33 W. Va. 489 | W. Va. | 1890
This was an action brought before a justice of the peace of Putnam county, by James Hoyleman and John L. Porter, against the Kanawha & Ohio Railway Company, on the
It appears that one ,T. J. Bright, the plaintiff’s landlord, had a contract with the A. & N. W. R. R. Co., that the right of way through a tract of land in said county containing 350 acres, owned by said Bright, should be fenced with a good and lawful fence on the side next to the river when notified so to do; that the defendant now owns the railroad that was built by the A. &N. W. R. R. Co. in 1881 through said farm; that the plaintiffs rented said farm for the year 1887, about 150 acres of which is bottom; that at the time of renting, the fence along the railroad was in bad condition, aud the agent of said Bright gave notice at different times to the agent and employes to build up said fence ; that in the year 1887 the plaintiffs had thirty two acres of said land sown in wheat, three acres in grass, and corn in the balance, of 100 acres; that the railroad let the water that came from the hills run through its .road-bed in five different places; and the evidence proceeds to detail the losses which accrued to plaintiffs by reason.of said water
It seems to me this complaint of the plaintiffs is not sustained by the evidence. Although it is an agreed fact-that the plaintiffin error now owns and operates, and did in 1887, the railroad that was built in 1881 by the A. & N. W. R. R. Co., with which company J. J. Bright, plaintifls’ landlord, had a contract that the right of way through said farm should be fenced with a good and lawful fence, when notified so to do, on the side next to the river, which road passes through said farm, yet it does not appear that said fence vras to be maintained continually by said company. It may have been built in 1881, and been destroyed, in a variety of ways, between 1881 and 1887- It does not appear how the defendant company became the owners of said railroad, or to what extent they are liable to carry oiit the contracts of the A. & N. W. R. R. Co.; neither does the evidence disclose the terms and stipulations of the contract between J. J. Bright and said company so as to show the extent of the liability of the plaintiff in error, if it was conceded that it was to the fullest extent liable for the contracts of the A. & N. W. R. R. Co. The defendants in error merely, rented the land for a year; and, as we understand the law, they took it in the condition it was when they rented it, and could not require J. J. Bright to repair the fences.
The contract for building the fence was made by the A. & N. W. R. R. Co. with said landlord, J. J. Bright, and not with the defendants in error; and, assuming it had been shown by the evidence that the plaintiff in error had in any manner taken upon itself a liability for any damages which might result from a failure to keep said fence in repair, said
As to the damageclaimed by reasou of the water flowing-on the land, one of the plaintiffs stated in evidence that if said land wras properly ditched about two thirds of the water that came on it from the hill would go up the river, into Earley’s creek, and the balance would come down the river; and it is not claimed that it was in any manner incumbent on the plaintiff in error to properly ditch- said land. The evidence further shows that the surface water ran off the hill-side, and flowed on the land; and although the plaintiffs’ witness Showen says that in 1887 water was turned through the railroad in
As to instructions Nos. 1 and 2, asked for by the plaintiffs in error, which read as follows: (1) “The jury are instructed that, if they find from the evidence that the plaintiffs had no contract with the defendant or its predecessors about fencing railroad track through the farm rented by the plaintiffs, then the defendant is not liable to the plaintiffs for damages for failure to fence.” (2) “If the jury find from the evidence that the fence of the railroad through the farm upon which plaintiffs lived in 1887 was bad, and practically worthless, at the time said plaintiffs rented said farm of the owner, J. J. Bright, in January, 1887, then the jury can not find damages for the plaintiffs on account of defects in said railroad fence which existed at the time the plaintiffs rented said farm.” These instructions were objected to by the plaintiffs, which objection was sustained by the court. I am of opinion that said objection was properly sustained by the court, and said instructions. were properly rejected by the court on account of irrelevancy; but, as the evidence in the cause does not show that the damages complained of were caused by the negligence of the defendant, and for the further reason that the plaintiffs could not sustain an action for damages against the defendant for failure to fence the railroad, I am of opinion to reverse thejudgment of the Circuit Court at the costs of the defendants in error, and dismiss the plaintiff’s action.
ReveRsed. Dismissed.