Fontaine v. Southern Pac. R.R.

Department No. 2, Sharpstein, J.:

The plaintiff brought this action to recover the value of some cattle, which he alleges were run over by locomotives and cars on the track of the defendant’s railroad, by reason of the failure of the defendent to make and maintain a good and sufficient fence on either side or both sides of its said railroad track and property, as required by law.

The complaint was demurred to, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled, and it is urged on behalf of appellant that the Court erred in overruling it, because “ it was not the duty of the defendant to build fences along the line of its road until the plaintiff or his lessor, Beale, had constructed fences abutting on its road. (Statutes continued in force, p. 169, § 30, subd. 2.) The complaint fails to allege that such abutting fences had been constructed, and is, therefore, insufficient. Where the non-performance of a duty imposed by statute is relied upon as the gravamen of the action, the conditions, in view of which the duty is to be performed, must be averred.”

The rule, which is here invoked by the learned counsel, is a familiar one, and if the statute which creates the liability of railroad companies, in cases like this, makes the building of abutting fences by the owners of lands through which such roads run a condition precedent to a right to recover the value of cattle killed by locomotives and cars, the necessity of averring that such abutting fences existed at the time of the killing of such cattle, would -be apparent—no less so than the neces*649sity of averring that the company had not made and maintained a sufficient fence on either or both sides of its property; but the statute, which creates the liability in cases like this, does not in terms make that liability depend upon the existence of abutting fences. It reads as follows:

“ It shall be the duty of the railroad company to make and maintain a good and sufficient fence on either or both sides of their property; and in case any company do not make and maintain such fence, if their engine or cars shall kill, maim, or destroy any cattle, or other domestic animals, when they stray upon their line of road where it passes through or alongside of the property of the owners thereof, they shall pay to the owner or owners of such cattle or other domestic animals, a fair market price for the same, unless the owner or owners of the animals so killed, maimed, or destroyed shall be negligent or at fault” (Statutes continued in force, p. 174, § 40.)

It is alleged in the complaint that the cattle and horses which were killed strayed in and upon the track and ground occupied by defendant’s railroad without the fault of the plaintiff.

It is urged, on behalf of the appellant, that this is not sufficient, and that it was necessary for the plaintiff to specifically allege that abutting fences had been built on the land, from which the cattle killed by defendant’s cars strayed upon the railroad track. In support of this position, § 30 of the act before referred to is cited. That section relates to the mode of assessing damages for lands taken for railroad purposes, and among other things it provides, that “ in assessing such damages, they (the Commissioners) shall include the cost of good and sufficient fences along the line of said railroad, and the cost of cattle-guards, where fences may cross the line of said railroad, unless said railroad company shall have offered or agreed, in their petition, to construct the same, in which case the cost of the same shall not be included in said damages; provided, if said land be uninclosed, said company shall not be required to construct said fences and cattle-guards until the owners of the land shall have constructed fences abutting on said railroad.”

This clause is not necessarily inconsistent with the one which creates a liability for animals killed by a locomotive or cars *650running upon unfenced portions of a railroad. The clause quoted from § 30 simply provides that a railroad company shall not be compelled to perform its offer or agreement to fence on the sides of its road where the same runs through uninclosed lands, until the owner thereof has built fences abutting upon said railroad. It does not exempt, or attempt to exempt, the company from the liability created by § 40 in any case. By this construction, effect is given to both clauses. If this were an action upon the defendant’s offer or agreement to build a fence, its liability would have to be determined by a reference to § 30. But in an action to recover damages for the killing of cattle on its road, the question of its liability must be determined by reference to § 40.

