100 Me. 406 | Me. | 1905
The plaintiff sues to recover the value of a horse killed by the defendant’s freight train. The horse was being kept for hire in the pasture of a third party. Between the pasture and the railroad location was a field, owned by the same party, through which the plaintiff' had a right to lead the horse to and from the pasture, but in which he had no right to turn it loose. The horse broke out of the pasture in the night time, crossed the field and went on to the railroad track, at a place adjoining the field, where there was no fence. It followed the track for nearly two miles, when it was overtaken by the train and killed. The plaintiff’s declaration counts on the failure of the defendant to maintain a suitable, legal and sufficient fence along its way adjoining the land used for pasturing. II. S., ch. 52, sect. 26. But the proof in this respect fails, because the pasture where the plaintiff pastured his horse, and where only he had a right to pasture it, did not adjoin the railroad location. Under such circumstances the defendant owed no duty to the plaintiff to fence its road. Byrnes v. B. & M. R. R., 181 Mass. 322. Though the owner might lawfully lead his horse across the land between the pasture and the railroad location, he had no' right to let the horse go at large across it. And if he did so, the horse was an estray, out of the pasture, and the railroad owed no duty of fencing against the horse so situated.
In his declaration the plaintiff also alleges that the defendant negligently run its locomotive upon the horse, then upon the railroad track, for want of a sufficient fenceto prevent it, and upon this ground alone the plaintiff seeks to retain his verdict. Waiving the question whether the declaration as a whole sufficiently sets forth a claim of negligence by the defendant in operating its locomotive and train, we proceed to inquire whether there is sufficient evidence in the record to warrant a jury in finding that the defendant was negligent in this respect.
The plaintiff’s horse was an estray, unlawfully at large, and a trespasser upon the defendant’s railroad track.' The defendant did
The train, consisting of thirty-six freight cars, appears to have been moving at a usual and proper rate of speed. It was midnight. There was a nearly full moon. The defendant says the night was cloudy. But this is denied by the plaintiff. We assume that the latter is correct. The head light on the locomotive lighted the track ahead for about one hundred and fifty feet. The engineer testifies that he did not see the horse until it came within the light of the head light, and that he then shut the steam off and blew the whistle. But it was too late to avoid the accident.
On the other hand, the plaintiff shows from the appearance of the tracks of the horse, that it was “on the run” from three-quarters of a mile to a mile before it was struck by the locomotive. It is argued that the horse was frightened by the approach of the train and ran that distance in front of it. It is claimed that the engineer must have seen it, and therefore that it was wanton and reckless conduct in him not to stop the train or slacken its speed before the collision. But we do not think the evidence warrants such a conclusion. We have conjecture, not proof. No one knows, so far as the
Motion for a new trial sustained.