113 Ga. 357 | Ga. | 1901
The complaint made in the present bill of exceptions is that the court below erred in dismissing on demurrer a suit instituted by Hardin against the railroad company. His action was based upon the provisions of sections 2243-2246 of the Civil Code, which relate to the duty of railroad companies to erect and maintain cattle-guards, and prescribe what shall be the liability ot such companies for failure to comply with the requirements therein mentioned. He sought to bring bis case within the statutory law embraced in those sections, by alleging in his petition, with respect to the ownership of “the lands to be affected by” the cattle-guard therein referred to, “ That petitioner is now, and was on or before October the 9th, 1899, in possession and control [of], and held under bond for title, with part of the purchase-money paid, 60 acres of” a designated lot of land through which the railroad of the defendant company ran, and which adjoined the premises of another named person whose lot the railroad also traversed. One of the grounds of the demurrer was that the facts alleged in Hardin’s petition did not show that he was “such owner of said .lot of land” as the law embraced in section 2243 of the Civil Code contemplated. We think this point was well taken, and should control our decision upon the question whether or not the trial judge erred in dismissing the plaintiff’s action. It has heretofore been definitely ruled that: “Relatively to one who is not the owner of cultivated lands through which the ■ track of a railroad company runs, such company is under no duty . . to erect, keep, or maintain cattle-guards for the protection of crops growing upon such lands;”but that, in view of the provisions of the act of November 11,1889, now to be found in the sections of the code above cited, “for a breach of duty imposed by that statute the owner of the lands only is entitled to maintain an action.” See Florida Central Railroad Co. v. Judge, 100 Ga. 600. It appeared in that case that the plaintiff “had been engaged in conducting a farm upon a tract of land owned by his father; that this farm was crossed by the track and right of way of the defendant company,” and that, because of its failure to erect and maintain proper cattle-guards, “ domestic animals of various kinds entered upon his crops and destroyed them.” As he was not the owner of the tract of land in question, but at best a mere tenant of such owner, we without difficulty reached the conclusion that a general demurrer to his petition should have been
“ The word ‘ owner ’ has no' technical meaning, and, being nómen generalissimum, should, especially when used in a remedial statute, be construed liberally-in favor of the parties whom it is the duty and intention of the legislature to protect.” 1 Hare’s Am. Const. Law, 355. “Under different circumstances, and having regard to the different objects of various statutes in which the word has been used, ‘ owner ’ has been held to mean the person having the legal title, or the one who has the equitable estate, the mortgagor or the mortgagee. And in more than one instance it has been held to include every one who has an interest in the land.” 17 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 304. In the present instance, however, it is evident that the legislature did not intend “ to include every one who has an interest in the land,” but the real owner thereof as against the world at large — the one person whose right and title thereto must, as matter of law, he held paramount to the claims of all others who may have a mere incidental interest therein or control over the same. Hardin is not, under his own statement of the facts of the case, an “owner” in any such sense. Imagine the very natural state of mind of his vendor if, in a controversy to which the latter was an interested party, we were to hold to the contrary! Though it would seem scarcely necessary to fortify the conclusion just announced by the citation of authority, yet we will briefly refer to a number of decisions by this court which are more or less in point. The in
Judgment affirmed.