delivered the following dissenting opinion.
I concur in reversing the judgment on the last point discussed in the above opinion; but I do not wish to be understood as assenting to anything that goes to impair the authority of the case of Schultz vs. Pacific Railroad, and in this I am requested to say that Judges Vories and Sherwood agree with me.
Per Hough, Judge.I concur in reversing the judgment in this case, but as I entertain a view of the construction which should be given to the second section of the damage act, upon which the plaintiff’s action is founded, different from that placed upon it by any of my brother judges, I deem it proper to present that view in a separate opinion, together with my reasons therefor.
The petition in this case alleged that the death of the plaintiff’s husband was caused by the negligence and unskillfulness of the officers, servants and employees of the defendant, whilst running, conducting and managing a locomotive and train of cars on defendant’s railroad. There was no allegation of any want of care or diligence, on the part of the defendant, in the selection, or retention in service, of its servants in charge of the locomotive and cars. The alleged negligence and unskill fulness were denied, and an allegation in the answer, that the plaintiff’s husband was, at the time of the injury resulting in his death, in the service of defendant, as brakeman, was admitted by the replication. The petition *297did not definitely allege, nor did it cl,early appear from the testimony, whose negligence occasioned the death of Connor. The gravel train on which he was at the time of his death, was, while being backed out of the way of a passenger train, run over a cow and precipitated down an embankment, and he was crushed in the wreck and killed. There were on the train at the time of the accident, only an engineer, fireman and one brakeman, besides Connor. The court at the instance of the plaintiff, gave among others, the following instruction :
“If the jury believe from the evidence, that the injuries from which Michael Connor died were received without fault or negligence on his part, and that the injuries from which be died resulted from or were occasioned by the negligence or unskillfulness of the officers, agents, servants, or employees of the defendant, whilst running, conducting or managing the locomotive or train of cars on which said Con-nor was, at the time of receiving'said injury, then they will find for plaintiff.” To the giving of. which, defendant excepted.
Among other instructions asked by defendant, and refused by the court, was the following: “Plaintiff cannot recover on account of any negligence or unskillfulness of the other brakeman who was braking on the train at the time of the injury which resulted in the death of Connor.” To the action of the court in refusing to give said instruction, defendant excepted. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff.
The sections of the damage act, the construction of which, is involved, are as follows : Sec. 2. “ Whenever any person shall die from an injury, resulting from or occasioned by the negligence, unskillfulness or criminal intent of any officer, agent, servant or employee, whilst running, conducting or managing any locomotive, car or train of cars, or of any master, pilot, engineer, agent or employee whilst running conducting or managing any steamboat or any of the machinery thereof ; or of any driver of any stage coach, or other public conveyance, whilst in charge of the same as a driver; and when any passenger shall die from any injury resulting from or occa*298sioned by any defect or insufficiency in any railroad, or any part thereof; or in any locomotive or car, or in any steamboat or the machinery thereof, or in any stage coach or other public conveyance, the corporation, individual or individuals, in whose employ any such officer, agent, servant, employee, master, pilot, engineer or driver, shall be at the time such injury is committed, or who owns any such railroad, locomotive, car, stage coach or other public conveyance, at the time 'any injury is received, resulting from, or occasioned by, any defect or insufficiency above declared, shall forfeit and pay-for every person or passenger so dying, the sum of five thousand dollars, which may be sued for and recovered ; first, by the husband or wife of the deceased; or, second, if there be no husband or wife, or he or she fails to sue within six months after such death, then by the minor child or children of the deceased ; or, third, if such deceased be a minor and unmarried, then by the father and mother who may join in the suit, and each shall have an equal interest in the judgment; oi’, if either of them be dead, then by the survivor. In suits instituted under this section, it shall be competent for the defendant, for his defense, to show that the defect or insufficiency named in'this section was not of a negligent defect or insufficiency.”
Sec. 3. “ Whenever the death of a person shall be caused by a wrongful act, neglect or default of another, and the act, neglect or default is such» as would (if death had not ensued) have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereof, then, and in every such ease, 'the person who, or the corporation which would have been liable if death had not ensued, shall be liable to an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured.”
Sec. 4. “ All damages accruing under the last preceding section shall be sued for and recovered by the same parties and in the same manner as provided in the second section of this chapter, and in every such action, the jury may give such damages as they may deem fair and just, not exceeding five thousand dollars, with reference to the necessary injury re-*299suiting from such death, to the surviving parties who may be entitled to sue, and also, having regard to the mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending such wrongful act, neglect or default.”
