79 Mich. 323 | Mich. | 1890
Plaintiff's ox was killed upon a highway, while crossing over the defendant's road, by a train of cars. He brought suit, claiming that the ox was killed by defendant's negligence.
The declaration contained three counts. The first count alleged that the negligence consisted in running its train at a high and dangerous rate of speed, and neglecting to slow up when it was seen that the ox was in danger.! The second count alleged that the defendant carelessly and negligently caused an embankment of sand and gravel: to be formed on each side of its track, from two to threat
The undisputed facts are these: The crossing was on a. public highway in the country, near the plaintiff's farm. There were two crossings, one of which led into the-plaintiff's yard, and on which the ox was killed, but both were in the highway, and used by the public. The train was a wild one; that is, one which was not running upon schedule time. The ox was one of a herd, about fifteen in number. All the others had passed over the track before the engine reached the crossing. Plaintiff' saw the cattle and the train. He testifies that the engineer blew the customary danger signals — three sharp toots — when within about fifteen rods of the crossing. His cattle were running at large in the highway. He knew this, for he and his son were at work in his field a short distance away, and saw them. He testifies:
“1 saw quite a number of the cattle, just a little while before the train came down. They were about three or four rods east of the crossing, in the public highway.”
The bell was rung automatically, by air. The testimony as to the speed of the train, the blowing of the whistle forty rods from the crossing, and the embankment of sand and gravel, was conflicting. Some off plaintiff’s witnesses estimated the speed at from fifty to sixty miles an hour. The engineer testified that he blew the whistle; that he was running about forty miles an hour, till within about twenty rods of the crossing, when he suddenly saw the cattle coming towards the track; that he immediately shut off steam, applied the brakes, and did all he cpuld to stop the train, except to reverse
The important question submitted upon this record is this: Was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence in permitting his cattle to run at large in the public, highway, near this crossing, without any keeper? By the common law, every person must keep his animals upon his own premises. He may use the highway for the purpose of driving them from place to place. He cannot use it for a public pasture. He may pasture in the highway opposite his own premises, for he is entitled to the herbage growing there. He is not entitled to pasturage opposite the lands of others, even when the cattle are in charge of the keeper. Campau v. Konan, 39 Mich. 302; Bertwhistle v. Goodrich, 53 Id. 457 (19 N. W. Rep. 143). Such use is not an incident of travel for which the highway is dedicated to or appropriated by the public.
In Campan v. Konan, it was doubted by this Court whether authority could be conferred upon the board of supervisors or any other body to permit beasts to run at large upon public highways. A similar provision was held unconstitutional and void by the court of appeals of New York. Railroad Co. v. Hunger, 5 Denio, 255. Section 8, Act No. 185, Laws of 1887, provided that the act should not apply to that portion of the State lying north of the tier of townships 12 N., unless so ordered by the board of supervisors of any county lying north of said tier of townships. The township in this case lies north of that line. That act, therefore, conferred no right to the use of the highway in that part of the State that did not exist at common law. The rule of the common law prevails in this State, and in many of the other states. The act above mentioned, therefore, has no bearing upon the determination of the question in issue.
It is difficult to see how the blowing of the whistle 40 rods from the crossing would have prevented the injury. Juries must not be left to conjecture. Not only must the negligence be proven, but also it must be shown that it caused the injury. In Railway Co. v. Shannon, 38 Kan. 477 (16 Pac. Rep. 836), a case very similar in its facts to the ease at bar, the following question was submitted to the jury:
“As the plaintiff and his cattle were situated when the train was eighty rods west of the crossing, could a whistle blown upon the locomotive have prevented the injury?” to which the jury answered: “We do not know.”
Under this answer, the court held that the omission to blow the whistle was unimportant in the case. A contrary finding by the jury in this case, as well as in that, would have been mere conjecture.
The fair and legitimate conclusion from the evidence in
In turning his cattle at large in the public highway near this crossing, without a keeper, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. Due regard for the safety of human life and property forbids a person to turn his dumb animals at large, under such circumstances. This rule is dictated alike by good sense and the feeling of common humanity. The owner is conclusively presumed to know that his animals may get upon the crossing, and thereby incur not only the risk of their own destruction, but also endanger the lives of passengers and the safety of property of great value. The destruction of plaintiff’s
In the case of Railroad Co. v. Skinner, 19 Penn. St. 303, the supreme court of Pennsylvania held that not only did the owner of cattle running at large have no recourse against the company for the loss of his property, but that he was liable for damage resulting to the company or its passengers. It that case the court say.
“If an owner suffer his cattle to be at large, it must be at a risk of losing them, or paying for their transgressions. The very act of turning them loose is negligence. * * * That he is not answerable * * * criminally, * * * is because mischief was not intended by him.”
In Bennett v. Railroad Co., 19 Wis. 148, plaintiff sued to recover damages for injury to a colt which had strayed from a common upon the depot grounds of the defendant. The court say:
“In permitting the colt to run at large on a common adjoining the railroad and depot grounds, from whence he would probably, if not certainly, stray upon the track, and be exposed to collision with trains of cars passing by, thereby endangering the lives and persons of all on the trains, the plaintiff himself was guilty of very great negligence.”
And in Railway Co. v. Goss, 17 Wis. 433, the court say:
“'If the owner rashly or carelessly allows his oxen ox* horses to go upon the road, and they are killed by the gross negligence of the company, * * * it is gross negligence against gross negligence, and there can be no apportionment of damages. In such case it would seem that nothing short of proof of wanton or malicious injury would entitle hinx to compensation.”
In the case of Railroad Co. v. Ballard, 2 Metc. (Ky.) 177, cited by plaintiff's counsel, the court held that a peculiar obligation devolved upon the owner of cattle to keep them off the tracks of railways, and that there
Judgment below reversed, and new trial ordered.