104 Tenn. 40 | Tenn. | 1900
Eugene Patton obtained verdict _ and judgment against the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company for $G5 for killing a mule. The company appealed in error.
The plaintiff’s mule was killed by a moving train of the defendant on its track in a held belonging to one of the plaintiff’s neighbors. The held contained fifteen acres, and seems to have been a parallelogram, almost square. The defendant’s track passed through the field from end to end, and was not inclosed otherwise than by the fence along the outer limits of the field.
The trial Judge correctly instructed the jury that the defendant was liable for the value of the mule, if it was killed by one of its moving trains upon an unfenced track, unless the killing
Tbe jury was erroneously instructed that it was also incumbent on tbe defendant, in order to avoid liability, to show that its agents bad sounded tbe alarm whistle and observed tbe other precautions prescribed by Sub-section 4 of Section 1514 of Shannon’s Code. The duty of observing those precautions, as such, was superseded by the fencing act as to all parts (Railroad v. House, 96 Tenn., 552) of the line of road to which that, act applied. Railroad v. Russell, 92 Tenn., 108; Railroad v. Tiernan, 102 Tenn., 708. But this error was a harmless one, and hence not reversible, since it was admitted that the defendant had not fenced its track at the place where the mule was killed.
The failure to fence made the defendant’s lia
With or without tbe latter instruction the result would have been tbe same, as tbe track was not fenced.
The verdict refutes the contention of tbe company that the plaintiff placed, or caused tbe mule to be placed on tbe track with a view of having it killed; and that verdict having proof to sustain it, will not be disturbed in this Court.
Affirmed.