This case presents, distinctly, the specific question whether a party who had from the public authorities a license to run a ferry, and had leased the same to another party for a definite period, who was conducting the same independently of the lessor, by his own men and means, is liable for a death caused during that period, by the wrongful act or negligence of a servant of the lessee. I think the principle is well settled on authority^ that he is not so liable; but as the contrary is strenuously maintained by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, and as the principle itself is of large application, and must control a considerable number of suits growing out of the occurrence in question in this case, it may be well to re-state some of the reasons upon which it rests.
I am not able to see how any person can be made responsible for a particular transaction, or the consequences flowing from it, unless he has been in some way personally engaged in it, or instrumental in bringing it about, or the relation between him and the person who inflicts the injury complained of, be that of partner, or master and servant, or some other involving the principle of agency.
Where one is the master or principal of another, he is responsible for his acts, within the scope of his employment, because he has conferred authority upon the latter to do the act, and because he has the power and the legal right to control his conduct. Where one is the partner of another, he is liable for his acts within the scope of the partnership, because he has agreed to be so, and because the very nature and object *621of this relation imply that each acts with the authority and assent of the other. But where the parties stand towards each other simply in the light of contracting parties, having no relation towards each other which draws into operation the principle of agency, the rule does not apply. Such is the condition of lessor and lessee. The lessee, for the time being, takes the place and assumes the duties and obligations of the lessor. He is a substitute for the lessor. He acts independently of him. He cannot be controlled by him. He has an agreement under which, in consideration of a stipulated compensation, he is, for the time being, clothed with the rights and responsibilities of the lessor. The lessee of a house or a farm is, during the continuance of the lease, owner—at least quasi owner. He has the rights of owner. The lessor cannot, without his consent, set foot upon the premises. The lessee of a ferry has similar and equal rights. By the very terms and legal effect of the lease the lessor is displaced from the possession and temporary ownership of the ferry. He cannot run it. He cannot control it.. He cannot give directions in regard to it. He has no more rights in regard to it than a third person. To attempt to take possession or to exercise control, or to give directions, would be to make him an usurper, an intruder—-a trespasser. How then.can he be liable for the acts of the lessee ? The servants of the lessee are not his servants. He cannot control them. He cannot give them orders which they are bound to obey. They owe no allegiance or service to him. Having no power over them, and having conferred no authority upon them, he is not responsible for their acts. He stands in no relation to them which makes applicable to him the maxim respondeat superior.
The application of these principles, under the adjudged cases, is generally not difficult, when the facts are undisputed. Thus, in Blake v. Ferris, (1 Selden, 48,) the defendant had a license from the common council of Hew York, to put down a sewer in one of the public streets, and which required him, in order to protect the citizens from clanger, to keep up *622proper barriers and lights in the neighborhood of the excavation, and made him responsible for the damages which might result from the making of the improvement, by a neglect of any of the necessary precautions, and Ferris, instead of prosecuting the work himself, contracted with one Gibbons to do it, for a stipulated price, and it was done by the latter. During its prosecution, an injury occurred to the carriage and horses of the plaintiff, by their being driven into the excavation thus made; and for this injury the action was brought. But although there was a recovery, with the sanction of the supreme court, it was reversed in the court of appeals, and a lengthy opinion pronounced, in which this whole doctrine is elaborately discussed and deliberately settled. The court distinctly held that Gibbons, and not Ferris, was the party liable, and that the servants of Gibbons were not the servants of Ferris, within the meaning of the rule respondeat superior. The decision is worthy of particular consideration, because, within the principle of some other adjudged cases, it might with much plausibility be contended, that inasmuch as the building of sewers and the duty of taking all proper precautions against accidents, were obligations resting upon the municipal authorities of New York, as public officers, imposed by law, and which they could not evade or shift upon others, they themselves should be regarded as the parties really liable; and inasmuch as they had substituted in their place the defendant, and expressly imposed upon him, by the terms of the written license, the same obligations and responsibilities which rested upon them, he should not be permitted to shift them upon another person. Nevertheless, the court of appeals emphatically hold that Gibbons being the actual contractor, and conducting the work by his own servants and means, for a stipulated price, to be paid him by Ferris, the latter was neither in a situation to interfere with, nor to be responsible for, the acts of the latter, so far as third persons were concerned. The principle of that case, unless it has been in some way *623modified or overruled, is directly applicable to the case at bar, and decisive of the result.
