35 Mo. App. 559 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
The substantive cause of action stated in the plaintiff’s petition is, that the defendant, who was the owner of a certain number of hogs, which he knew were infected with a fatal and contagious disease, negligently placed them so as to communicate the said disease to the hogs of the plaintiff, and from which some forty-nine of them died. The answer denied this. There was evidence introduced tending to show that the defendant was the owner of a twenty-acre enclosed lot, in the southeast corner of which was a corral, or feed lot. The latter was separated from the pasture of the plaintiff by a fence owned by the plaintiff. The plaintiff occupied the premises, of which said pasture
The plaintiff, in the month preceding the one in which defendant placed said shoats in his corral, had cast suspicion upon the health of his own hogs by administering to them large doses of carbolic acid and stating to witness Green and others that his hogs had cholera.
As to whether the plaintiff’s hogs were infected with the fatal contagion by defendant’s hogs, is by no means certain, though it is conceded they died of that ailment.
The court instructed the jury for defendant, as follows:
“1. If the evidence fails to satisfy the jury that the disease known as hog cholera is contagious, they will find for the defendant.”
“2, If the evidence fails to satisfy the jury that the disease was communicated to plaintiff’s hogs by defendant’s hogs, by reason of defendant’s hogs escaping upon plaintiff’s premises, they will find for the defendant.”
“3. If the plaintiff’s hogs contracted the disease known as hog cholera from defendant’s hogs by escaping from plaintiff ’ s premises, to defendant’s premises, the jury will find for defendant.”
“5. The plaintiff cannot recover of the defendant damages resulting from defendant’s hogs escaping from defendant’s premises upon the premises of plaintiff, through a fence which it was the duty of the plaintiff to keep in repair, by virtue of an agreement or understanding between defendant and plaintiff, or plaintiff’s landlord, Marette, to that effect.”
The verdict of the jury was for the defendant, and after an unsuccessful motion to set aside the same, judgment was entered thereon, and from which the plaintiff appealed to this court.
I. Plaintiff complains that the circuit court admitted over his objections illegal and improper evidence.
But such objections of the plaintiff were not preserved in his bill of exceptions and we must presume that the circuit court correctly overruled the same. If a party desires to have the action of a trial court in admitting evidence against his objections reviewed here he must preserve such objections by his bill of exceptions. Margrave et al. v. Ausmuss et al., 51 Mo. 561; Bank v. Westlake, 21 Mo. App. 569
II. The second ground of the plaintiff’s appeal is that the defendants instructions “ignore any question of negligence.” We should be inclined to regard this objection as fatal were it not that the plaintiff grounds his cause of action upon the negligence of the defendant, and yet in none of the instructions asked and given in his behalf is that question submitted to the triers of the facts for their consideration.
The defendant’s third instruction is not inconsistent with the theory of those given for plaintiff. If the jury, as they probably did, found for the defendant upon this theory it is difficult to discover any reason for disturbing the judgment on that account.
The plaintiff assails the defendant’s fifth instruction on the ground that there was no evidence on which to base it.
We think otherwise. The evidence satisfactorily shows that the fence separating the pasture of the defendant from that of the plaintiff was not a division fence within the meaning of the statute, but was a fence belonging to the plaintiff. It was exclusively under his control as the tenant of his landlord Marette. There was no pretense that it was a statutory fence. The inference it quite clear that it was not. It is the law of this state that a party must fence his field with a lawful fence before he can complain of damage done him by the animals of others. Canefox v. Crenshaw, 24 Mo. 199.
If such was the duty of plaintiff and he neglected to protect himself by a lawful fence and in consequence thereof the defendant’s hogs strayed into his pasture and did the mischief complained of, the damage would be attributable to his own fault, and he would have no remedy.
If the plaintiff’s fence was a division fence in fact and not in law he could at his option have, at any time proceeded under the statute and made it a statutory division fence. He preferred to be the exclusive owner
The agreement to repair imposed no duty on the plaintiff other than that imposed by law in so far as the same affects the relations of the parties in respect to the subject-matter of this suit. The finding of the jury in this regard was right, though subject possibly to the objection as being for a wrong reason, and that this did not operate to prejudice the rights of the plaintiff is no ground for reversal.
The plaintiff in his brief cites us to Cooley on Torts, 608, to sustain his contention, where it will be seen that author states the law to be that when domestic animals which have an infectious disease become a nuisance when the care and management of them by their owners is such as to expose the domestic animals of others to the infection, the question of liability is one of negligence and the want of good faith. No such theory nor was the converse thereof submitted to the jury by any instruction and hence the principle cannot be,invoked.
The case of Reddick v. Newman, 76 Mo. 423, also cited by plaintiff, does not support the plaintiff’s position for the reason that the “partition fence,” there referred to, was a statutory division fence. The case in its facts is wholly wanting in analogy to this. We have carefully considered the evidence and have reached the conclusion that the verdict of the jury was for the right party.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.