64 Iowa 696 | Iowa | 1884
For the purposes of this case, the claimed propositions will be conceded, and yet the motion must be sustained, because the abstract only purports to set out what, in the opinion of counsel, the evidence tended to establish. It is not competent for the clerk to do this, and, clearly, counsel cannot, and thus bind the court and the other party by a record made by themselves.
It will be observed that two grounds of recovery are stated,— First, that the defendant failed to fence its track, although the right to do so existed; and, Second, that it permitted the cattle-guard to become filled with snow or ice, and the horses got on the track and were killed, either because the track was not fenced, or because of the condition of the cattle-guard.
The court instructed the jury as follows: ' “ If you find for the plaintiff, and that the injury was occasioned by the
~We are required to presume that there was evidence upon which this instruction could be based. McMillan v. B. & M. R'y Co., 46 Iowa, 231. Besides this, the plaintiff has filed an amended abstract, in which is set out the fact that there was evidence tending to prove that the horses got on the track over the cattle-guard, which was filled with snow and ice.
"We, therefore, have before us sufficient to make it our duty to determine whether the foregoing instruction is correct. It is claimed to.be erroneous, because thereunder the plaintiff is allowed to recover double damages. This depends on the proper construction of sections 1288 and 1289 of the Code. The former provides that railway companies' shall construct proper cattle-guards where the railway enters or leaves any improved or fenced land, and where'the same crosses any publichighway; and, for a failure to do so, the corporation is made liable for all damages sustained by reason of such failure. The latter section provides that double damages may be recovered when the corporation fails to fence, when it has the right to do so, and a loss or damage is caused by such failure.
Counsel for the appellee contend that a cattle-guard is as much a part of a fence as is a gate, and that the road cannot be effectually fénced unless cattle-guards are constructed; and it must be conceded that there is much force in the argument. Ordinarily, where an .injury is caused by the neglect of an enjoined duty, compensation only is the rule. Section 1289 of the Code, however, attaches to such a failure a penalty in addition to compensation. In Miller v. C. & N. W. R'y Co., 59 Iowa, 707, it is said that section 1289 of the Code, “is in its nature penal,” and that “a statute should not be so construed as to create or authorize the recovery of a penalty,
The argument that a cattle-guard is a part of the fence, in so far as double damages are recoverable for an injury caused by its defective condition, ceases to have any force, when it is considered that the duty to construct cattle-guards is enjoined by section 1288 of tlie Code, and it is then provided that single damages or compensation only can he recovered because the corporation has failed to fullfil its duty in this respect. If cattle-guards, in a statutory sense, should be regarded as a part of the fence, then section 1288 is practically useless, and such a construction would render it inoperative. We are, therefore, required to invoke the well-known rule that, where there are two statutes relating to the same subject matter, such a construction should he adopted, if it can be done without doing violence to the language employed, as will permit both to stand, and have force and effect. Resides this, we think we should adopt and follow the rule stated in the Miller case, above cited.
In the case at bar, the jury found specifically that the horses were running at large in violation of the herd law in force in the county. Upon looking into the evidence as set out in the amended abstract, we ascertain that this finding is based on the following facts: The plaintiff’s farm, or at least
a portion of it, is enclosed with a hedge fence, and he turned his horses in that part of the farm so fenced, and they broke through the fence and strayed on the railroad track. Whether the fence was reasonably sufficient does not appear, but it does appear that the plaintiff had no knowledge that his horses had escaped from the enclosure in which he had placed them, until after they were killed. We are unable to say that, under these circumstances, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
Reversed.