The defendant answered, and, among other things, denied that “ at any time mentioned in the complaint it failed to make or maintain a good or sufficient fence on either or' both sides of the railroad track and property, described in said complaint, as required by law ’’; and the Court found “ that during the time aforesaid, the said defendant failed to make and maintain a good and sufficient fence on either or both sides of its said railroad track and property, as required by lato, and, through the negligence of the defendant in that respect, the locomotives and cars of said defendant ran against and over the said cattle and horses of the plaintiff, and killed and destroyed the same.” •

This is objected to on the ground that it is not the finding of a fact, but a conclusion of law. It was said in Figg v. Mayo, 39 Cal. 265, that “ when the "facts are so obscurely found, or are so blended with legal conclusions, as to render it doubtful whether the facts are only hypothetically stated, we must disregard it as a finding of fact.” If the Court had omitted the words “ as required by law ” in the above finding, it would not-be obnoxious to criticism even. But as the finding, with or without those words, means precisely the same thing, we think that it may properly be treated as a sufficient finding of fact.

It is alleged in the answer, that before the plaintiff’s cattle were killed, the defendant “ leased unto the Central Pacific Railroad Company all its (defendant’s) railroad line then constructed and thereafter to be constructed from the town of Goshen, in the *651County of Tulare, of said State, southerly through the Counties of Tulare and Kern, of said State, together with all the cars, locomotives, and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining; and * * * said Central Pacific Bail-road Company took possession and control, and has ever since had possession and control, of all of said railroad line, property, and appurtenances so leased and let to it, the said Central Pacific Railroad Company, by the said Southern Pacific Railroad Company, defendant herein.”

“ And * * * that ever since the railroad track, cars, locomotives, and appurtenances hereinbefore mentioned and described have been in the exclusive control, management, and possession of said Central Pacific Railroad Company, and operated and run by it solely; and defendant * * * has never at any time since * * * had any control, management, or possession of the line of railroad mentioned in the complaint, or of the locomotives, cars, or appurtenances thereunto belonging, or has run or operated the same, or any part or portion thereof; and that, if any damage has been caused by any matters alleged in the complaint, it has been caused and done by the said Central Pacific Railroad Company, and not by this defendant.”

The only finding which seems to refer to this allegation is: “ That the lease from the Southern Pacific Railroad Company to the Central Pacific Railroad Company, dated September 1st, 1876, and the resolution introduced in evidence by the defendant, have never been recorded in the County of Kern, and there is no evidence that the plaintiff had any knowledge of the existence thereof.”

If that allegation raises a material issue, this finding is not sufficient. In this action it is wholly immaterial whether the lease referred to has ever been recorded or not. The only question is, whether the lessor is liable for cattle killed by the trains of the lessee, on unfenced portions of the lessor’s railroad. If it is, the allegation in respect of the lease is immaterial, and no finding upon it was necessary. The liability is created by statute, and it only arises in the absence of sufficient fences. The actionable negligence consists in the omission to build fences. The statute provides that if any company does not make and *652maintain a good and sufficient fence on either or both sides of its property, and its engine or cars kill any cattle which stray upon the line of its road, where it passes through or alongside of the property of the owner of said cattle, such company shall pay the owner of the cattle so killed a fair market price for them, unless such owner shall be negligent or at fault. In many, if not in all of the States of the Union, similar statutes have been enacted, and there are several reported cases in which the question involved in this case was considered.

In Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, (§ 466) it is said: “ When a railroad company runs its trains over a track belonging to another company, and such track is not properly fenced, a nice question arises as to which company, if either, is liable under the statute for injuries committed by the trains of the former company. We think the negligence of the company owning the track is to be imputed to the company running the trains, and that the latter is absolutely liable under the statute for injuries to animals.”

