The opinion of the court was delivered, January 3d 1870, by
Read, J.— The bridge across Red Bank creek, between the counties of Armstrong and Clarion, at the place known as the Rockport Mills, was a county bridge, maintained and kept in repair at the joint and equal charge of both counties. Whilst John A. Humphreys was crossing the bridge it fell and he was severely injured; he brought suit for damages against the county of Armstrong; and on the trial, under the charge of the court, there was a verdict for defendant. This was reversed on writ of error (6 P.. F. Smith 204); and upon a second trial there was a verdict for the plaintiff for $1100 damages, on which judgment was entered. This judgment, with interest and costs, was paid by Armstrong county, and the present suit is to recover contribution from Clarion county. On the trial the learned judge nonsuited the plaintiff on the ground that one of two joint wrongdoers cannot have contribution from the other.
The commissioners of the two counties had examined the bridge in the summer and ordered some repair’s which were made. There can be little doubt that morally Clarion county was bound to pay *220one-half of the sum recovered from and paid by Armstrong county; and the question is, does not the law make the moral obligation a legal one ? Merriweather v. Nixon, 8 Term R. 186, the leading case on the subject, was of a joint injury to real estate, and for the joint conversion of personal property, being machinery in a mill. In Colburn v. Patmore, 1 Cr. M. & R. 73, the proprietor of a newspaper who, for a libel published in it, .was subjected to a criminal information, convicted and fined, sought to recover from his editor who was the author of the libel, the expenses which he had incurred by his misfeasance ; Lord Lyndhurst said: “ I know of no case in which a person who has committed an act declared by the law to be criminal, has been permitted to recover compensation against a person who has acted jointly with him in the commission of the crime.”
So in Arnold v. Clifford, 2 Sumner 238, it was held, a promise to indemnify the publisher of a libel is void. “No one,” said Judge Story, “ ever imagined that a promise to pay for the poisoning of another was capable of being enforced in a court of justice.”
In Miller v. Fenton, 11 Paige 18, the wrongdoers were two of the officers of a bank, who had fraudulently abstracted its funds, and of course there could be no contribution between criminals. In the case of The Attorney-General v. Wilson, 4 Jurist 1174, cited in the above case by the chancellor, and also reported in 1 Craig & Phillips 1, where it was contended that all the persons charged with the breach of trust should be made parties, Lord Cottenham said: “ In cases of this kind where the liability arises from the wrongful act of the parties, each is liable for all the consequences, and there is no contribution between them, and each case is distinct, depending upon the -evidence against each party. It is therefore not necessary to make all parties who may more or-less have joined in the act complained of.” Seddon v. Connell, 10 Simons 81, is to the same effect.
In Story on Partnership, § 220, after speaking of the general rule that there is no contribution between joint wrongdoers, the author says: “ But the rule is to be understood according to its true sense and meaning, which is, where the tort is a known meditated wrong, and not where the party is acting under the supposition of the entire innocence and propriety of the act, and the tort is merely one by construction, or inference of law. In the latter case, although not in the former, there may be and properly is, a contribution allowed by law for such payments and expenses between constructive wrongdoers, whether partners or not:” The case of Adamson v. Jarvis, cited by the learned commentators, is in 4 Bing. 66, in which Lord Chief Justice Best, after noticing Merriweather v. Nixon, says : “ The case of Philips v. Biggs, Hardress 164” (which was on the equity side of the *221Exchequer), “was never decided; hut the Court of Chancery seemed to consider the case of two sheriffs of Middlesex, where one had paid the damages in an action for an escape, and sued the other for contribution, as like the case of two joint obligors.'”
“ From the inclination of the court in this last case, and from the concluding part of Lord Kenyon’s judgment in Merriweather v. Nixon, and from reason, justice and sound policy, the rule that wrongdoers cannot have redress or contribution against each other is confined to cases where the person seeking redress must be presumed to have known he was doing an unlawful act.”
In Betts v. Gibbins, 2 Ad. & E. 57, Lord Denman said, “ The case of Merriweather v. Nixon, 8 T. R. 186, seems to me to have been strained beyond what the decision will bear — the present case is an exception to the general rule. The general rule is, that between wrongdoers there is neither indemnity nor contribution. The exception is where the act is not clearly illegal in itself, and Merriweather v. Nixon, 8 T. R. 186, was only a refusal of a rule nisi.”
“ In Adamson v. Jarvis, 4 Bing. 66, we have the observations of a learned person familiar with commercial law.”
A promise to indemnify against an act not known to the promissee at the time to be unlawful is valid: Coventry v. Barton, 17 Johns. 142; Stone v. Hooker, 9 Cow. 154.
In Pearson v. Skelton, 1 Mee. & Wels. 504, where one stagecoach proprietor had been sued for the negligence of a driver, and damages had been recovered against him, which he had paid, and he sought contribution from another of the proprietors, it was held that the rule there, no contribution between joint tortfeasors, does not apply to a case where the party seeking contribution was a tort-feasor only by inference of law, but is confined te cases where it must be presumed that the party knew he was committing an unlawful act.
The same doctrine was maintained in Wooley v. Batte, 2 C. & P. 417.
These cases have been followed in this court in Horbach’s Administrators v. Elder, 6 Harris 33. “ Here,” said Judge Coulter, “ the plaintiff and defendant are in equali jure. The plaintiff has exclusively borne the burden which ought to have been shared by the defendant, who therefore ought to contribute his share.”
“ Contribution,”, says Lord Chief Baron Eyre, in Dering v. Earl of Winchelsea, 1 Cox 318, “ is bottomed and fixed on general principles of natural justice, and does not spring from contract.”
These principles rule the case before us. The parties plaintiff and defendant are two municipal corporations, jointly bound to keep this bridge' in repair. These bodies can act only by their legally constituted agents, their commissioners, who examine the structure and order repair which is done. They erred in judg*222ment, and both were liable for the consequences of that error, and one having paid the whole of the damages is entitled to contribution from the other.
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.