive into the bay and drowned, in consequence of the negligent and improper conduct of the defendant in giving to the engineer the wrong signal; i. e., in giving the signal to go instead of a signal to stop.
In considering the sufficiency of the statement to constitute a cause of action, the court below was bound, as is this court, to presume from the allegations of the complaint that the act of negligence which caused the engineer’s death was committed by some one employed by the company, whose duty it was to signal and set switches for its trains, for a railroad corporation can only act by its agents or servants; so that whether the death of the engineer resulted from the negligence of the switch-tender of the corporation, or, as suggested in argument by plaintiff ’s counsel, from the negligence of the Superintendent, or a director, or other agent of the corporation in charge of that duty, he was an employee of the corporation; and as the engineer was also an employee, the corporation was not liable under the code for the death of the engineer resulting from the negligence of the co-employee, unless the employees were not employed in the same general business, or the corporation neglected to use ordinary care in the selection of the culpable employee, *175or in providing him with proper machinery for use. (Civ. Code, sec. 1970.)
There is no allegation that the officer, whoever he was, was not properly qualified, competent, and skillful to perform his duty, nor that the instrumentalities furnished by the corporation for the performance of his duty were defective; therefore the corporation performed its duty in that regard, and the single question remains whether the engineer and switch-tender were co-employees in the same general business. We think they were. “ The business of a railroad company,” says Chief Justice Shaw in Farwell v. Boston and Worcester Railroad Company, 4 Met. 55, “ is to construct and maintain a railroad, and to employ their trains of cars to carry persons and merchandise for hire.....Persons employed by the company are appointed and employed to perform separate duties and services, all tending to the accomplishment of one and the same purpose, — that of the safe and rapid transmission of the trains; and they are paid for their-respective services, according to the nature of their respective duties, and the labor and skill required for their proper performance.” In that case it was held that the engineer and switch-tender of the company were fellow-employees in the same line of employment.
The rule for determining the question involved is thus formulated by the Supreme Court of Illinois: “Where the facts show that the employees were brought into personal consociation by their ordinary duties, or that at the time of the injury they were co-operating in some particular work; in such cases they must be regarded in law as fellow-servants.” (C. & N. R. R. Co. v. Moranda, 93 Ill. 324.)
Upon the same principle, this court has held that the “ helper ” at a foundry and the driver of a truck-wagon belonging to the foundry under the same employer, and the superintendent or foreman of a mine and a laborer at the mine, were “ fellow-servants ” engaged in the same *176general business. (Hogan v. Central R. R. Co., 49 Cal. 128; Collier v. Steinhart, 51 Cal. 116; McLean v. Blue Point Gravel Co., 51 Cal. 255.) “ The term ‘fellow-servants ’ includes all who serve the same master, work under the same control, derive authority and compensation from the same source, and are engaged in the same general business, though it may be in different grades and departments of it.” (Wood on Master and Servant, sec. 435; McLean’s Case, supra.)
But it does not include the servants of an employee in any such grades or departments; as, for instance, if a corporation employs an agent to perform duties of any particular grade, or in any special department, with power to employ, control, and discharge workmen or laborers under him, he is not a “fellow-employee” of those whom he employs, and for injuries to any of them caused by his negligence the corporation is liable. (Beeson v. Green Mountain G. M. Co., 57 Cal. 20; McKune v. Southern R. R. Co., 67 Cal. 302.) This case does not fall within that exception; the engineer and the switch-tender, although on duty in separate departments, were in the discharge of their duties under the same general employment, and for the negligence of the fellow-servant of the intestate the defendant is not liable. (Yeomans v. Contra Costa County, 44 Cal. 71; Hogan v. C. P. R. R. Co., supra; Slater v. Jewett, 85 N. Y. 62.) There was no error in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint.
Rehearing denied.