This would seem to imply that, in the opinion of the authors, the lessor would not be liable under the statute for such injuries. But we are unable to discover any stronger reason for holding the lessee than for holding the lessor liable in such a case. A strictly literal interpretation of the statute might exempt both the lessor and the lessee from liability, as the statute does not in terms provide for a case in which one company owns and another operates a railroad. The duty, however, of fencing devolves upon the company owning the road, and if it leases the road in an unfenced condition to be operated by another company, it does seem to us that it is liable within the spirit, if not within the letter of the law, to the same extent, in a case like this, as it would be if its instead of its lessee’s engine and cars had run over the plaintiff’s cattle. As was said by the Court in Tracy v. The Troy and Boston Railroad Company (38 N. Y. 437) : “ The passage of this act being induced by public considerations, and its purpose being to protect the traveling public and the owners of domestic animals along the line of their road, it should receive a liberal construction to effectuate the benign purpose of its framers. A rigid and literal reading would, in *653many cases, defeat the very object of the statute, and would exemplify the maxim, that ‘ the letter killeth, while the spirit keepeth alive.’ Every statute ought to be expounded, not according to the letter, but according to the meaning; qui haeret in litera haeret in cortice. (Dwar. on Stat. 695.) And the intention is to govern, although such construction may not, in all respects, agree with the letter of the statute. (Plowd. 205.) The reason and object of a statute are a clue to its meaning (Dwar. on Stat. 695); and the spirit of the law, and the intention of its makers are diligently to be sought after, and the letter must bend to these. (6 Bac. Abr. 384, 6th ed. Lond. 1807; Kent’s Com. 465; Smith’s Com. on Stat. §§ 709, 710.) The defendant in this case seeks to escape liability for the injury it has inflicted, through the letter of the law.”

The language of this statute is as follows: “ It shall be the duty of the railroad company to make and maintain a good and sufficient fence on either or both sides of their property, and in case any company do not make and maintain such fence, if their engine or cars shall kill, maim, or destroy any cattle,” etc. This language imposes the duty to fence upon the company which constructs and owns the road. No such duty is imposed upon the lessee of the road. Therefore the learned counsel for the appellant insists that, “ This language makes the owner of the road liable only when its engine, etc., kills, or maims, etc., and not when the killing or maiming is done by the cars of a lessee. In neither respect does this language embrace the case of a lessee. In a case like the present, then, where one corporation owns the road, and another the engine and cars, and is operating the road under a lease, this statute can have no application, and hence the case is to be tried and determined according to the principles of the common law only.”

Such a construction would render the statute a dead letter in any case in which a railroad had been leased, and no case has been brought to our attention in which it was held that neither the lessor nor the lessee would be liable in such a case. Nor have we found a case in which it was distinctly held that the company owning the road could exempt itself from such liability by leasing its road to another company. In the Illinois *654Central Railroad Company v. Kanouse, (39 Ill. 227) which was an action against the lessee of the road, the Court says: “ In the case before us, admitting it was the duty of the first party to the agreement (the company owning the road) to fence this road, that they would be liable for this injury had they been sued there can be no question.” And in Toledo etc. Railroad Company v. Rumbold, 40 Ill. 143, the same Court said, in an action against the lessors of the same road: “ It was the duty of appellants to have fenced the road, and public safety demands that they should be held liable for all damages resulting from the neglect to fence it. And the same policy would require that the Illinois Central (the lessee) should be held responsible for presuming to use the road of another company fenceless and unprotected. Either company would be liable for the injury.” Redfield, in a note to the case of Parker v. Rensselaer and Saratoga Railway, (16 Barb. 315) in which it was held that the defendant, being the lessee of the road upon which the injury was committed, was not liable under the statute, says, the only question in regard to the soundness of the decision is, whether both companies were not chargeable with negligence, the one for suffering the road to be used, and the other for using it in that condition. (1 Redfield on the Law of Railways, 5th ed. 618.)

It follows, from the view which we have taken of this question, that the defendant’s liability under the statute could not be affected by the lease which it set up in its answer, and therefore it was unnecessary for the Court to find -upon the issue raised by the allegation that the road had been leased, and was operated by the lessee at the time when the injury to the plaintiff’s cattle was committed.

This case was argued before the late Supreme Court, and submitted. That Court, as we are advised, requested further argument upon the question last discussed in this opinion. On the other points, we understand that our views are in accord with those of the late Court.

Judgment and order denying the motion for anew trial affirmed.

Thornton, P. J., and Myrick, J., concurred.