Kirkpatrick v. Illinois Southern Railway Co.

120 Mo. App. 416 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906

NORTONI, J.

(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*421covery. It is not necessary to pass upon the question as to whether such would constitute a fatal variance, for the evidence tends to show that the cattle were at pasture in the inclosure of plaintiff’s testator through which inclosure the railroad passes and along the sides of which no right of way fence had been constructed as required by the statute; that they came upon the right of way from this pasture by reason of defendant’s failure to erect the fence required by law. It is well settled in the jurisprudence of this State that it is the point at which the cattle enter upon the right of way of the railroad which determines the liability or non-liability of defendant in these cases (Snider v. Railway, 73 Mo. 465; Acord v. Railway, 113 Mo. App. 84-98, 87 S. W. 537), not the point at which the actual collision occurred. It is wholly immaterial that after going upon the right of way at a point which would affix liability against the railroad, the cattle afterwards, in their wanderings, passed a half-mile north on the track and over a point where a cattle-guard should have been constructed. The proximate cause of the injury was the failure to maintain a fence which would confine the cattle in the pasture and preclude them in the first instance from entering upon the right of way and not the failure to maintain the cattle-guard mentioned. There is no variance between the pleadings and proof. On the contrary, the pleader was precise in counting upon the failure to fence.

2. The evidence shows that the corn and wheat mentioned in the second count were damaged by hogs owned by the plaintiff’s testator; that said hogs passed from the pasture onto defendant’s right of way and escaped from the right of way into the field where the ungathered corn was standing and the unthreshed wheat was in the stack; that the escape of the hogs into the field was by reason of defendant’s failure to construct and maintain fences along its right of way as required *422by the statute; that said hogs were found in said field on several occasions by plaintiff’s testator and each time returned by him to the pasture mentioned. Upon this state of facts, it is argued by the defendant that this item of damage accrued to the plaintiff’s testator by reason of his negligence which directly contributed to the injury complained of. The point is made that the plaintiff’s testator was negligent in repeatedly turning the hogs into the pasture when he knew it was possible for them to escape upon the right of way and from the right of way into his field. The case of Milburn v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 104, is cited and relied upon to support this proposition. In that case, which was one of common law negligence for killing two cows upon a public crossing at different times, the plaintiff and his son testified that they were near by, about two hundred yards distant, and saw the cows standing upon the crossing for about one-half an hour prior to their being killed by the regular passenger train. It was shown that the plaintiff knew the train was due. In view of the facts that the plaintiff permitted the cows to stand for one-half an hour upon the track at a crossing when he had every reason to expect the approach of the regular passenger train, without endeavoring to avert the injury by driving them therefrom, the co”rt held that his negligence was such as to preclude a recovery. We do not understand that case to be in point here. That was an action for common law negligence where each, the plaintiff and the defendant, owed to the other the correlative obligation to exercise ordinary care to avert the injury, whereas this case is one involving different obligations between the parties. Here the plaintiff’s deceased had the undoubted right to turn his hogs into his pasture and thus enjoy his premises and the defendant owed to him the positive statutory duty of constructing and maintaining a fence along the right of way sufficient to prevent such hogs from passing either upon the *423track or from the track to Ms fields. If the law were otherwise, the plaintiff’s deceased would be practically precluded from occupying his pasture and premises by defendant’s failure to erect a fence, at the peril of losing his animals without compensation. The statute imposes upon the railroad company the obligation both to construct and maintMn fences along the sides of its right of way sufficient to prevent animals from adjacent pastures going upon the railroad and escaping therefrom into other adjacent fields. This is a positive statutory duty of the defendant. [Davis v. Railroad, 19 Mo. App. 425.] Whereas the owner of the animals in the adjacent pastures and fields has the undoubted right to occupy and enjoy his own premises and is not required to restrain his animals from going upon or about the railroad. This is its duty, not his. [Davis v. Railroad, 19 Mo. App. 425; Gorman v. Railroad, 26 Mo. 441; Turner v. Railroad, 78 Mo. 578-580; Busby v. Railroad, 81 Mo. 43.] The owner of the adjacent lands has the right to occupy his premises, relying upon the railroad to either perform its duty as to fences or suffer the penalties resulting from a violation in that behalf. It is shown in the evidence that the plaintiff’s deceased drove the hogs out of the field as often as they were discovered therein and thus prevented the doing of much damage by them which otherwise no doubt would have resulted to him, and this was certainly exercising all of the care on his part that the law would require.

The judgment is for the right party, and it will be affirmed. It is so ordered.

Bland, P. J., and Goode, J., concur.
midpage