The common law rule that a servant cannot recover for injuries received in consequence of the negligence, or unskillfulness, of a fellow servant, unless the common master has been guilty of a want of diligence and care in the selection of the negligent or unskillful servant, or in retaining such servant after notice of his incompetencv, is too firmly established by a long line of decisions of the highest courts, in England and in all the States of the American Union, where the question has arisen, to be now questioned or overthrown, save by legislative enactment.
Cases in Ohio, Kentucky and Georgia have been thought to break in upon this remarkable uniformity of decision, and announce a different rule ; but the case of Whalen vs. Mad. R. and Lake Erie Railway Co., (8 Ohio St., 249) affirmed in Manville vs. Cleveland and Toledo R. R., (11 Ohio St., 417) conforms to the general rule; and the case of Louisville and Nashville R. R. Co. vs. Collins, (2 Duvall 114) held the company liable on the ground that the person injured was in a subordinate position, and not to be regarded as a fellow servant of the person causing the injury, thereby virtually affirming the correctness of the general rule. In the Georgia case, Scudder vs. Woodbridge, (1 Kelly, 195) generally cited as an exception, the person injured was a slave, and the court say, speaking of the rule laid down in Priestly vs. Fowler : “ Interest to the owner and humanity to the slave, forbid its application to any other than free white agents.” The subsequent case of Shields vs. Younge, Supt. Western and Atlantic R., (15 Ga. 349) and the case of Cooper vs. Mullins, (30 Ga., 151) recognize the rule, but limit its application by a restricted definition of the term, fellow servant. A rule so inflexibly adhered to in England, during a period of nearly forty years, and which has in a multitude of cases, at various times during a period of over thirty years, been sanctioned *300and enforced by the concurrent judgment of many of the ablest judges of this country, and approvingly stated by our most learned commentators, must indeed be a wise and salutary one.
This rule is of universal application. It obtains not only where employees of railroads and other carriers are concerned, but it applies as well to laborers, operatives and employees in foundries, factories, mines, stores, hotels and warehouses, in short, wherever and in whatever employment, occupation, or business, the relation of master and servant exists, or may exist. In the language of the court in Fifield vs. Northern Railroad, (42 N. H., 225) “ The responsibilities of the defendant and of the individual who hires two laborers in harvest, or two carpenters to érect staging and shingle houses, are to be determined by the same legal tests.”
This rule, like that which holds the common carrier of goods to the liability of an insurer, the act of God and the public enemy excepted, and exacts the highest degree of care, vigilance and skill of carriers of passengers, is founded in considerations of expediency and public policy. In the language of Baron Abinger, in the leading English case, (Priestly vs. Fowler) “In fact, to allow this sort of action to prevail would be an encouragement to the servant to omit that diligence and caution which he is in duty bound to exercise on the behalf of his master, to protect him against the misconduct or negligence of others who serve him, and which diligence and caution, while they protect the master, are a much better security against any injury the servant may sustain by the negligence of others engaged under the same master, than any recourse against his master for damages, could possibly afford.”
In the leading American ease, Farwell v. The Boston & Worcester Rail Corp., 4 Met., 49, Chief Justice Shaw says: “Where several persons are employed in the conduct of one common enterprise or undertaking, and the safety of each depends much on the care and skill with which each other shall perform his appropriate duty, each is an observer of the con*301duct of the others, can give notice of any misconduct, incapacity or neglect of duty and leave the service if the common employer will not take such precautions and employ such agents as the safety of the whole party may require. By these means the safety of each will be much more effectually secured, than could be done by a resort to the common employer for indemnity, in case of loss by the negligence of each other. Regarding it in this light it is the ordinary case of one sustaining an injury in the course of his employment, in which he must bear the loss himself or seek his remedy, if he have any, against the actual wrong-doer.”
The same rule has been repeatedly announced by this court. (McDermott vs. P. R. R., 30 Mo., 115; Rohback vs. P. R. R., 43 Mo., 192; Gibson vs. P. R. R., 46 Mo., 163; Harper vs. Ind. & St. Louis R. R., 47 Mo., 567; Moss vs. P. R. R., 49 Mo., 167; Devitt vs. P. R. R., 50 Mo., 302; Brothers vs. Carter, 52 Mo., 372.)
