63 Pa. Super. 362 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916
Opinion by
The plaintiff sues to recover the value of a horse which was struck by a car operated by the defendant company and so injured that it had to be killed. The defendant’s car was being operated on its track, not on any public highway but on a private right of way owned by the company. There was a fence between the track and right of way and the public highway. On the other side of the track was an unfenced pasture field in which the plaintiff or his tenant was accustomed to graze his stock. At or about the point of the accident there was a gate leading from the highway through the fence aforesaid to the track of the company, and at that point the cars were accustomed to stop when occasion required to receive or discharge passengers. It was just at this point the horse was struck. No witness saw the collision. There is evidence that the horse was inside the fence, close to the gate, and either on the track of the defendant or so close to it that he was necessarily struck by the car. How the animal got to that place, the evidence does not disclose.
At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case the learned trial judge entered a compulsory nonsuit and thus stated his reasons therefor: “I direct this nonsuit because the evidence shows that the horse that was destroyed was a trespasser on the track of the trolley company, and the evidence entirely fails to show that he was run into as the result of any wilfulness or recklessness on the part of the defendant company.” No such wilful or wanton
The case is practically ruled by Devereux v. Philadelphia, Etc., Railway Co., 245 Pa. 136. In the opinion of Mr. Justice Elkin we find a situation portrayed exactly like the one presented by this record: “The horses, the value of which this suit was brought to recover’, were killed while trespassing upon the right of way of the defendant company, and this is conceded, but it is contended that under all the facts disclosed by the testimony it was for the jury to say whether the railroad company exercised proper and reasonable care under the circumstances. We see nothing in the case to take it out of the rule which has been recognized and followed in our State for more than half a century.”
Nor can we see anything in this case to differentiate it in principle from the one just cited. The same doctrine is affirmed in Taylor v. The Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co., 55 Pa. Superior Ct. 607, affirmed by the Supreme Court: vide 245 Pa. 189. The record discloses no reversible error and the judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.