53 Ala. 595 | Ala. | 1875
The doctrine of the common law in relation to trespasses by and upon cattle running at large,
A railroad certainly has a right to the free and uninterrupted use and enjoyment of its roadbed. The right is the same in character and degree that the owner of the freehold has to the exclusive use and occupation of his premises. If one, wilfully or negligently interfering with its right to the use and enjoyment of its road, is injured by its machinery t>r trains, he must bear the consequences of his wrong or folly. But the owner of animals, having a right to suffer them to run at large, is not guilty of wilfully or negligently trespassing on the road if they wander on its uninclpsed track. On the railroad then rests the duty of exercising the care and diligence which may be necessary to avoid injury to them. If they are killed or injured,.and the owner seeks redress, on him is cast the burden of proving that the killing or injury was negligent. Danner v. South Carolina R. R. Co. 4 Rich. Law. 329.
Thus, the common law of this State would stand independent of statutes. Soon after railroads were constructed and operated in this State, it was found this law was not-
The effect of the statutes is, that a railroad company is liable for injuries to stock when they result from the negligence of its servants or agents, whenever and wherever it may occur. If the injury occurs at or near any public road crossing, or any regular depot or stopping place, or within the corporate limits of any town or city, or because of an obstruction which could or ought to have been perceived, no degree of diligence will excuse the company from liability, unless all the requirements of the statute have been observed. In either ease, the injury being shown, the burden of proof is on the railroad company to acquit itself of negligence, or to show a compliance with the statute. If any other construction of the statute should be adopted, it would
The charge of the court below was more favorable to the appellant than it should have been, and of consequence affords no cause of complaint on error. The court should have charged the jury, if the eAÚdence showed the killing of the cattle of appellee (not at one of the places specified in section 1399 of the Revised Code) by the locomotive or ears of the appellant, then appellee was entitled to recover, unless appellant had shoAArn the killing Avas not the result of negligence on the part of its servants or agents.
The sum claimed by appellee exceeded twenty dollars, and on appeal to the circuit court was triable b.y jury. An issue must have been formed, which could be submitted to the jury for trial. A statement of the appellee’s cause of action must have been filed. 1 Brick. Dig. 114, § 74. Such statement is not subject to the technical rules of pleading; yet it must set forth a substantial cause of action, or the defendant may demur. Jones v. Buckley, 19 Ala. 604; Ganaway v. Mayor of Mobile, 21 Ala. 577. The complaint or statement filed by appellee did not aver the killing of the cattle Avas negligent, or the result of the negligence of appellant, its servants or agents. A demurrer to it was interposed on this specific ground, and was overruled. In this there Avas error. Negligence of appellant, its servants or agents, is an essential ingredient of the right of recovery, and without an averment of it no cause of action was disclosed. As the complaint stands, construing it, as all pleadings are construed, most strongly against tbe pleader, the intendment Avould be that there Avas no negligence, no breach of duty on the part of appellant; that the liability was deducible only from the act of killing. True, evidence of the killing would throw the burden of proving diligence on the appellant, but the right of the appellee to a recovery still rests on the fact of a negligent injury, which must be averred. For the error in overruling the demurrer to the complaint, the judgment in each ease must be reversed, and the causes remanded.