Nor do I perceive any solid distinction in principle between this case and that of Heimstreet v. Howland, (5 Denio, 68.) That was, like this, an action on the case, for negligence alleged to have been committed by the ferryman of the defendant, hy which a span of horses belonging to the plaintiff was drowned. There, as here, the defendant was the original lessee of the ferry. There, as here, he had leased the same to a third person, and the servant of the latter was guilty of the negligence. The question turned, it is true, upon the point whether the nature of the arrangement as to the ferriage, between the defendant and his lessee, did not constitute them partners, and the court held it.did not, and therefore granted a new trial, reversing the decision made at the circuit. But if the ground which the plaintiff here takes was tenable, it would have been decisive of the case there. It is true, it does not seem to have been discussed, but it was necessarily involved in the case, and would have been fatal to the defendant, independent of the question of partnership.
The same principle was involved in the case of Pack v. The Mayor &c. of New York, (4 Selden, 222.) The defendants had made with one Foster a contract for grading and keeping in repair the Bloomingdale road, and Foster’s servant in executing the work had blasted rocks, pieces of which were in consequence thrown into the second story of the plaintiff’s house, injuring his property, and his wife and children, for which injury the action was brought. It was held that the contractor was not, in respect to liability for such an injury, the servant or agent of the corporation, and accordingly the court of appeals reversed the judgment of the court of common pleas of New York, allowing a recovery in such a case.
The principle was again enunciated in Kelly v. The Mayor of New York, (1 Kernan, 432,) where it was held that the corporation of the city of New York, which had ordered a street to be graded and had contracted with a person to do the *624grading, was not liable for an injury to the plaintiff’s horse, alleged to have been caused by the negligence, in the blasting of rocks, of the workmen employed by the contractor in performing the work; even though the contract contained a clause that the whole work should be done under the direction and to the entire satisfaction of certain of the officers of the corporation.
There is a class of cases where the original party is held liable, upon a different principle. Such is the case of Bailey and others v. The Mayor &c. of New York, (3 Hill, 531, 2 Denio, 433.) The action was brought for injuries to the plaintiff’s lands and property, occasioned hy the negligent construction of a dam. upon property owned hy the defendants, erected in the process of carrying the water of the Croton river to the city of New York, which was authorized by an act of the legislature for the purpose of supplying the city of New York with pure and wholesome water. The general superintendence and conduct of the work had been confided to certain water commissioners appointed by an act of the legislature, and they had contracted with other parties to build the particular dam in question, which parties by themselves and their servants had accordingly done the work. But the act of the legislature which originally authorized the work and appointed the water commissioners, had under a provision of the act itself, been submitted to the suffrages of the electors of the city for their approval and been approved by them; and this, it was held, was an adoption of the water commissioners as the agents of the city; and the work, when completed under the direction of the water commissioners, had been submitted to the common council of New York for approval and had been approved hy them; and this, it was held, was an adoption of the work itself. The question however remained, whether the defendants were liable notwithstanding the injury happened by the negligent execution of the work by the contractors and their servants. And it was held, though with considerable hesitation and after severe conflict, and *625against an able dissenting opinion of Lieutenant Governor Gardiner in the court for the correction of errors, that they were so liable. And it was put mainly upon the ground that the defendants were the owners of the property upon which the dam that occasioned the injury was built, and that the dam was itself a nuisance, and that the defendants by sustaining and continuing the nuisance were in effect the authors of the injury; and that it was an incidental obligation attached to the ownership of real estate that it should not be made the instrument of damage to others.
