Suit by Caldwell against the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company, to recover the value of a cow killed upon the railroad track of said company by her locomotive.
The cow was killed at a point where the railroad was not fenced, and was not, by law, required to be fenced. The cow was running at large.
In such cases it has been held by this Court, that common-law principles must govern in determining the relative rights and liabilities of the parties. 5 Ind. R. 111.—6 id. 141
But the point is here made that the Court, in thus deciding, overlooked the statute of the state relative to animals running at large, which, it is claimed, abrogates the common law in this state, as to this particular subj ect. That statute provides (1 R. S. p. 102), that the board of commissioners shall specify, by an entry on then records, what kinds of animals shall be allowed to run at large, on the public commons, in any township in their respective counties. The implication of this statute is, that without such order, no kind of animal has a right to run at large; and as the Supreme Court cannot judicially know what orders are made in the premises, by county boards, it will determine cases, where no proof is made of orders, by the gen
Where it is shown, in a given case, that such an order had been made, and the animal killed, or doing damage, was one licensed to run at large, then the Court will have to consider, in connection with the statute cited, another act, relative to fencing against such animals (1 E. S. p. 292); and also the question of power on the part of the legislature to authorize the depasturage of the cattle of one man upon the unenclosed lands of another — a point we need not here allude to, but in regard to which we may say, that it, perhaps, is not an unreasonable regulation to require owners of property to fence then lands as a condition precedent to the right to recover damages for trespasses upon them
This case, then, will be decided in accordance with the previous rulings of the Court in like cases; which are—
1. That where an injury happens to a party proximately through his own wrong, he cannot recover for it. But—
2. That where such injury happens by the proximate wrong of another, he shall be liable for it, even though the remote negligence of the injured party may have contributed to produce it. Negligence and wrong in one party should not provoke, and will not justify, wantonness and negligence in another. Wright et al. v. Brown, 4 Ind. R. 95.
•This principle runs through every branch of the law. A party, in repelling an assault, must do no more injury to the wrong-doing assailant, than is necessary. A man, in driving trespassing animals from his field, must not set upon them a fierce mastiff, if an inoffensive- cur will suffice. 6 Blackf. 258. Nor can he, by violence, reclaim property wrongfully taken or detained from him. Id. 375. Such is the general principle. Nevertheless, the law does not, in these cases, attempt to draw a very exact boundary line between proper care on the one hand, and negligence on the other. It will not be extremely rigid in favor of one who is himself a wrong-doer. But where, in case of a
The judgment is affirmed with 1 per cent, damages and costs.
See The Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company v. Kinney, 8 Ind. R. 402.
See Myers v. Dodd, Ante, 290, and notes.