Passengers and employees compose the two classes of persons mainly interested in the management of trains, and the character and quality of the means of transportation employed ; and while provision against danger and injury to each of these classes is always required, the security of the passenger is of primary importance, and the common law liabilities to each, are based upon the different character of the-relations held, by each, to the carrier. The transportation of the passenger, with expedition and safety, is the sole purpose of the employment by the carrier of servants for the management of passenger trains. The servant and the master are, as to the passenger, but a single person, and as to him, no degree of diligence and circumspection on the part of the master in the selection of his .servants, will exempt the carrier from liability for injuries arising from the negligence or unskillfulness of his servants. The negligence of the servant is, in such case, the negligence of the master.
But in case of an injury to a passenger, arising from insufficient or defective carriages, or machinery, the carrier may excuse himself by showing that he exercised the utmost care *302and diligence in providing such carriages and machinery, and that the defects, producing injury, could not have been discovered by the most careful and thorough inspection. (Redfield’s Am. Railw. Cas., 471.)
So, too, the employee has a right of action against the master for injuries arising from defective or insufficient machinery, implements or appliances, furnished by the master to him, if the master has been guilty of negligence or want of proper care in providing such machinery, implements or appliances, and the servant used the same without any knowledge that they were defective, or insufficient. (Gibson vs. P. R. R., 46 Mo., 163 and cases cited; Devitt vs. P. R. R., 50 Mo., 302 and cases cited.)
The construction placed upon the second section above quoted, by the able and accomplished judge who delivered the opinion of the court in the case of Schultz vs. P. R. R., 36 Mo., 13,) obliterates, to some extent, the foregoing distinctions, and in my judgment, confounds the wisdom of the common law, and leads to consequences grossly incongruous and palpably unjust. It is held in that case, that the words “any person’’ in the first clause of the second section,, include fellow servants, or co-employees, as well as passengers and strangers, and that in an action by the representatives of an employee, under the provisions of that section “there need be no proof (iu such case) of any negligence or want of care and diligence on the part of the employer, in selecting his agent and servant, for the act does not rest the liability on any negligence of that kind, thongh the liability at common law, for injuries occasioned by such negligence may still remain, as before, unaffected by the statute.”
Under this construction, a servant who is injured by the negligence of a fellow servant, without any fault or negligence on the part of the common master in the selection, or retention, of such negligent servant, though reduced to a condition of permanent and helpless dependence, and thereby rendered an object of constant care, commiseration and expense to his family, can recover nothing; whereas, if his injuries should re-suit *303in death, though that death should occasion less painful and disastrous consequences to his family than a life of lingering agony and destitution, his representatives can recover the sum of five thousand dollars. No motive of charitable benevolence, or dictate of public policy, can in my judgment justify such a distinction. Again, what wise purpose is to be subserved in providing by statute, a gratuitous life insurance of five thousand dollars, in favor of representatives of the employees of carriers, against the negligence of their fellow servants, thus making them a favored class, while no such statutory legacy is provided for the myriads of operatives and employees engaged in every department of labor and business •throughout the State, many of whom are, equally with the employees of carriers, exposed to danger and death from the nature of their service, and are not inferior to them perhaps in culture, character and personal worth, and whose lives are of equal value to their families and to society. I'-cannot think that the legislature intended any such unjust discrimination. Certainly, no additional security to the traveling public could be expected to result therefrom, in view of the combined and oft-repeated judgment of the Bench of England and America during nearly half a century, that the greatest security, in this regard, is to be attained by the enforcement of the common law rule. Besides, the statute is as applicable to trains, boats and vehicles, which carry freight only, as to those which carry passengers. And if such were the object of the legislature in the enactment of the second section, why did they not give the servant a right of action, when injured through the negligence of a fellow servant, the master not being in fault, though death should not ensue ? Any negligence, producing injury, should, if such were the purpose, give a right of action, and not negligence producing only mortal injury. The grossest negligence may sometimes be capriciously followed by slight injury, and the slightest neglect may at other times be attended by the most disastrous consequences.
