Page:Harvard Law Review Volume 8.djvu/373

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HARVARD LAW REVIEW.
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RECENT CASES. 357 and the cases of Lanark v. Dougherty, and Coal Co. v. Holmquist (above cited), reported since the writing of the note on this subject, are un- doubtedly, as Mr. Prentice suggests, to be regarded as rendering the doctrine of Comparative Negligence obsolete and no longer law. Rice v. D'Arville and Johnson v. Girdwood affirmed. — Rice v. lyArville, 8 Harvard Law Review, 172, has been afifirmed by the Su- preme Court of Massachusetts, which seems explicitly to deny, as Mr. Justice Holmes did below, the English case of Lumley v. Wagner, i De G. M. & G. 604. But the main ground of the decision, so far as the incom- plete report at hand shows, is that the plaintiff was unable to do his part of the affirmative contract, and therefore not entitled to equitable relief in the negative branch. The decision above is then by no means so far- reaching as the principle laid down below. yohnson v. Girdwood, 28 N. Y. Suppl. 151, commented on 8 Harvard Law Review, 222 ("Can one cheated into plea^Jing guilty maintain an action for it?"), had been affirmed in the Court of Appeal, without opinion or reasons for the decision, on October 9. It is to be regretted that the commendable zeal of that court to keep up with its docket should de- prive the profession of discussion on a case of the first impression with such novel facts and raising so interesting a question. RECENT CASES. Agency — Employer's Statutory Liability — Ways, Works, and Machin- ery. — Held, that loaded freight cars received by a railroad company from and belong- ing to another road, are part of " the ways, works, and machinery " of the railroad, within the meaning of a statute similar to the English Employer's Liability Act. Bowers v. Co7tnecticut River R. R. Co., 38 N. E. Rep. 508 (Mass). While this case turns upon the construction of a statute, yet it is interesting because of the prevalence of statutes of this kind. A different construction was given the statute on facts which are hardly distinguishable in Coffee v. R. R. Co., 155 Mass. 21, where it was held that empty cars belonging to another company and being returned to that company by the defendant, were not part of" the ways, works, and machinery " of the defendant. The point is now settled in Massachusetts in accordance with the principal case by St. 1893, ^- 359> which expressly provides that any car in the use of, or in the possession of a railroad company, shall be considered a part of its ways, works and machinery. Agency — Parol Authority. — A Statute of Illinois provides that city councils should allow street railroads to be built only when the land-owners petition for such railroad. There was a petition in this case and the city council granted permission to the defendant railway company to build a line. Plaintiff now 'seeks to enjoin the building of it on the ground that the names of some of the land-owners were signed by agents, as appears on the face of the petition, and that the authority does not appear. The theory was that the authority had to be in writing. Held, a parol authority to sign was good, and injunction will not be granted. Ttbbets v. West and South Towns St. Ry. Co., 38 N. E. Rep. 664 (111.). In Illinois an authority to sell or lease lands must be in writing, and the argument of the counsel for plaintiff was that practically land was sold here so the petition could be signed only by the owner, or an ai^ent authorized by writing. The court answered that "there was nothing in the statute changing the common-law rule by which an agent may sign the name of his principal to a writing, under an authority not in writ- ing." They said the fee of the street belonged to the city of Chicago, and that the petitions did not operate as a grant anyway. .■gency — Ratification by Principal Non-Existing at Date of Contract. — One of the promoters of defendant corporation contracted with plaintiff on behalf of