207 Mass. 12 | Mass. | 1910
The plaintiff, having no cause of action at common law, seeks to hold the defendant in damages for personal injuries caused by a failure to comply with R. L. c. Ill, § 120, that “ every railroad corporation shall erect and maintain suitable fences, with convenient bars, gates or openings therein, upon both sides of the entire length of its railroad, except at the crossings of a public way or in places where the convenient use of the road would be thereby obstructed, and except at places where, and so long as, it is specially exempted from the duty of so doing by the board ” of county commissioners. “ The corporation shall also construct and maintain sufficient barriers, where it is necessary and practicable so to do, to prevent the entrance of cattle upon the road. A corporation which unreasonably neglects to comply with the provisions of this . . . section shall, for every such neglect, forfeit not more than two hundred dollars for every month during which the neglect continues; and the Supreme Judicial Court shall have jurisdiction in equity to compel the corporation to comply with such provisions, and, upon such neglect, to restrain and prohibit it from crossing a highway or town way, or from using any land, until such provisions shall have been complied with.” Rust v. Low, 6 Mass. 90, 93. Thayer v. Arnold, 4 Met. 589. Eames v. Salem & Lowell Railroad, 98 Mass. 560. Baxter v. Boston & Worcester Railroad, 102 Mass. 383. Bronson v. Coffin, 108 Mass. 175. See St. 1906, c. 463, Part II. § 103.
It is not sufficient for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant failed to fence, and if this had been done he would not have been injured, but he must go further and show, that the requirement of the statute was enacted for his benefit. The inquiry, therefore, is, whether it was the defendant’s duty to erect and maintain at the place of the accident a fence which would have been sufficient to have intercepted the plaintiff’s fall, and prevented his injuries. If this is established the further averments of its negligence are admitted by the demurrer. 1
The language imposing the duty does not define its scope, and to ascertain the proper construction, the statute must be read
It is common observation, that a railroad often runs through extensive tracts of woodland and unimproved lands, and, as a fence which there might be sufficient to comply with the statute would be wholly insufficient between coterminous owners of lands under cultivation, Eames v. Salem & Lowell Railroad, 98 Mass. 560, 565, decided, that the fence defined in Gen. Sts. c. 25, § 1, now R. L. c. 33, § 1, was not the standard of requirement. The “ security and benefit ” of the landowner, and “ of travellers on such railroad,” having been the words of the statute of 1841, there would seem to be no reasonable ground to question, that, under the original act and subsequent statutes which indicate no change of purpose, a fence sufficient to turn the cattle of those whose lands adjoined the road, was all that the Legislature intended.
The railroad company also in the operation of its trains has the right to the exclusive use of its tracks, and is under no obligation to anticipate the intrusion of cattle which may have
The plaintiff, however, urges that the demurrer should be overruled and the judgment reversed, because in a few jurisdictions statutes primarily enacted for purposes similar to our own, even if in some instances varying in terms, have been judicially defined as including protection from personal injuries which might be caused to children of tender years who wandered upon the track through the neglect of the corporation to fence. Keyser v. Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway, 56 Mich. 559. Isabel v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad, 60 Mo. 475, 484. Schmidt v. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, 23 Wis. 186. Rosse v. St. Paul & Duluth Railway, 68 Minn. 216. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway v. Grablin, 38 Neb. 90. See further, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Ressman, 9 C. C. A. 20; Hayes v. Michigan Central Railroad, 111 U. S. 228, and Union Pacific Railroad v. McDonald, 152 U. S. 262. But even in the distinction, the decisions are not harmonious. Some of them are favorably commented upon by Brown, J., in delivering the opinion of a majority of the court in New York Central & Hudson River Railroad v. Price, 159 Fed. Rep. 330, where a boy six and a half years old ran on to the defendant’s unfenced track, receiving injuries from which he died after a period of conscious suffering. The decision turned upon whether our statute required the road to fence against the plaintiff’s intestate, and the construction adopted by this court in Byrnes v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 181 Mass. 322, was followed, and recovery was denied. A child six years old went upon the unfenced track of the defendant, in Bischof v. Illinois Southern Railroad, 232 Ill. 446; S. C. 13 Ann. Cas. 185, and was killed, but after a review by Cartwright, J., of many of the cases, upon which the plaintiff at bar relies, the court held, that under a statute requiring the corporation to erect and maintain a fence sufficient to prevent cattle, horses, sheep, hogs and other stock from getting on the railroad,
If the building and maintenance of a “ suitable fence ” which under certain conditions formerly devolved upon the landowner, meant a structure sufficient to protect his cattle, and to prevent their intrusion upon the location, no adequate reason has been suggested by the plaintiff why a different construction should be adopted when this duty is imposed solely upon the corporation, and the obligation so extended as to include a structure sufficient to protect the landholder, or occupier, or their servants, when on the premises, from inadvertently passing, or falling upon the track. It was so decided in principle in the case of Byrnes v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 181 Mass. 322, 323, which was followed with approval in Gerry v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 194 Mass. 35, 38. We are not satisfied that these recent cases, to say nothing of those which preceded them, should be overruled, and a radical departure entered upon from that which has been deemed to be the true application and construction of these statutes. If the agricultural conditions which prevailed when the development of our railroad law began, and for
The plaintiff having failed to allege any breach of duty by the defendant which it owed to his employer, or to him, the first ground of demurrer was well taken, and the second need not be considered.
Judgment affirmed.