*304Again, what satisfactory reason can be assigned for giving the representatives of an employee of a carrier, a right of action for an injury resulting in death, occasioned by the negligence of a co-employee, in managing a locomotive or train of cars, without any proof of negligence on the part of the master, and denying a right of action for an injury resulting in death, occasioned by a defect or insufficiency in the machinery and means of transportation employed, unless the master has been guilty of negligence in providing or continuing to use the same? Public policy as imperatively demands perfect machinery and appliances as it does diligent servants. If any distinction should be made in this regard, as between master and servant, it would seem that the rule, as stated above, should be reversed; and in case of death, the master held absolutely liable for defective machinery furnished to the servant, and only conditionally liable for the negligence of those human agencies employed by him, having freedom of volition and action, and whose motives and conduct he cannot always foresee or control.
Again, why should the representatives of the servant of a carrier, be entitled to recover the sum of five thousand dollars, for the negligence of a fellow servant producing his death whilst running, conducting and managing a locomotive or train, which does not carry passengers, where the master is not in fault, and no such right be given to the representatives of a servant of a carrier killed by the negligence, or unskillfulness of a fellow servant when jointly engaged in any other service of the carrier ?
Again, why should the representatives of an employee killed by the negligence of a fellow servant, be entitled to recover from the master who has been guilty of no fault, the sum of five thousand dollars absolutely, and when killed by defective machinery through the fault of the master himself, be entitled to recover under the third section, such sum as a jury may deem fair and just, not exceeding the sum of five thousand dollars, reference being had to the necessary injury resulting from such death, to the parties entitled to sue, and *305also to the circumstances attending the neglect or default producing the death ?
The foregoing are some of the incongruities attending a literal interpretation of the words “any person” in the second section. And if we are “to stick in the bark.,” I do not see why, Under the first clause of that section, a recovery may not be had, even where the employee may have himself been guilty of negligence contributing directly to occasion his death; for such negligence is not .inconsistent with negligence on the part of a fellow servant, without which, the injury and death could not have occurred. Contributory negligence, as the designation itself implies, can only exist where the injury is the result of the combined negligence of the plaintiff and defendant. Where plaintiff’s negligence is the sole cause of .the injury, it is not contributory. But as this-is a common law defense, not provided for by the statute, which is and must always be allowed against “any person,” whether passenger, stranger or employee, what warrant is there in the statute for saying that no other common law defense shall be permitted. If the language of the statute must be relaxed to admit one common law defense, why should the other common law defense be denied, that where “any person,” injured and dying, happens to be a fellow servant of the servant or employee, causing his death, there can be no recovery unless some negligence of the master be shown in the selection, or retention of such servant? Admit such a defense, and the statute would still give aright of action to the representatives of those employees who are not fellow servants of the servant, causing by his negligence, their injury and death.
In ascertaining the intention of the legislature, which is the object to be attained in the construction of all statutes, we are not always limited to the language of the act. Courts are to consider the subject matter, the effects and the reason of the statute, in order to discover the intention. “Those statutes which comprehend all things in the letter, they (the sages of the law) have expounded to extend to but some things; those which generally prohibit all people from doing such an *306act, they have interpreted to permit some people to do it, and those which include every person in the letter, they have adjudged to reach some persons only.”
Nor are we without authority as to the construction of the words “any person” in similar statutes in this State, and in other States.
In the revised statutes of Maine, was. the following section. “Every railroad corporation shall be liable for all damages sustained by any person, inconsequence of any neglect of the provisions of the foregoing sections, or of any other neglect of any of their servants, or by any mismanagement of their engines, in an action on the case, by the person sustaining such damages.” In the case of Carle vs. Bangor & Piscataquis Canal & R. R. Co., 13 Me., 269, the words “any person,” in this statute, were held not to include servants of the defendant, who were injured by their fellow servants, and the court say “statutes, unless plainly to be otherwise construed, should receive a construction not in derogation of the common law.”
The words “any person” in a similar statute of Iowa, were in the case of Sullivan vs. Mississippi & Missouri R. R. Co., 11 Iowa, 121, held not to include fellow servants. That statute was as follows : “Every railroad corporation shall be liable for all damages sustained by any person in consequence of any neglect of the provisions of this act, or of any other neglect of any of their agents, or by any mismanagement of their engineers, by the persop sustaining such damages.”
The thirty-eighth section of the general corporation law, applicable to railroad companies in this State, makes it incumbent on all railroad companies to have a bell placed on each locomotive engine, to.be rung at a distance of at least eighty rods from the place where the railroad shall cross any traveled public road or street, and kept ringing until it shall have crossed such road or street, or to sound a steam whistle, except in cities. The last clause of the section is as follows: " And said corporation shall also be liable for all damages which shall be sustained by any person by reason of such neglect.”
