37 Cal. 409 | Cal. | 1869
This is an action to recover the value of a mare which is alleged to have become valueless by reason of certain injuries sustained by her while trespassing ujb.on the defendant’s road, through gross negligence of the defendant’s servants while removing her. The plaintiff recovered a verdict in the Court below, and the defendant applied for a new trial upon the grounds: first, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence; and second, that the Court erred in its charge to the jury.
The plaintiff alleges that the defendant had failed to fence its road, and for that reason the mare came upon it; that being so upon the road, the defendant caused her to be removed in such a grossly negligent manner that by reason thereof she sustained the injuries in question. Both of these propositions are denied by the defendant and the contrary averred.
The testimony shows that the mare, in company with ten or fifteen other horses, escaped (probably through a gate carelessly left open by some one not known) from the premises of the plaintiff’ (situated about a mile and a half from the defendant’s road) into a public highway which intersects the defendant’s road; that she strayed along the highway until she came to and upon the defendant’s road; that she was thus upon the defendant’s road when a freight train in charge of the defendant’s servants came along at the usual and ordinary rate of speed; that upon discovering the horses the engineer sounded the whistle for the double purpose of frightening the horses off the track, and warning the brakemen of danger ahead. That at the sound of the whistle the mare started and ran at the top of her speed along the track in advance of the train, until she came to a trestle bridge, upon which she leaped at full speed and fell near its center. That this bridge spanned a narrow watercourse, which was at the time dry, at the height, by actual measurement, of seven feet. That the train “slowed up” and came to a halt
Four of the defendant’s servants, who were present and assisted in removing the mare, were witnesses for the defendant at the trial. They all testified that they exercised as much care in letting the mare through the bridge as was possible under the circumstances, and that they adopted that method of removing her, in the belief that it was less likely to result in injury to the mare than any other available mode. To this point but one witness testified on the part of the plaintiff. He resided near the place where the event in
The plaintiff’ offered no proof in support of his allegation that the mare came upon the railroad by reason of the defendant having failed to inclose its road by lawful fences, but, on the contrary, admitted that his allegation in that respect was false, and that the defendant’s road was inclosed by good and sufficient fences. Nor was there anything in the testimony, aside from inference, tending to show whether the injury to the mare was received in falling through the bridge, or in leaping, at full speed, and falling upon it, in the manner which has been stated.
In view of the foregoing testimony, the Court, at the request of the plaintiff, charged the jury as follows: “First —Even though the mare of plaintiff was wrongfully upon the road of defendant, their employés were not, for that reason, justified in injuring her in effecting her removal from the road. Second—If the mare of plaintiff was injured by want of ordinary care on the part of the employés of defendant in removing her from the railroad, or by reason of their negligence in doing so, the fact that she was wrongfully upon the road does not protect the defendant from liability. Third—If the employés of the defendant had the means at hand, or if they could have obtained the means by the use of ordinary diligence, to have removed the mare from the bridge, and they did not resort to such means, they were
To all of which the defendant excepted.
The Court, at the request of the defendant, next charged the jury as follows: “First—There is no question in this case but that the railroad company had made and maintained good and sufficient fences on both sides of tlieir track, and the company having fenced their track on both sides with good and sufficient fences, and having maintained such fences on both sides thereof, the mare of plaintiff was unlawfully on the track, and if the jury believe from the evidence that she was injured, without any fault of defendant, by jumping on or falling on the bridge of the defendant, they must find for the defendant. Second—That the railroad company having made and maintained, on both sides of their track, good and sufficient fences, and the said mare having strayed upon the said line of railroad, was there unlawfully; and if while there she ran on defendant’s bridge and was injured, they must find for the defendant; or if said mare, being so unlawfully on said road, ran on said bridge, and the defendant’s servants, in the use of ordinary care and diligence, injured the said mare in removing her from the bridge, they must find for the defendant! Third—That if the jury believe from the evidence that defendant’s employés endeavored in good faith to get said mare off the bridge without injury, and used such care as men would ordinarily use under similar circumstances, and in so doing the mare was injured, they must find for the defendant. Fourth— That if the jury believe from the evidence that the mode of getting said mare off the bridge was not the best way, still, if the railroad employés honestly believed or supposed that it was the best and safest way of extricating her, they must find for the defendant.”
The defendant next asked for the following instructions: “ First—That the burden of proof is on the plaintiff, and he must show himself free from negligence in the escape of his
These instructions the Court refused upon the ground that it had already instructed the jury upon the points involved, as follows: “First—The owner of an animal who allows it to run at large takes all the risk of its loss or injury by unavoidable accident. Second—It is for plaintiff to show that he exercised reasonable care of his own property. If he was negligent in this respect, and, in consequence thereof, his mare escaped from his possession and control and trespassed upon the land of defendant, where it was unavoidably injured, he cannot recover for such injury, because it is traceable to his own fault. Third—Row, if you believe from the evidence that the mare of the plaintiff was kept by him in a field insufficiently fenced, or the gate of which was insecurely fastened or carelessly left open by the plaintiff or any one else, except the defendant or his employes, and in consequence of this she strayed from the field on to the railroad of the defendant, where she became entangled in one of the bridges of the road, and was unavoidably injured by
It is claimed that the Court below erred in thus holding, in view of the fact that the mare came upon the railroad by the legal fault of the plaintiff; that the defendant was bound to exercise ordinary care in removing her, or that it was liable for any injury sustained by the mare in consequence of any acts of the defendant, unless such acts were heedless and wanton.
