65 Cal. 316 | Cal. | 1884
John P. Hynes, a boy accustomed to work on his father’s farm, through which the defendant’s road is constructed, went on a certain afternoon in 1879 to his father’s barn, mounted a horse, and started in search of cows. He used no saddle, but
By a statute of this State the railroad company was required to make and maintain a good and sufficient fence along its track, and this duty the company in question failed to perform. The statute reads: “Eailroad corporations must make and maintain a good and sufficient fence on either or both sides of their track and property. In case they do not make and maintain such
(Civ. Code, § 485.)
It is obvious that the purpose of the statute in requring railway companies to make and maintain such fences is to prevent collisions with cattle and other domestic animals, and that it has no application to ordinary cases in which an individual suffers any injury. The statute having' imposed on the defendant the duty of making and maintaining the fences, and defendant having wholly failed in its duty in that particular, there can be no doubt, we think, of the liability of defendant for the loss of the horse, if there was no such negligence on the part of John P. Hynes in riding the horse, as and where he did, as precludes a recovery (C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Utley, 38 Ill. 411 Whart. Law of Negligence, § 889, 2d. ed.)
In the Illinois case, the mare of the plaintiff was being driven at night, and becoming frightened, ran away, separated herself from the vehicle, and was found the next morning, not very far from the point where she took fright, dead on the track of the railroad. The real question presented by the evidence in the case was, whether the cattle-guard at the crossing, near which the mare was killed, and the fences along the line of the road, were good and sufficient—the court holding that if the fence or cattle-guard' was not such as the law required at the point where the mare came upon the railroad, that fact alone would render the company liable. Precisely the same reason that made the company liable for the death of the mare, would have made it liable for the destruction of the vehicle had it remained attached to her and been destroyed, and also for the death or injury of its occupants. So, here, if John P. Hynes was without fault, and the defendant is liable for the loss of the horse by reason of its failure to make and maintain the fence required by the statute, no reason is perceived why it is not also liable for the injury to the boy carried on the back of the runaway horse. The real question, therefore, in our opinion, is whether there was such
There was also error on the part of the court in charging the jury that if the boy was on the premises of his father “at a point where a passing train could not injure him, upon a horse he was accustomed to ride, and believed to be gentle and hot afraid ■ of the cars, and if the horse became alarmed at the train and unmanageable and dashed upon the track with him, the same not being fenced, when it was beyond his power to prevent it or to dismount, then I charge you that in making up your verdict it does not matter whether he saw or heard the cars, or bell, or whistle, before the horse became frightened, or not.” By these instructions the court virtually took from the jury the determination of the question of contributory negligence. ' It was for the jury to say whether the boy exercised such ordinary care and prudence under the particular circumstances of the case as would reasonably be expected of him—regard, of course, being had to his age and condition. Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
McKinstry, J., concurred.
McKee, J., concurred in the judgment.