Citation Numbers: 35 Mo. App. 621, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 220
Judges: Smith
Filed Date: 4/15/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This was an action brought before a. justice of the peace of Cuivre township in Pike county, upon the statute, to recover damages for the killing of nine mules and one mare.
The case was tried before the justice and from his; judgment an appeal was taken to the circuit court, from whence a change of venue was awarded to the circuit-court of Audrain county where there was atrial de novo,. and judgment for plaintiff from which defendant prosecuted its appeal here.
I. At the inception of the trial of the case in the-circuit court the defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence under the statement and transcript, for the reasons (1) that it did not appear therefrom that the-justice had jurisdiction, and (2) that the justice’s transcript did not show that there was any evidence taken before him that plaintiff’s animals were killed in the township where he resided.
It is quite difficult to perceive why the first ground of defendant’s objection was made; for, when reference is had to the statement filed by the plaintiff before the justice, it will be seen that it is therein distinctly alleged
These jurisdictional facts must not only affirmatively appear upon the face of the justice’s transcript, but they must be proved like any other jurisdictional fact. The cases mostly relied on by defendant’s counsel, in support of this ground of its objection, are those where the judgment of the lower court was réversed because there was no evidence tending to establish these jurisdictional facts. Backenstoe v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 492; 23 Mo. App. 148, is a fair representative of them. These citations do not support this ground of defendant’s objections.
As to the second ground of objection to the introduction of any evidence by plaintiff, it is sufficient to
II. The second point urged upon our consid eration by defendant in its brief is that the law does not impose upon it the duty to fence its track at the point where the plaintiff’s animals entered upon the same.
This of course depends upon where the point of entry was. This question it seems to us was properly submitted to the triers of the fact by the instruction which was given for plaintiff by the trial court, and which told the jury that if they believed that defendant by its agents, engines or cars, killed plaintiff’s animals on its railroad track in Cuivre township, Pike county, Missouri, at a point on said railroad where the same runs through or along unenclosed or cultivated fields or unenclosed lands, and not at a private or public crossing, or where said railroad passes through any town or city, and at such point defendant had failed and neglected to erect and maintain lawful fences on the sides of its said railroad, then their verdict should be for plaintiff, and the instruction given for the defendant which directed the jury that, if they believed from the evidence that plaintiff’s animals entered upon the defendant’s railroad track either at a private or public road crossing, their verdict should be for the defendant.
Because defendant’s railroad runs parallel with the public road from which the evidence tends to show the plaintiff’s animals strayed upon its railroad track, it was not excused from fencing the same even though its said right of way occupied part of the public road. It is not the right of way which the law requires to be fenced but its “road.”
Undoubtedly the object and purpose, which the lawmaker had in view in the enactment of the fencing
Even if the defendant’s railroad track did encroach upon the public highway at the point where plaintiff contends his animals entered upon said railroad it was none the less the duty of defendant to erect and maintain at that point a fence between its road and public highway. The fact that the injury complained of happened at a point, where defendant’s road paralleled the public way and was in dangerous proximity to it, forcibly illustrates not only the necessity for a fence at that point but the wisdom of the legislature in imposing by statute the duty upon the railroads of this state to erect and maintain fences everywhere on both sides of their roads, except where specially excused by the terms of the statute itself. Bobinson v. Railroad, 57 Mo. 494; Rutledge v. Railroad, 78 Mo. 286; Morris v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 367; Rozzelle v. Railroal, 79 Mo. 349.
III. There is no evidence to support the hypothesis that the plaintiff’s animals were killed at a private crossing. No such question arises in the record before us.
IV. The defendant’s further contention is that its demurrer to the whole evidence ought to have been sustained.
We have with considerable care examined the abstract of the evidence and conclude that the circuit court was fully justified in letting the case go to the jury. The evidence does not tend to show that plaintiff’s animals went upon the defendant’s road at a
Y. ■ The defendant contends that it owed plaintiff no duty to fence its road at the point where his animals entered upon its track, for the reason that they escaped from their pasture and passed over and through the enclosures and fences of others, until they reached a public road from which they passed upon its track. It is true the evidence does show that the 'plaintiff’s animals escaped from a pasture, in which they were confined, situate about a mile and a half from the point where they went upon defendant’s road, but it is not shown that they passed through intervening fences and fields until they reached defendant’s railroad.
It shows they came up a public road from the south to the point where it intersects another public road running parallel with defendant’s road, and between which and it there is no division fence for a distance of about four hundred feet and from this parallel road they went upon defendant’s track and were killed by its engines and cars.
The array of authority referred to by the very able and industrious counsel for the defendant does not in our judgment apply to a case like this.
These cases from Berry v. Railroad, 65 Mo. 172 to Peddicord v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 160, decide that the duty of fencing the sides of their roads through enclosed and cultivated fields is imposed upon railroad companies for the benefit of the owner of such inclosures, or as aptly illustrated by Mr. Commissioner Ewing in the case last cited, “if a railway company owns a road running through the enclosed and cultivated fields of A. and does not have its road fenced as the law requires, it would not be liable for damages done to the cow of B. provided the fence around A.’s field was a lawful fence.
This illustration and application of the principle announced in the cases referred to by defendant abundantly demonstrates that the same are not in point here.
There is not even a suspicion raised by the evidence that the plaintiff’s animals escaped upon defendant’s railroad track from any inclosed or cultivated fields through which it ran. The plaintiff’s animals were just prior to the time of their injury running at large and entered upon defendant’s railroad from a public and parallel road at a point where defendant had neglected to erect a fence on the side of the same. Under the interpretation repeatedly placed upon the “double damage act” by the supreme court of this state we cannot see how the defendant can escape liability in this case. Morris v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 367; Rozzelle v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 349.
The defendant asked the court to give twenty-three instructions, all of which, except three, were refused but as the defendant, neither in the brief nor in the oral argument of its counsel, has made any point in respect to these, it is unnecessary to consider them further than has been done incidentally in the discussion of the points which have been pressed upon our attention by defendant.
We think, after inspection of the entire record, that the case was fairly submitted by the circuit court to the jury with whose verdict there can be found no fault. Judgment affirmed.