24 Pa. 308 | Pa. | 1855
Tbe opinion of tbe Court was delivered by
These parties were the owners of adjoining lands, and a public road was laid out and opened on the division line which at that time ran through tbe woods. Afterwards the land was cleared, and crops sowed on both sides. To save labor and expense, the parties agreed not to make a lane along tbe road, but to enclose tbe fields on both sides by a ring fence, each one maintaining it to tbe middle of tbe woodland, stopping it up.
Undoubtedly this contract was illegal and void. It was an agreement to commit a nuisance for which both of the parties were liable to an indictment. If any citizen bad asserted tbe public right to tbe use of tbe road by throwing down the fence, those who put it up could have sustained no action for tbe injury suffered by them. The contract being wholly void, one of tbe parties cannot sue tbe other for tbe breach of it.
When the defendant got bis own crop away, be threw down that part of tbe fence which he bad placed on the road, and thus caused tbe plaintiff’s grain to be destroyed by tbe cattle which were let in upon it. Tbe Court of Common Pleas rightly instructed tbe jury on tbe nature of tbe contract, and said in substance that
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.