126 N.Y. 365 | NY | 1891
The 44tli section of the General Railroad Act of 1850, imposed upon every railroad company organized
It is conceded that the defendant has never fenced its road and that the plaintiff’s cattle were killed on the track of the defendant, onto which they had strayed, by an engine running thereon.
It appears that the defendant is one of five railroads running for a distance out of the city of Buffalo on five parallel tracks, separated from each other only so far as to permit the passage of trains on the respective roads. The defendant’s tracks occupy a central position, there being the tracks of two other ro -ds on each side of its tracks, those on the easterly side being the tracks of the Buffalo, Bochester and Pittsburgh railroad, and of the Western Hew York and Pennsylvania railroad. The exterior tracks on the easterly side of the defendant’s tracks are those of the road first named, and the plaintiff’s cattle strayed from a farm adjoining the tracks of that road on to those tracks, thence across the tracks of the Western Hew York and Pennsylvania railroad on to those of the defendant. Heither of the roads mentioned had ever erected any fences on the sides of its road. There was no barrier to prevent cattle straying from the farm where the plaintiff’s cattle were, across the intervening tracks on to the tracks of the defendant. There were eight or more tracks east of those of the defendant. The Buffalo, Bochester and Pittsburgh Company had its tracks and sidings, and also an engine-house, coal platforms and other structures on its lands, but the way was otherwise open and unobstructed.
The defendant relies upon two grounds for the reversal of the judgment: First, that the cattle did not get on to the defendant’s tracks from lands “ adjoining the same,” within the meaning of the statute, and second, that the court erred in rejecting evidence that fences on the sides of the defendant’s road would, by reason of the narrow space between its tracks and those of the adjacent roads, constitute a dangerous obstruction and imperil the lives of passengers and of operatives employed about the cars and upon the track.
The first point was adjudicated againt the defendant’s contention in the case of Shepard v. Buffalo, New York and Erie Railroad Company (35 N. Y. 641). In that case cattle had strayed from lands adjoining the track of the New York Central railroad, upon and over the track of that road and thence - upon the track of the Erie road, immediately adjoining, and were there killed. Neither company had fenced its road. It was claimed that the primary duty to fence was upon the road whose tracks were next to the land from which the cattle strayed, and that the lands of the New York Central railroad, from which the cattle came on to the defendant’s road, being railroad lands, were not “ adjoining lands ” to those of the defendant, within the statute of 1854. The court overruled the contention, and while conceding that the purpose of the statute would have been attained if the New York Central Company had complied on its part with the law, nevertheless held that the defendant was not thereby excused, and that, not having fenced its road, washable for the value of the cattle. The multiplication of railroads and the difficulty, especially in large cities, of securing suitable and convenient approaches and outlets, makes it often desirable and in some cases necessary that different converging roads should be constructed for a dis
The evidence to show the danger to passengers and operators from the erection of fences was, we think, properly excluded.
It is to be observed that the question is not whether a court would, in the actual situation, compel a specific performance by the defendant of its statutory duty. It may be conceded that it would refuse to enforce specifically the building of fences along the sides of the defendant’s road as now located if it should appear that by so doing human life would be endangered. But this, we conceive, is no answer to a civil action for damages resulting from the neglect to fence. The defendant, for its own purpose and- by its own volition, has placed its tracks in such near proximity to the tracks of other
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.