84 Mo. 345 | Mo. | 1884
This was a suit to recover damages for killing stock, on the following agreed statement of facts : “That the appellant was, on the-day of June, 1881, a railroad corporation, operating a railroad through the township of Pierce, in the county of Lawrence ; that on said date the respondent was the owner of a cow of the value of fifty dollars ($50) ; that said cow came upon appellant’s railroad track at a point in said township, where the same runs through and within the corporate limits of an incorporated city, to-wit: Pierce City, and where there were no fences, and where the land was not laid out in lots, streets, and alleys, and where said railroad of defendant passed along and through uninclosed prairie land and not commons of the city; and that at said time and place said cow was run over and killed by the cars of appellant; that between the portion of said city platted and laid off in town lots, and its corporate limits, there is a space of one-half mile of open prairie land which is unenclosed land within the corporate limits, belonging to individuals, over and through-which appellant’s railroad passed, and at which point respondent’s cow was killed, as aforesaid, and which cow came on said track and was killed, by reason of the failure of appellant to fence its said railroad. "Which failure to fence, it was agreed, was the only negligence claimed on the part of respondent. It was also agreed that the action was brought under section 809, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1879.”
The court, on the above facts, rendered judgment for
The questions involved in this case were thoroughly-considered in the case of Edwards v. H. & St. Jo. R. R. Co., 66 Mo. 567, and definitely settled. There, it was held that section 809, Revised Statutes, 1879, does not require railroad companies to erect and maintain fences within the limits of incorporated towns. Under that section there can be no recovery for injuries resulting from the negligent management' of the train. Cary v. St. L., K. C. & N. Ry., 60 Mo. 209; Crutchfield v. Railroad, 64 Mo. 255. The agreed statement of facts shows that the injury complained of occurred within the corporate limits of a town. The action is based on section 809, as is admitted, and hence there can be no recovery for a failure to erect fences where, by said section, fences are not required to be erected. The action being under the double damage section, 809, there can be no recovery under section 2124, Revised Statutes, 1879 — the old fifth section of the damage act. Cary v. St. L., K. C. & N. Ry., 60 Mo. 209; Wood v. Ry., 58 Mo. 109.
In Wymore v. H. & St. Jo. Ry. Co., 79 Mo. 247, Henry, J., speaking for the court, says : “In the case at bar, where a tract of four acres of land is within the corporation limits, but not laid out into blocks and lots, and having no streets or alleys crossing it, the company might, because it would not inconvenience the public, lawfully erect fences along the sides of its road, and, therefore, section five of the damage act is applicable to a case of stock killed or injured by a train of defendant’s cars at that point.” In the case at bar, being a proceed^ ing under the double damage act (section 809, supra), and the injury occurring within the corporate limits of a town, a place where, by law, the railroad company is not required to fence, the plaintiff cannot recover. At places
Under the statement of agreed facts in this case, plaintiff - cannot recover under section 809, and the judgment below is reversed.