delivered the opinion of the court.
There is but one question that we deem it necessary to consider upon this record, namely, whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict. It arises out of the defendant’s motion for a non-suit. The testimony of the plaintiff, as disclosed by the record, shows that one George Taylor was tending and in charge of the sheep when killed; that the night before the killing of them occurred he drove them across the railroad track and down to the river to water them; that he sometimes watered them there, but not often, and had brought them there that.
Taking this evidence as true, is it sufficient to sustain the verdict, or did the court err in not granting the motion for non-suit. The contention of counsel for the defendant is, that from this evidence it clearly appears that it was the negligence of Taylor which occasioned the collision and caused the destruction of the sheep. It has beert held in this State that the common law mle that every man is bound to keep his stock within his own enclosure does not prevail, and that a party in allowing his stock to run at large, which strays upon a railroad track and is killed, is not guilty of contributory negligence. Moses v. S. P. R. R. Co., 18 Or. 385. And it is also provided under the statute under which this action is brought that the allowing of stock to run at large upon common unfenced range, or upon enclosed land owned or in the possession of theowner of such stock, shall not bo deemed or held to be contributory negligence. Hill’s Code, § 4048. Stock running at large are animals that roam and feed at will, and are not under the immediate direction and control of any one. They may be in an enclosure which may restrain the limita
Now, it appears that on the night previous to the killing of the sheep that the herder had driven them down to water on the river and left them all night on a narrow space or strip of land between the river and the line of the railroad; that it was only “sometimes” that he watered them at this place, but that he did it on this occasion, and when that was done he repaired to his cabin some-distance away and remained for the night, leaving twenty-six hundred sheep hemmed in this narrow space along the track of the railroad, liable to be used at all hours of the night and day as the requirements of its business might demand, and with their feeding grounds on the other side of it. The sheep were thus voluntarily placed and left in a place of danger, and where, under the circumstances, injury to them would likely occur as a natural and probable consequence. As luck would have it, nothing occurred during
In Moses v. Southern Pacific Railroad Co., supra, it was said: “An owner cannot turn loose his stock regardless of circumstances, or at a place where danger to them is constant and imminent; and when an injury occurs to them as a consequence of his conduct, though the defendant may not have been free from fault, escape the charge of negligence, or a want of ordinary care. * '* * In such case the act itself is equivalent to deliberately putting the stock into a place of danger, and where injury to them is a probable consequence. The stock do not stray into a place of danger but they are turned loose in a place where danger is known to exist, or may be foreseen by the exercise of
It follows that the judgment must be reversed with the direction to the trial court to sustain the motion for non • suit.