89 P. 1025 | Wyo. | 1907
The plaintiff in error brought this action in a justice of the peace court of Crook county against the defendant in error to recover damages for the killing of a bull upon its tracks. Judgment was recovered in justice court, whereupon an appeal was taken by the defendant to the district court. The plaintiff filed an original petition in that court which was demurred to, and upon hearing, the demurrer was sustained. The plaintiff electing to stand upon his petition judgment was entered for the defendant. The plaintiff brings the case here on error.
1. The plaintiff in error assigns as error the denial of his motion to dismiss the appeal. The appearance was special
2. It is alleged in the petition that defendant is and has been a corporation and for many years' the owner of and engaged in operating- its line of road in and through Crook County, Wyoming-, and that plaintiff is and for many years has been the owner of a large tract of land on either side of said road in said county, and of a large number of cattle which ranged and pastured upon said land. That in the operation of said road the defendant caused to be propelled over its tracks both night and day a large number of trains, both passenger and freight, and often at the rate of 30 to 50 miles per hour. That in 1893 the defendant constructed a good and sufficient fence along its right of way over and through plaintiff’s land and that he relied upon defendant keeping said fence in repair. That for several weeks prior to the time the bull was killed defendant had negligently permitted the fence to get out of repair, so that it was not sufficient to prevent said bull or live stock from straying upon its right of way and being killed, all of which was known to defendant. That in consequence of such negligence plaintiff’s bull on or about August 18, 1905, strayed on to defendant’s track and was killed by being run against by defendant’s engine and was so killed by reason of defendant’s negligence in failing to keep its fence in sufficient repair to prevent stock from entering- the right of way. The foregoing sets out all of the allegations of negligence upon which plaintiff predicates his right to recover.
There was no law in this state at the time of the injury complained of requiring railroads to fence their right of
In Crary v. C. M. & St. P. Ry. Co. (So. Dak.), 100 N. W. Rep., 18, it was held upon the facts that the defendant was under no obligation to construct a fence along its right of way at the place where the animal was killed. It is there said: “Whether, therefore, the fence was sufficient or insufficient to restrain the plaintiff’s stock is not material-in this case, for, if the railroad company was not required by law to fence its right of way, it was not bound to construct or maintain any such fence, and the fact that it did construct a fence does not estop it from showing that the law did not require the same, and that the plaintiff as lessee had no right to assume that the company would maintain the fence in good repair.”
In Stevenson v. Railway Co., 35 La. Ann., 498, the plaintiff sued for the value of six mules alleged to have been killed by the defendant’s train through the carelessness and negligence of its employees. The court said: “Plaintiff contends that the proof of the destruction of his property by the trains of the company throws upon the defendant the burden of proving justification or want of negligence. But he has signally failed to refer us to any authority either of law or jurisprudence, in support of this proposition * * *. Plence we recognize the rule that in such suits for damages the plaintiff must make his case certain, and that the burden is upon him to prove that'the alleged injury to his property
It may be conceded, and this court has held, that cattle upon the open range which stray upon and depasture the unenclosed land of a person other than their owner are not trespassers to the extent that an action would lie in favor of the owner of the land. So it may be said that injury to the right of way of a railroad by cattle under like conditions would not be actionable trespass. It does not, however, follow that because no action is given under such circumstances that the cattle are so lawfully upon the right of way as to make the railroad company an insurer of their safety. The plaintiff is presumed to have known that in the ab
The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.