*307The words “ any person ” in this clause were held, in the case of Rohback vs. P. R. R. (43 Mo., 187), not to include fellow servants. In that case the court say, “ It is obvious that the enactment of the law was intended primarily for the protection of the traveling public and passengersand further, “ that the draftsman of the law used the word “person” in the sense that it should apply to the classes above referred to, and without any intention of changing the common law construction, can scarcely be questioned.” After referring to the second section of the damage act, and the Schultz case, (36 Mo., 13) the court further say, “ both acts were passed by the same legislature. They show clearly that the law as it existed was understood by that body ; that in one ease a modification was intended to be made, and in the other not. If it had been intended that the 38th section should change the law, so as to allow persons to sue, who had been previously barred, words of similar import to those used in the damage act would have been employed.” The letter of the statute is thus made in that case to yield to the intent of the legislature. I have attentively considered these two sections, and with the highest respect for the great abilities of the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court in the Rohback case, I feel compelled to say that I am unable to perceive how the use of the words employed in the first clause of the second section of the damage aet, can indicate that a modification of the common law was intended, if the words employed in the thirty-eighth section of the corporation law, fail to indicate an iutention to change the common law. If the naming in the damage act of the servants and employees whose negligence or unskillfulness shall give a right of action to the representatives of “any person” dying from injuries thereby received, can be claimed to constitute the distinction, I can still see no real difference between the two provisions. The thirty-eighth section clearly contemplates that the bell required to be placed on each locomotive, shall be rung by the servants of the company in charge of such loco motive, and the remedy is as clearly given to “ any person” who shall be *308injured in consequence of the failure of any servant or employee of the company to ring said bell as therein required. Rohback, injured, but living, had no right of action for the injuries inflicted in consequence of the failure of the servants of the company to ring the bell, and yet had he died from such injuries, under the rule laid down in the Schultz case, his representatives could, on the same state of facts, have recovered five thousand dollars; for it would undoubtedly have been held, that the failure to ring the bell or sound the whistle constituted negligence on the part of the servant or employee in charge of, or running, conducting and managing the locomotive. The decision in the Rohback case is supported by reason and authority, and is undeniably right, on the point involved, but I cannot concur in its indorsement of the Schultz case.
It is evident to my mind, from the whole scope of the damage act, that the purpose of the legislature in the second section, was simply to cause those actions to survive to certain representatives of the deceased, in the cases there named, which according to the rules of the common law died with the person, and to limit the amount of the recovery in such cases. No new right of action is given by the third section ; no new right of action is given as to passengers or strangers in the second section; that is to say, the right of action which the passenger himself or a stranger, would have had, if injured, but not killed, is made in the event of death, to survive; and if the words, “any person ” shall be held to mean passengers and strangers, and such employees only as are not fellow servants of those causing their death, then no new liability will be created as to any one, by the second section, and the several parts of this statute will constitute a consistent and harmonious whole.
The injustice and impolicy of such a construction of the second section as would, to use a pardonable solecism, make a right of action survive which had no existence either at common law or by statute, is, I think, manifest. The legislature did not intend to create new liabilities *309tion of' master and servant. It was not legislating upon the relation itself, but was concerned only in making common law remedies to survive. The only object of the second section was to give to the representatives of all persons, who could have maintained an action at common law, if death had not ensued, in the cases therein enumerated, the liquidated sum of five thousand dollars; and the object of the third section was to give in all other cases, where an action could have been maintained at common law, such sum as the jury might deem fair and just, not exceeding five thousand dollars, regard being had to the attendant circumstances; and this section applies to the employees of carriers, as well as to other persons. (Brownell vs. P. R. R., 47 Mo., 242; Moss vs. P. R. R., 49 Mo., 167; Devitt vs. P. R. R., 50 Mo., 302.)
I am of opinion, therefore, that the doctrine of the Schultz case should not be adhered to; and as all persons on the train, who were charged with having occasioned, by their negligence and unskillfulness, the death of Connor, were his fellow servants, J think that plaintiff’s first instruction should have been refused, and the sixth instruction asked by the defendant should have been given.
End ok February Term, 1875, at St. Joseph.