No. 6688 | Tex. | May 30, 1890

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

—Appellee owned and was driving a large herd of cattle along the public highway from Texas to the Indian Territory, when at night he stopped them on unenclosed land more than one-half mile from appellant’s road. During the night there was heavy rain accompanied with thunder and lightning. The cattle, despite the efforts of the servants of appellee to prevent it, drifted to and upon the railway, and while there, the night being very dark, many of them were killed and crippled by collision with a train on appellant’s road, which was unfenced. To recover damages for the loss thus occasioned this action was brought, and appellee recovered a judgment $775.13.

During the trial appellant proposed to ask a witness shown to be familiar with the handling of cattle, “ what effect, if any, as td checking or holding in check a herd of cattle when they are in herd and stampeded will an ordinary wire fence have on such herd under such circumstances?” expecting to prove that such a fence would not have prevented cattle so situated from entering on the roadway. To this evidence appellee objected, and the court sustained the objection. This ruling is assigned as error.

The statute provides that “each and every railroad company shall be liable to the owner for the value of all stock killed or injured by the locomotives and cars of such railroad company in running over their respective railways, which may be recovered by suit before any court having competent jurisdiction of the amount. If the railroad company fence in their road, they shall only then be liable in case of injury resulting from the want of ordinary care.” Rev. Stats., art. 4245.

As said in Railway v. Childress, 64 Texas, 349, the statute “clearly intended to provide, first, what should make out a case for recovery on the part of the plaintiff, and then what should constitute the only defense which the defendant could set up to defeat it. * * * The clear meaning of the statute, as derived from its language, is that if the owner of the stock proves that it has been killed or injured by the cars of the company he shall recover damages, unless they prove that their road was fenced, in which event he shall not recover unless the injury resulted from want of ordinary care on the part of the railroad company.”

There may be another exception not now necessary to consider. The offer was to prove by the opinion of a witness that the exercise of that care prescribed by the Legislature which must exist before an inquiry will be entered into as to the existence or nonexistence of ordinary care would have been unavailing.

*497We are of opinion that a railway company that has not fenced its road has no right to enter into an inquiry whether the injury would have occurred had its road been properly fenced. If a railway company does not fence its road the law makes this such negligence as fixes liability on the company for injury to stock by locomotives and cars running on the road at any place where the road might lawfully be fenced; and from this liability a company can not be relieved by evidence that the injury would have occurred had the road been fenced, unless it be shown that the injury occurred at a place where it was unlawful for stock to run at large, or that the injury was the immediate and proximate result of the owner’s act. The evidence was properly rejected, and would have been had it not been restricted to "an ordinary wire fence.”

Appellant’s counsel asked instructions in different forms to the effect that it would not be liable if its employes used ordinary care, and these were properly refused; for it was shown that the road was unfenced, and not shown that it might not lawfully have been fenced at the place where the injury occurred, nor that the cattle were injured at a place where it was unlawful for them to be at large. In such a case without fence ordinary care can not exist.

The court having charged the jury that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff, was requested to repeat this in a charge which embodied the proposition that it was incumbent on him to show that the injury resulted from the negligence of the company’s employes.

The court did not err in refusing to give the charge requested, which would have been misleading.

Some of the cattle injured did not die at once, and it seems to have been contended that some that did subsequently die from injuries received would not have died if they had been given proper attention; but we do not see from the evidence that there was ground on which to base such a claim.

In this state of the ease the court was asked to instruct the jury "that the burden of proof is on .the plaintiff to show that such cattle were not •so injured or made worse or caused to die by the acts of plaintiff as aforesaid, if you find such were his acts.”

It is not claimed that the cattle that subsequently died did not receive the injuries from which they died by contact with the locomotive or cars, but that the injuries so received would not have caused so much loss to appellee as was brought about by his subsequent mismanagement.

Under this state of facts the burden of proof to show mismanagement on the part of appellee and that greater loss resulted from this than would from the injuries caused by appellant was upon the latter, and the court properly refused to give the charge requested.

It is claimed that the judgment is excessive. Many witnesses testified *498as to the number and kinds of cattle killed outright and so crippled as to be of but little or of any value, but the plaintiff testified as follows:

“The accident occurred six miles south of Fort Worth on the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway; the dead cattle were lying right along on side of track from twenty to thirty feet from the side of track; some of the crippled cattle hobbled off some distance from the track. When I got there I could not tell how many of the cattle were dead; some had one leg, some two legs, and one had three legs broken, that were not dead; they were down, but I don’t remember how many were dead when I got there, but I drove off everything that I could. * * * I think seven out of the forty-two survived; the balance all died. The kind of cattle that were killed and crippled were one, two, and three-year-old steers. I can’t tell the number of each. There were of the number that died in all 60 two-year-olds, 40 yearlings, and 39 or 40 three-year-olds. In June, 1885, three-year-olds were worth $20 to $22, the two-year-olds $14 to $16 per head, and the yearlings were worth from $10 to $11 each. I did not go all the way to the Indian Territory with the cattle. I was with the herd four or five days after the accident. All the cattle did not die within four or five days after the accident. I did not see all the cattle die; I was not with the herd all the time. Of the number left dead and wounded at the place of accident I can not say how many were three years old or two years old or one year old; I can not divide them up. Of the six that died the next day my recollection is that three were three years old and three were two years old. I made a memorandum of the cattle, but I have not got it with me.”

Under this and the other evidence offered, we can not say that the judgment is excessive.

The court instructed the jury that appellant would not be liable for cattle killed or injured otherwise than by the locomotive or other parts of the train, and it is not now claimed that the jury disregarded that part of the charge or found in this respect contrary to the evidence.

There is no error in the judgment, and it will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Delivered May 30, 1890.

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