89 Mo. App. 241 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
The plaintiff sued before a justice of the peace to recover double damages for his cow which was killed by a locomotive. An appeal from the justice’s judgment was taken. On the trial in the circuit court the plaintiff again succeeded.
It is claimed there was no evidence that the injury occurred in the township where the action was begun or an adjoining one. The plaintiff testified the animal was killed in Joachim township, while the transcript of the justice before whom the action was begun, subscribed by that officer, designates him as a magistrate of that township. The statement laid the killing there, too. The jurisdictional facts are complete. Emmerson v. R’y, 35 Mo. App. 621; Burger v. Railway Co., 52 Mo. App. 127.
The defendant requested and the court gave a declaration of law that the plaintiff could not recover if the point where the cow came on the track was inside the switch limits, and the erection of fences and cattle guards at said point would be a menace to the safety of employees in switching trains — ■ that defendant was not bound to fence under such circumstances. It is apparent that the court believed the company could have safely fenced its right of way where the animal entered. As no one saw it enter, that place is presumed to be where it was killed. Duke v. R’y Co., 39 Mo. App. 105; Kinion v. R’y Co., 39 Mo. App. 382. This was between the station Herculaneum and the bridge over Joachim creek. One witness swore he found the body nearly three-fourths of a mile from the depot and close to the bridge. The distance between the two places is from a half to three-quarters of a mile, and from the bridge to the head of the switch, according
The case is distinguishable from Jennings v. Railway Co., 37 Mo. App. 652, and Crenshaw v. R’y. Co., 52 Mo. App. 236, on account of the much greater length of unfenced track. In the Jennings case, only twenty-eight feet west of the corporate limits of the town was open, which was conclusively shown to be necessarily kept so for switching purposes. Inside the corporation the company was not bound to fence. Herculaneum is an unincorporated town. In the Crenshaw case, the accident happened inside the town of Eoley, where it is plain fences could not have been erected without material hinder anee to the handling of trains. No such conclusion is. inevitable from the evidence in the present case. Reasonable minds might differ as to whether the defendant’s right of way could have been safely closed where the plaintiff’s cow got on it. The court was the trier of the facts and we have no right to reverse his finding, unless we are satisfied he acted arbitrarily, under the influence of passion or prejudice. Gannon v. Gas Co., 145 Mo. 502. The case just cited has altered the rule in regard to the power of appellate courts to determine when there is sufficient evidence to support a verdict laid down in Reichenbach v. Ellerbe, 115 Mo. 588, which was in force when the Jennings and Crenshaw cases were determined.
The judgment is affirmed.