This view of the law seems to be sustained by the New York cases which counsel have cited. It has been held in that State that a railroad company is not liable for negligently running its engine upon and killing domestic animals found upon its road under circumstances similar to those presented by the record in this case. (Tonawanda Railroad Company v. Munger, 5 Denio, 255; same case, 4 Comstock, 849.) The reason given for this rule is that the owner of cattle found straying upon the road, although he may be guiltless of actual carelessness in allowing them to escape from his premises, is nevertheless guilty in law of a wrongful and negligent act, without which the injury complained of would not have happened, and, therefore, having thus co-operated in causing the injury which he has sustained, he cannot be allowed to recover, whatever may have been the negligence of the defendant. That the defendant has an unqualified property in its road, and an unqualified right to occupy and use it in whatever manner may suit its pleasure and convenience, and hence, whenever such occupation and use is wrongfully obstructed, the defendant may lawfully remove the obstruction in any manner which, under the circumstances, it may find most convenient, provided it stops short of wanton and malicious mischief. In the case above cited Mr. Chief Justice Beardsley said : “Negligence
The Golden Buie is a corner- stone of the law as well as of morals, and in the department of the former finds its expres sion in the maxim: Sic uiere luo, ut alienum non Icedas. No more in law than in morals can one wrong be justified or excused by another. A wrongdoer is not an outlaw, against whom every man may lift his hand. Neither his life, limbs, nor property are held at the mercy of his adversary. On the contrary, the latter is bound to conduct himself with reasonable care and prudence, notwithstanding the fault of
The false reasoning of the Hew York Courts has been ably exposed by the Supreme Court of Connecticut in the case of Isbell v. The New York and New Haven Railroad Company, 27 Conn. 404. It was there said: “A remote fault in one party does not of course dispense with care in the other. It may even make it more necessary and important, if thereby a calamitous injury can be avoided, or an unavoidable calamity essentially mitigated. Common justice and common humanity, to say nothing of law, demands this; and it is no answer for the neglect of it to say that the complainant was first in the wrong, since inattention and accidents are to a greater or less extent incident to human affairs. Preventive remedies must therefore always be proportioned to the ease in its peculiar circumstances—to .the imminency of the danger, the evil to be avoided, and the means at hand of avoiding it. And herein is no novel or strange doctrine of the law; it is as old as the moral law itself, and is laid down in the earliest books on jurisprudence. A boy enters a dooryard to find his ball or arrow, or to look at a flower in the garden; he is bitten and lacerated by a vicious bulldog; still, he is a trespasser, and if he had kept away would have received no hurt, nevertheless, is not the owner of the dog liable ? A person is hunting in the woods of a stranger, or crossing a pasture of his neighbor, and is wounded by a concealed gun, or his dog is killed by some concealed instrument, or he is himself gored by an enraged bull; is he in all these cases remediless because he is there without consent? Or, an intoxicated man is lying in the traveled part of the highway, helpless, if not unconscious: must I not use care to avoid him? May I say that he has no right to incumber the high
This distinction between cases of proximate and remote negligence on the part of the plaintiff* in the application of the rule in question has also been declared by the Supreme
The same rule has been established in Ohio. (Kerwhacker v. The C. C. and C. R. R. Co., 3 Ohio St. 172; The C. C. and C. R. R. Co. v. Elliott, 4 Ohio St. 474. Also, in England: Bridge v. The Grand Junction Railway Company, 3 M. & W. 256; Davies v. Mann, 10 M. & W. 546; Illidge v. Goddwin, 5 C. & P. 190; The Mayor of Colchester v. Brooks, 53 E. C. L. 376.
Our conclusion upon this branch of the case is, that the Court below did not err in holding that the remote negligence of the plaintiff in allowing his mare to escape from his premises did not absolve the defendant from its obligation to observe ordinary care and prudence in removing her from its road.
After a careful examination of the testimony, however, we are satisfied that it fails to make a case of negligence. The testimony shows that the plan adopted for the purpose of removing the mare was executed with all possible care. If there was any negligence at all, it was exhibited in the selection of the plan, and not in its execution. All the witnesses, with a single exception, unite in saying that the plan was the only one which, under the circumstances and with the means at hand, could have been adopted. One of the witnesses, it is true, testified that in his opinion the mare could have been removed in safety had ropes and other appliances been used, and that ropes could have been obtained at his house; but he admits that he made no suggestion to that effect. If he entertained that opinion at the time, it is a little surprising that he remained so reticent, and his failure to speak suggests that his opinion may have been the result of subsequent speculation rather than present conviction. But be that as it may, his opinion was that of one better advised as to the means which were available, and ought not to be made the test of the conduct of others, who were possessed of less information. “Negligence is the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided by those con
Subjected to this test, we think the defendant cannot be held obnoxious to the charge made in this case. The peculiar business of the defendant must not he overlooked. It requires speed and regularity of movement. A delay in the movements of trains leads to the inconvenience of the public, and may possibly result in personal injury. The security and safety of passengers must be looked to, and to that end the time and speed which have been adopted for the transportation of passengers and freight must be adhered to as near as possible. Weighed in the light of such considerations, we think all that was required of the defendant’s employés, under the law as declared in this opinion, was done by them.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.