To the same class belongs the case of Congreve v. Morgan, (5 Duer, 495.) That was a special action on the case for an injury happening to the plaintiff by his being precipitated into a vault under a side walk in the city of New York, in consequence of a defective flag stone used as a cover to the vault or area beneath. The action was against the owner of the adjoining premises, for whose benefit the vault was constructed by a contractor employed for that purpose. The plaintiff had a verdict, which was sustained on a review at general term. The decision was put upon three grounds: 1. That the erection of the vault was unlawful without the permission of the municipal authority. 2. That being constructed and maintained for the benefit of the adjacent real estate and its owner, it was incumbent upon him to keep it in proper condition and repair. 3. That having been delivered over by the contractor to the owner, and accepted and approved by him, the acceptance and continuance thereof by him must of necessity make him responsible for all injuries sustained during the period that he was in the possession and enjoyment of it. (See also, as to the last point, Mayor of Albany v. Cunliff, 2 Comst. 174.) So also in Ellis v. The Sheffield Gas Consuming Company, (22 Eng. L. and Eg. Rep. 198,) the defendants were held liable for an injury happening to the plaintiff by his falling over a heap of stones and dirt collected in digging a trench on a public street, notwithstanding the excavation was' made by persons contracting with the defendants to do the work. And the de*626cisión was put upon the ground that the-act of digging up the streets was in itself an unlawful and unjustifiable act, and. that the defendants, in employing a contractor to perform an act thus unlawful, were necessarily responsible, as they must be held to have directly authorized the excavation which resulted in the injury to the plaintiff.
The decision in Congreve v. Morgan may be successfully defended, also, by the reasoning that governed the court in Dygert v. Schenck, (23 Wend. 446,) where the defendant for his own convenience had built a raceway for the passage of water across the.public highway, and had covered it with a bridge, which, after the lapse of ten years, becoming out of repair, the plaintiff’s horse fell through and was injured. The action was sustained, the court regarding the building of the raceway as not only unauthorized but essentially a nuisance, and being maintained solely for the defendant’s accommodation, and against the public rights and interests, he was bound to see to it that it was kept in perfect repair, or be responsible for the consequences.
The case of Nelson v. The Vermont and Canada Rail Road Company, (26 Verm. Rep. 717,) on which the plaintiffs’ counsel relies as decisive of the present case, stands upon a different principle. It is this. Where the injury occurs from the nonperformance of a duty which the law imposes, and is directly traceable to that cause, there the party is liable notwithstanding subsequent parties or lessees taking his place may have been guilty of a like delinquency. In the case referred to, the injury occurred from the omission to make and maintain fences along the line of the rail road, the making and maintenance of which were made obligatory upon the defendants by their charter, the statute law of the state. The court properly held that notwithstanding the defendants had leased their road, and it was actually operated by other parties, the defendants were liable for an injury which resulted from their omission to comply with a duty imposed by the very terms of their charter, and which was none the .less obligatory on ac*627count of the lapse of time during which their delinquency had been continued.
The case of Hutson and wife v. The Mayor &c. of New York, (5 Selden, 163,) rested upon a like reason. An injury happened to the plaintiff’s wife from driving into an excavation made under the permission and authority of the defendants, by the Harlem Hail Eoad Company, in one of the Hew York avenues, for the convenience and accommodation of their road. The plaintiffs recovered, upon the ground that the superintendence and repair of the public streets and avenues of the city were duties imposed upon the defendants by law, for executing which they were provided with ample means, and from which they could not discharge themselves by any arrangement with other persons.
So also where an act is forbidden by statute and originally unlawful, and the injury complained of can be said to be a direct, natural and necessary consequence of the unlawful act, the party doing that act must be held responsible. It was upon that principle that the case of Thomas v. Winchester, (2 Selden, 397,) was decided by our court of appeals, in which the defendant, who had by mistake put a false label upon a box of medicine, in consequence of which an active poison was sold for a harmless article, was held liable, notwithstanding the medicine had gone through several intervening hands before it reached the plaintiff; and notwithstanding the defendant had not sold it with any view of its being administered to the particular party who actually suffered from its poisonous qualities.
