18 Wis. 28 | Wis. | 1864
By the Court,
The circuit court gave, without qualification or amendment, the several instructions asked for by the appellant on the trial. Those instructions embraced many propositions defining the duties, rights and liabilities of the parties. Among other things, the jury were told that if the evidence showed that the injury to the cattle was occasioned by the mutual negligence of the plaintiff and defendant; or if the wrongful act of the plaintiff co-operated with the misconduct of the defendant to produce the result; or if the owner permitted his cattle to run at large in the highway or other-place where they could pass at pleasure upon the railroad track, he was guilty of gross and culpable negligence; and in neither of the above supposed cases was the company liable
The only exception taken in the case was to this instruction. We are of the opinion that it was strictly pertinent to the facts proven on the trial, and is sound in principle. The essence of the instruction is, that it was the duty of the company to keep its cattle guards open, and not suffer them to remain filled with snow so that cattle going along the highway would pass on to the track and be liable to be killed; that the company permitting its cattle guards to remain in that condition was guilty of negligence, and if an injury was thereby sustained it was liable. This is what the instruction amounts to. Nowit is not pretended that the charter does not impose upon the company the duty of putting up and maintaining proper cattle guards along its track. And why is this ? Obviously for the protection of the property of the citizen. Yet to what purpose are railroad corporations required to put up such guards, if they are not to be kept open, but are permitted to fill up, so that cattle are liable to pass over them on to the track without any fault of the owner ? Now we are to assume in this case that the plaintiff was guilty of no negligence; that his cattle escaped from his enclosure into the highway without his knowledge, and then passed over on to the track of the company because
In view of the facts proven on the trial we are of the opinion that the circuit court fairly laid down the law applicable to the case, and that the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.