120 Mo. App. 416 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
(after stating the facts)
It is insisted by appellant that inasmuch as the first count of the petition, that pertaining to the loss of the cattle, counts upon the failure of the railroad to erect and maintain fences only, as its specification of negligence, the plaintiff cannot recover for the reason that there is a variance betAveen the pleadings and proof, as it maintains the cattle came to the place of collision over a point on the railroad tracks where it should have maintained a cattle-gua-rd and by reason of its failure to maintain such cattle-guard. The argument is to the effect that the cattle having passed over such point-where there was no cattle-guard, no recovery can be allowed upon the pleadings in that the specification of negligence therein is the failure to construct fences and for this reason there is a fatal variance. It is true the petition in the first count does allege a failure to construct and maintain fences. It is urged that as the cattle passed over the point Avhere the cattle-guard should have been erected and came to their injury and death thereafter, the failure to construct the cattle-guard and not the failure to construct the fences is the negligence upon which plaintiff must- rely for re
The judgment is for the right party, and it will be affirmed. It is so ordered.