From this review of the leading cases it will be seen that none of them, with perhaps a single exception, rest on grounds which will sustain the plaintiff’s recovery. Some of them point prominently to the fact that the act originally done or authorized was illegal; and doubtless where this is so, and the injury complained of can be deduced as a direct and necessary consequence from such an act, the original party should be held liable. Such are the cases of Dygert v. Schenck, Congreve v. Morgan, Hutson v. The Mayor &c. of New York, *628Nelson v. The Vermont and Canada Rail Road Company, and Thomas v. Winchester, above referred to. And yet all those cases' are plainly distinguishable from the case at bar, even if we assume that the lease from Wiswall to Morrison was an unauthorized or illegal assignment. The distinction consists in this: that the negligence of Morrison’s servant is not a direct and natural consequence flowing from the lease of Wiswall to Morrison, because it must be assumed that either' by the express terms of that lease, or by legal implication, it was made the duty of Morrison to provide proper boats and skillful men, and to transport passengers with all necessary skill and care. The case of Ellis v. The Sheffield Gas Consuming Company seems to go farther than any of the other cases above referred to, and to hold that where the act—for example, the excavation in the street for the purpose of laying down gas pipes-^-was unlawful in itself, then an injury which arose from a heap of dirt thrown out by the excavation would make the gas company liable notwithstanding the work was done through a contractor employed by them, and the injury occurred by the negligence of the contractor’s servants. That case is not quite analogous to the present, even if we assume the lease to be unlawful, because in the English case the entire proceeding was illegal, whereas in this case Wiswall had the right of ferriage and the right to employ Morrison to conduct it as his servant; and the illegality, if any, was in undertaking to invest him with his rights by lease or assignment.
But the English case above referred to seems to be in conflict with the American cases, and, I think, with the spirit of the cases in our own state. Two of them are referred to in the able opinion of Mr. Justice Harris in the parallel case of Blackwell v. Wiswall, arising out of the same transaction, where the question was presented on demurrer These are the cases of Ladd v. Chotard, (1 Alab. Rep. 366,) and Felton v. Dean, (22 Verm. Rep. 170,) where the defendant who had a ferry license, receiving the same under similar restrictions to those imposed by our own laws, having rented the same to *629another party, by the negligence of whose servant the injury occurred, was held not to be liable in a suit by the aggrieved party. These cases are nearly or quite parallel to the present. To these may be added the case of Bowyer v. Anderson, (2 Leigh’s Va. Rep. 550,) which was similar to the last two cases above cited, except that the defendant’s agreement with a third party left it equivocal whether it was á partnership or a transfer for the time being of the absolute interest of the defendant as the licensee of the ferry. This was, as in the case of Heimstreet v. Howland, (5 Denio, 48,) the only question discussed; it never having, seemingly, occurred to either counsel to take the ground that the original party was liable whether he had assigned or leased his interest or not.
[Albany General Term, March 1, 1858.The weight of authority seems decidedly against the plaintiff’s right to maintain the action against the present defendants. 1 think it therefore unnecessary to discuss the question whether the lease or renting by Wiswall to Morrison was an unlawful and ineffectual attempt to vest in the latter rights which Were confided to Wiswall as a personal trust and confidence, and in their nature not assignable. I incline to the opinion of Mr. Justice Hams on that point; but I concur with him also in the conclusion that assuming such to be the fact, it cannot make the servant of Morrison whom he had no right to direct or control, in whose selection he had no agency, and of whose condüct he had no knowledge, his servant in the sense which should make him liable for the consequences of his wrongful and negligent acts, Under the rule respondeat superior.
The decision of this question against the plaintiff makes it unnecessary to examine the other questions made at the trial.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event,
Wright, J., concurred. Gould, J., dissented.
Judgment reversed.
Wright, Gould and Bogeboom, Justices.]