71 Ind. 500 | Ind. | 1880
This was a suit by the appellee against the appellant, in a complaint of two paragraphs, to recover damages for injuries sustained by a certain bay horse,
The issues joined were tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned for the appellee, assessing his damages in the sum of one hundred and forty dollars; and, the appellant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, and its exception entered to this ruling, judgment was rendered on the verdict.
In this court, the appellant has assigned, as errors, the decisions of the circuit court in overruling its demurrers to each of the paragraphs of the complaint, and in overruling its motion for a new trial. The only questions discussed by the appellant’s counsel, in their brief of this cause, are such as arise under the alleged error of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial.
In this motion, the following causes were assigned by the appellant for such ne.w trial:
• 1. Because the verdict was not sustained by sufficient evidence;
2. Because the verdict was contrary to law ; and,
8. Because the court erred in each of its instructions to the jury.
Before considering any of the questions presented for decision in this cause, it is proper and necessai’y that we should first give a summary of the facts stated by the appellee in his complaint, as his cause of action. In the first paragraph of his complaint, the appellee alleged, in substance, that on the 16th day of May, 1877, the appellant, by its agents and servants, was engaged in running a locomotive and train of cars on its railroad, in and through Hancock county, Indiana, and while so engaged the appel
The second paragraph of the complaint contained substantially the same allegations as the first paragraph ; the only material difference between the two being that, in the second paragraph, it was alleged that the appellant used and operated the railroad, and not that it owned such railroad, as in the first paragraph.
The appellee did not allege, in either paragraph of his complaint, that the appellant’s railroad was not securely fenced in, and such fence properly maintained, at the place where his horse got upon the railroad track. In other words, the appellee did not sue the appellant under the act of March 4th, 1863, providing compensation to the owners of animals killed or injured by the cars, etc., of any railroad company in this State; but the appellee sued in each of the paragraphs of his complaint to recover damages for an injury to his horse, caused, as alleged, by the wilful, careless and negligent conduct of the agents and servants of the appellant, in running and pursuing said horse on and along the track of the appellant’s railroad, when the horse was on said track without fault of the appellee. In each paragraph of his complaint, the appellee has stated a cause of action at the common law against the appellant,
“ At common law, the owner of animals is obliged to keep them upon his own grounds, and is a wrong-doer if he suffer them to stray upon the grounds of others. This, as a general rule, Í3 the law of Indiana.” The Indianapolis, etc., Railroad Co. v. Harter, 38 Ind. 557 ; The Jeffersonville, etc., Railroad Co. v. Huber, 42 Ind. 173 ; and The Jeffersonville, etc., Railroad Co. v. Adams, 43 Ind. 402. The only qualification of this common-law rule is found in the provisions of an act, approved May 31st, 1852, for the regulation of the running at large of all kinds of animals; whereby the boards of commissioners . of the different counties of this State were authorized to direct, by an order entered on the order book of the board, what kinds of animals should be allowed to pasture or run at large upon the uninelosed land, or public commons, within the bounds of any township in their respective counties. 1 R. S. 1816, p. 64. The 1st section of this act was amended
It must be assumed, therefore, that, at the time and place where the appellee’s horse was injured, the common-law rule prevailed, and that the horse was then and there trespassing upon the track of the appellant’s railroad. This is so, as it seems to us, even though it appeared that the appellee had used reasonable care and diligence to keep his horse upon his own grounds and within his own enclosure, and that the horse had escaped therefrom without his knowledge or consent. In the case of The North Pennsylvania Railroad Co. v. Rehman, 49 Pa. St. 101, it was decided by the Supreme Coui’t of Pennsylvania, that an owner of mules killed upon the track of a railroad company by an engine and cars can not recover damages therefor, though they escaped from a properly fenced enclosure without his knowledge, and were on the highway at its intersection with the track, at the time of the accident. In the opinion of the court, it was said by Thompson, J. : “ Whether, therefore, the plaintiff’s mules escaped from an enclosed field or not, in view of the trespass on the defendants’ road, I do not think makes any difference in this case. It was undisputed, that they were on the defendants’ road without license. If so, they were there wrongfully — were trespassers. How can the owner separate his case from the wrong done by his cattle ? Intention, nay, effort to prevent, will not make their occupancy of the track of the road lawful. If they were in fault, it was because their owner was m fault in not restraining them.” Substantially the same doctrine is laid down
In the case last cited, as reported in 2 Vroom, on page 237, it was said by the court: “ If the defendants ” (the railroad company) “ had brought an action against the plaintiff for the invasion of their track by his horses, on the occasion in question, it would have afforded no defence ■ to such suit for the plaintiff' to have shown that his field, from which they escaped, was well fenced and that the animals had been guarded with the utmost watchfulness. The invincible answer to such plea would have been a reference to the inexorable rule of law, which required him to keep his cattle off the land of another. It seems to me impossible to hold that the plaintiff' has not fulfilled his legal duty, and yet that he is not legally culpable; that he is a trespasser in failing to keep his cattle off the land of the defendants, and yet although a trespasser, he is guilty of no neglect in the eye of the law. If he had wilfully driven his horses onto the railroad track, it hardly would have been pretended, that he could have claimed to be indemnified by the company for his loss, by reason of the negligence of their servant. But the introduction of the element of the plaintiff’s volition in the causation of the wrong, does not alter its nature ; it is a trespass, whether it proceed from his want of legal care or from the direct action of- his will. The trespass of the cattle then being in law ifnputable to the plaintiff as the result of his own negligence — and as without such trespass the damages would not have accrued — it seems to follow unavoidably that this suit will not lie. The plaintiff is forbidden by law, to ask to be compensated for a loss which, in fact, was the product of his own culpability.”
The case of The Tonawanda Railroad Co. v. Munger, 5 Denio, 255, was an action founded on the alleged negligence of the servants of the railroad company, in so running an engine on its railway as to kill the plaintiff’s oxen. On page 264, the court said: “It is a well settled rule of law, that such an action can not be sustained if the wrongful act of the plaintiff co-operated with the misconduct of the defendants or their servants to produce the damage sustained. I do not mean that the co-operating act of the plaintiff must be wrong in intention, to call for the application of this principle, for such is not the law. The act may have been one of mere negligence on his part, still he can not recover. Or his beast, while trespassing on the land of another person, and that without the consent or knowledge of its owner, may have been damnified through 3ome careless act of the owner of the land, yet the fact of 3uch trespass constitutes a decisive obstacle to any recovery of damages for such an injury. It is, strictly speaking, damnum absque injuria.”
In the case at bar, it is not necessary that we should endorse or approve of the statements of the law enunciated in the cases decided by the courts of other States, as contained in the foregoing quotations therefrom, though it would seem that the law as there stated is the logical result or sequence of the common-law rule, admitted to be a part of the law of this State, that “the owner of animals is obliged to keep them upon his own grounds, and is a wrong-doer if he suffer them to stray upon the grounds of others.” We have already seen, that the only statutory exception to this common-law rule, in this State, is not claimed to have been applicable to any township in Hancock county.
We have carefully examined the evidence in the record, and we are clearly of the opinion, that this evidence did not even tend to prove that the appellee’s horse was injured by or through the carelessness and negligence, and certainly not wiltuiuess, oí the agents or servants of the
We are of the opinion, that the appellant can not be held liable to the appellee, under the common law, for this injury to his horse, and that the verdict of the jury, therefore, was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and was contrary to law. For these reasons, the court erred,
The judgment is reversed, at the appellees’ costs, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to sustain the motion for a new trial, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.