178 Ky. 363 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion op the Couet by
Reversing.
The appellee, William Durbin, sued the appellant railroad company to recover damages caused by injury
It appears from the evidence that the land of Durbin is situated on both sides of the right of way of the railroad company. Adjoining his land is the land of Granville Spicer, which'is also located on-both sides-of the right of way. Between the lands of Spicer and Durbin there is a fence running to the right of way on each--side at the point where the cattle guard is sit-mated. On one side of the right of way where it runs through the land of Durbin there is- a fence between it and the land of Durbin, but on the other side of the right of way where it runs through his land there is no fence between his land and the right of way, and it was on the side of the right of way not protected by a fence that the corn and other crops were growing which were injured by stock that came into Durbin’s land over the cattle guard on the line between his land and Spicer’s. This cattle guard, -which had been constructed many years ago when the railroad was established, had. been permitted to fill up with rock, cinders- and dirt level with the track .until at the time in question there was, in.fact, no suitable or sufficient cattle guard, and straying stock -could and did walk on the track between the land of Spicer and the land of Durbin, and when they got on Durbin’s land they could and did go without hindrance to the corn, and -other crops, as there was-, as we have said, no fence separating the right of way from the land where this corn and other crops were growing.
It further’ appears that in 1889, Benjamin T. Goe, a remote- vendor of Durbin, sold to the Richmond, Nicholasville, Irvine & Beattyville Railroad Co., the- vendor of the appellant railroad company, a right of way through the land now owned by Durbin. The deed.conveying this right of way was recorded in the proper office in 1889, and we find in it this clause: “And said party of* the first part (Goe) is to erect and maintain all the necessary fencing on said. land. ... . . all at the cost of. said.first party, and in no .event is the railroad company to erect or maintain any fencing on said land,
•At the time this contract was made the statute- law in respect to the erection and maintenance of railroad: fences and cattle guards, so far as applicable to this case, was substantially the same as that contained in the present statute; that is to say, the land owner had to construct and maintain the fence on one-half of the division line between the right of way and the. adjoining lands and the railroad company the other one-half' and cattle guards were to be erected and maintained by the railroad company “at all terminal points of fences constructed along their lines,” except that where there was a private passway across the railroad right of way, the land owner should bear one-half of the expense.
This statutory requirement, however,. was changed by the contract entered into between the parties" by which Groe, the land owner, agreed to erect and maintain all the necessary fencing, and the company agreed to erect and maintain crossings and cattle guards. We also think that the fencing required to be erected and maintained by Goe was such fencing as' both parties would have been required to construct and maintain except for the contract, and that the cattle guards which the railroad company obligated itself to construct and maintain were such cattle guards as the statute put on it the duty of constructing and maintaining. In other words, the conditions in the deed did not' change the quantity or quality of either the fencing or cattle guards required by the statute, but only made a different provision as to who should construct and maintain them.
Having this view of the matter, the,railroad company was under no duty to construct or maintain a cattle guard between the land of Spicer and Durbin until Durbin had constructed a fence on both sides of' the right of way between his land and the right of way,, and being under no duty to construct a cattle guard, until the fence was built, it was under no duty to maintain one. The construction and maintenance of fences- and cattle guards go together. If there is no parallel, fencing, there need-be no cattle guards. McKee v. C.,. N. O. & T. P. Ry. Company’s Receiver, 102 Ky. 253;
It necessarily follows from what we have said that the court should have given a peremptory instruction to find for the railroad company. ■
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to proceed in conformity with this opinion.