25 N.Y.S. 229 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
The action was to recover for injuries to the plaintiff’s horse, caused by his falling through a bridge over the ditch by the side of the defendant’s road, adjacent to the farm of one Davis. The horse was pastured on the Davis farm, and went onto the railroad land at a point where the fence was wanting. The railroad hands had taken the planks off from the bridge for the purpose of repairs, and the horse, coming upon it, fell between the stringers. The case is, in principle, precisely like that of Graham v. Canal Co., 46 Hun, 386, in which our brethren in the third department sustained a judgment in favor of a plaintiff, who lost his horse by a fall over the edge of a deep cut, in which the defendant’s track was laid, through the plaintiff’s field, and which was unprotected by a fence. In that case it was held, in an opinion by Landon, J., that the defendant was guilty of negligence in not performing its statutory duty to fence its track, (citing Corwin v.