Action on the case by Williams, against the New-Albany and Salem Railroad Company, commenced on the 2d day of April, 1853.
There are two counts in the declaration; the first charging said company with carelessly running over and killing the plaintiff’s mule upon her railroad; the second charging the lolling of the mule by running over it at a point on said railroad not protected by a fence. The general issue was pleaded; the cause was tried by the Court; and a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant. The following is the bill of exceptions:
“ The plaintiff proved that he was the owner of a mule worth 65 dollars, and that said mule was lolled on the defendant’s railroad by being ran over by a train of cars owned by the defendant, about the 27th day of September, 1852, at Clark county. It also appeared in evidence that there was no neglect on the part of the defendant, or her agents, in the management of said train, but that the agents in the management of said train of cars, as soon as they discovered there was danger of said mule being killed, did all they could to stop said train and avoid said injury; but that the defendant had not enclosed the place where the mule was killed by any fence whatever. Whereupon the Court, to whose decision the cause had been referred, found for the defendant; to which decision of the Court the plaintiff excepts.”
It will be observed that the railroad company made no attempt to prove that the mule was on the road through any carelessness of the owner.
This cause was decided by the Court below, without a jury, and no motion for a new trial was interposed. Had the cause been referred to a jury, and judgment suffered to pass upon their verdict without a motion for a new trial, this Court, as has been often decided, could not have interfered with the finding of the jury. It is judgments of
The questions of law, then, will be considered by this Court; and in doing so, it may be well to commence by stating two or three propositions which, we think, will not be disputed.
1. The railroad company, after having obtained the right of way for the road, was entitled to the exclusive possession of the strip of land over which the right of way had been obtained, and stood to adjoining proprietors in the common relation existing between landed proprietors bordering upon each other.
2. At common law, proprietors are not bound to fence • against each other; but each is bound to keep his stock upon his own land.
3. As a consequence from the two foregoing propositions, in the present case, at common law, the mule in question was wrongfully on the track of the railroad company, and, as there was no negligence on the part of the
But on the 11th of May, 1852, an act was passed by our legislature, providing that whenever any animal should be lulled or injured by any vehicle run upon a railroad in this state, the owner might recover for his loss in a suit against the company running the vehicle, without proof of negligence on the part of the company, where the injury occurred upon a part of the road left by said company without a fence, &c. This act did not designate any particular tribunal in which the remedy should be sought. But on the first of March, 1853, another act was passed, authorizing the prosecution in such cases to be instituted before a justice of the peace, and prescribing the mode of proceeding to be pursued. The second section is as follows:
“ On the hearing of said cause, the justice or jury trying the same shall give judgment for the plaintiff for the value of the animal destroyed or injury inflicted, without regard to the question whether such injury or destruction was the result of wilful misconduct or negligence, or the result of unavoidable accident.”
This second act repealed the sections of the first under which the present suit was instituted, but it expressly saved pending suits.
The two acts are in pari materia, upon the same subject-matter, were enacted to effect the same object, and must be considered and construed together. The second is as explicit as language could make it, and plainly expresses what was intended to be the force of the first statute, which is a little more indefinitely worded. We have no doubt that the rule of decision should be the same under both, and that it must be directly the reverse of the common law.
Under these statutes, railroad companies must fence in their roads, or pay for all stock straying from adjoining lands without fault of the owner, killed or injured by them
It is proper to remark, that this case is decided in the absence of an argument on the part of the railroad company, and, hence, we wish it limited in its bearing expressly to the facts upon which it is made.
Per Curiam.—The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.