109 Ky. 154 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
■Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
The appellant is the successor of the Owensboro & Rus-sellville Railway Company, and is the owner of all the rights, franchises, and property which formerly belonged to its predecessor. Its line of railroad runs through a tract of 250 acres of land now owned by appellee, but which at the date of the construction of appellant’s line belonged to one Nathaniel Lee and wife, Sophia Lee. On the 17th day of December, 1871, Lee and wife conveyed to appellant’s vendors a strip of land sixty feet wide through the tract now owned by appellee, for the sum of $1,500. The strip was purchased for a right of way, including in the aggregate four acres of land. After Lee’s death the farm was sold under a judgment of the court,- and appel-lee became the purchaser thereof, ahd it was-conveyed to him by the master commissioner of the court by a deed
Appellant, in support of its contention that the original demurrer filed by it was erroneously overruled, relies upon the provisions of chapter 48 of the statutes. Our attention is especially called to the arrangement of that chapter, and to the fact that it is divided into two general subdivisions; that, article No 1 is devoted exclusively to farm fences, and regulates the rights, duties, -and liabilities of the adjacent landholders, and expressly authorizes such adjacent landholder, who has erected a fence on his portion of the line, to require the adjacent owner to do likewise, and, if he fails to do so for three months, to erect such
“Sec. 1784. Division Fences — When a Party is Required to Build EEs Portion — When Barbed-Wire may be Used — Railroad fencing. When a division fence is desirable or is made necessary by the division of improved or enclosed lands, or when no fence exists between the enclosed or improved lands of adjoining owners, or lands where the right of way is- owned by one party, either party may, after he has built a lawful fence on his portion of the line, require the other party to erect a lawful fence out of planks, rails, wire, or wire and plank,
“Sec. 1789. Railroad Company Required to Fence as Other Land Owners. That when any corporation, or person owning or controlling a railroad in this Commonwealth, owns right of way, and its railroad shall have been constructed and in operation for five years, the same is hereby put on equal terms with other land owners owning adjoining lands in this Commonwealth.”
“Sec. 1791. That when either party, either the person owning, operating or controlling such railroad, or the owner of the lands adjoining the right of way thereof, has constructed or does construct a good and lawful fence on the division line between such right of way and the land adjoining the same for one-half the distance of said line, and the other party has not constructed such fence on said
Counsel for appellant has made a very clever and plausible argument in support of his contention as to the true meaning and purpose of these provisions of the statutes, but we do not indorse either the soundness of the argument or the conclusions reached. Section 1789, which is the first section of article 2 of chapter 48, says “that railroads which have been constructed and in operation for a period of five years are placed on equal terms and obligations with other land holders owning adjoining land in this Commonwealth.” Section 1784, which is found in article 1 of chapter 48, after providing for the recovery
The second error complained of is the trial court’s peremptory instruction to find for the plaintiff, and the third relied upon is the court’s refusal to give a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant. The defendant pleaded, in substance, that when its road was built its vendor bought of appellee’s vendor the right of way for $1,500, and that this compensation was intended to include fencing and all other damage. This was denied by appellee in his reply, and the only proof introduced in. the case was the deed from Lee and his wife to appellant’s vendor, and the testimony of Dr. George R. Bibb. The deed recites that, in consideration of $1,500, Lee and his wife convey a strip of land, sixty feet wide, bounded by certain courses and distances, and warrant general the title there