delivered the opinion of the court.
The errors complained of in this case relate, 1st, to the refusal of the court below to arrest the judgment; 2d, to the instructions to the jury given by the court of its 'own motion; and 3d, to the refusal of instructions asked by the appellant.
1. As to the refusal of the court to arrest the judgment. The motion in arrest was based on the supposed insufficiency of the petition. The petition contains three counts, substantially alike, the first of which is as follows: ££ Plaintiff states that defendant is a body politic and corporate, under and by the laws of the State of Missouri, and duly Organized pursuant to an act of the Legislature of this State, entitled £ An act to incorporate the Hannibal and St.
It is contended by the appellant’s counsel that the petition was intended to show, but failed in showing, against the appellant a statutory cause of action under the 52d section of the general railroad law, and that because of the failure the petition is bad and insufficient to support the judgment. It is clear enough the petition is short of showing any liability on the appellant under the provisions of the 52d section, and it is equally clear that in drawing the petition the pleader thought his case in someway affected by that section; yet we are not led to the same conclusion from these considerations as that arrived.at by the appellant’s counsel. All the matter in the petition that relates to the locus in quo, and to the duty of the appellant to fence its road, and to its omission to do so, may be stricken out, and still leave allegations enough to make a good cause of action at common law. And it is well settled, that in such case the irrelevant matter may be disregarded and stricken out as surplusage. (1 Chitty’s Pl. 262, 3; Crocker v. Mann, 3 Mo. 472.) Stripped of the redundant matter, the petition makes out a clear case of actual negligence, for which the appellant would have been answerable in damages at common law. There was, therefore, no fault in overruling the motion in arrest.
2. As to the instructions given by the court, of its own motion. The following is the evidence in the case, bearing upon the question of negligence : Harman Hollyman, on the part of the respondent, testified, that “he was sitting in his house, within a few feet of the railroad, when hearing a very fierce, sharp and unusual whistle of the locomotive of the train running west, he instantly ran to the road, and looking-down the track, in the direction of the approaching train, saw some cattle going up and some down, in front of the locomotive. The train was running at a good rate of speed. On going to where he had seen the cattle he found five head, three dead, and two crippled so badly they could not walk.” Further testifying the witness said: “ The track here is
In this condition of the evidence, the court gave the instructions complained of as follows:
1. “ If the jury believe, from the evidence in the cause, that defendant’s locomotive struck, killed and wounded the stock of the plaintiff, and that such striking was the result of carelessness or negligence of the agent or agents of the defendant, they should find for the plaintiff, and give him such damages as will compensate him for the loss he has sustained. But if they believe, from the evidence, that the injury so done was not at all the result of any carelessness or negligence of said defendant’s agents, or any one of them, but was inevitable if care and diligence had been used by the defendant’s agent or agents, then they should find for the defendant.”
2. “If the jury believe, from the evidence, that the defendant used reasonable and ordinary care in endeavoring to drive said stock off the track before they were struck by the locomotive, such care as a man of ordinary prudence would use to save his own property from damage, they should find for defendant.”
These instructions, in our opinion, give an exposition of the law as favorable to the appellant as under the evidence in the case it could reasonably ask.
3. The third and last ground of error which we are called to consider, is the refusal of the instructions asked by the appellant. All these, except the first and sixth, seem to have been asked under a total misapprehension of the nature of the case on trial. They are based upon the notion that the verdict of the jury was to be controlled by the question whether the road was fenced or not, and by the question as
The first of the series of instructions asked by the appellant proposed to limit the liability of the appellant to such injury to the cattle as was committed within the enclosed field of Hollyman. There was nothing in the issues which rendered it material whether the injury was committed within or without the enclosure. The sixth instruction asserts the proposition, that “ if the person in charge of the locomotive which struck said stock tried to scare said stock off the track by blowing the whistle, this was the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, and exonerated the appellant.” According to this, there is no obligation on the engineer to check the speed of his train, however practicable and full of promise, and the full measure of his duty is discharged by a blast of his whistle, as well when the train is so near that the destruction of the animal is inevitable, as when so distant that the means might prove efficacious. The instruction was clearly wrong, and was properly refused.
Let the judgment be affirmed.