116 Ind. 126 | Ind. | 1888
A mare and a bull belonging to the appellee were struck and killed by one of the appellant’s locomotives on the 2d day of May, 1884. The facts which control the controversy are thus stated in the special finding: “ The animals entered on the right of way and track of the defendant at a private road crossing made by the defendant to enable the plaintiff to pass to and from his fields, situate immediately north and south of the defendant’s right of way, which the plaintiff had long used. The defendant’s road runs east and west through plaintiff’s farm where the crossing was made. The defendant obtained its right of way by conveyance from the plaintiff. As part consideration for the execution of the deed it wa§ stipulated therein as follows : ‘ Said
Immediately before the plaintiff’s animals were killed they were feeding on his pasture on the north side of the road, and passed from that field through an open gate at the private crossing on to the defendant’s track.
The question in this case is whether the trial court did right in awarding a recovery, for, if the facts entitled the appellee to a recovery, then the judgment will not be reversed, although some one of the conclusions of law stated by the court may be erroneous. If the ultimate conclusion of the court is right upon the facts, an intermediate error in stating a conclusion of law which is not of controlling force will not authorize a reversal. Krug v. Davis, 101 Ind. 75; Bothwell v. Millikan, 104 Ind. 162.
"Where an erroneous conclusion of law leads to an erroneous judgment, it will, of course, require this court to set aside
There was a valid contract between the parties, founded upon a valuable consideration, and designed to accomplish a designated object. Contracts are, as a familiar elementary rule declares, to be construed by the light of attendant circumstances and with reference to the object it was the intention of the parties to accomplish. Indiana, etc., R. W. Co. v. Adamson, 114 Ind. 282.
It is quite clear that the construction given the contract by the trial court is such as this rule commands. It imposed upon the appellant the obligation of providing a safe private crossing, and of erecting and maintaining a secure fence. For a breach of the duty created by the contract the appellee had a right of action. Whether the action could be maintained if there were no such contract is not the question; the question is, was there a breach of the contract, and did loss result to the plaintiff from that breach ?
It is argued that the measure of damages is not the value of cattle killed, but the cost of erecting and maintaining a secure fence. The principle declared in Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Sumner, 106 Ind. 55, rules here, and decides this question against the appellant.
Where a railroad company obtains a right of way through a farm, and in consideration of the grant agrees to erect and maintain a secure fence, it is bound to pay for animals billed by its trains, in cases where the animals enter upon the track through the fault of the company in failing to fence the crossing in accordance with the terms of the contract. Don-
The facts stated make a prima facie case for the appellee, for they show a valid contract to make a secure fence, a breach of this contract, and that the animals got upon the track because the fence was not such as it was appellant’s duty to erect and maintain. If it had appeared that the gates were left open by the appellee, or by some wrong-doer other than the appellant, we should, perhaps, be required to hold that there was no liability; but no such facts appear. We do not believe it was necessary for the special finding to state that the gate was not left open by the appellee, or by a wrong-doer, for certainly the plaintiff was not bound to prove these facts in order to make out his case. He was bound to prove the contract, the appellant’s breach, and loss resulting from it, but he was not bound‘to anticipate and overthrow defences that might have availed the appellant.
Judgment affirmed.