Tbe defendant owned and operated a lumber mill and also a standard-gauge railroad in connection therewith to Parkersburg on the Atlantic Coast Line, a distance of three miles. This road was connected with branch railroads extending in tbe woods.
Tbe same engine and cars were used over tbe main stem and its branches. Sometimes a branch is taken up and relaid elsewhere.
Tbe defendant entered into a written contract •frith one Bull-man on 24 February, 1911, by which Buhman was to operate its railroad and lumber business. The plaintiff was foreman of the railroad construction crew, kept the time, and worked in constructing the branch railroads, laying down cross-ties, spiking rails, and doing other construction work. The defendant claims that Buhman was an independent contractor, and solely liable to the plaintiff, and that section 2018 has no application to defendant. His Honor so ruled, and the plaintiff excepted.
The plaintiff testified that he was building the railroad for the defendant under a contractor. Assuming that Buhman was an independent contractor, if defendant’s railroad comes within the meaning and spirit of section 2018, the defendant is liable, as it appears that the requirements of the statute have 'been strictly followed.
*10The defendant’s plant constitutes wbat is called a “logging railroad.” . It is standard-gauged, steel-railed, connected by switch with the Coast Line, operated by steam engines and standard-gauge cars, and has branches extending for convenience into the woods, over which the same engines and cars are used.
The description of this road brings it within the definitions of a railroad as given by Rapalje and Bouvier, in their law dictionaries. The language of this statute, defining a railroad, is the same as in the fellow-servant act, Revisal, 2646.
In construing that act and its similar phraseology, we held that logging roads are railroads within the meaning of the act, and that the term “railroad” embraced any road operated by steam or electricity on rails. Hemphill v. Lumber Co., 141 N. C., 489; Witsell v. R. R., 120 N. C., 557; Schus v. Powers Co., 85 Minn., 447.
We have also held that the law as applied to other railroads in respect to negligently causing fires on their rights of way shall be extended to railroads constructed solely for logging purposes. Craft v. Timber Co., 132 N. C., 156; Simpson v. Lumber Co., 133 N. C., 96.
We apply to both classes of railroads the same rule in regard to defective spark arresters. Cheek v. Lumber Co., 133 N. C., 96.
For these reasons we see no reason why this defendant should not be classified as a railroad' within the meaning of section 2018.
It is contended, however, that this section was first enacted in 1872, and that there were no logging roads in existence then, and that therefore they could not have been in contemplation of the Legislature.
We are not informed as to that, but we assume the correctness of the statement.
The mere fact that “logging railroads” came into more general use since the passage of the act does not alter the case. They are nevertheless “railroads,” although used principally for transporting logs.
*11It is a general rule of statutory construction that legislative enactments, in general and comprehensive terms, prospective in operation, apply alike to all persons, subjects, and business within their general scope coming into existence subsequent to their passage. McAunich v. M. and M. Ry., 20 Iowa, 337; Schus v. Powers Co., supra.
New trial.
Walker, J., and AlleN, J., dissenting.