Spinner v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

Mullin, P. J.:

In order to exempt a railroad company from liability for killing cattle on its track, under section 8 of the general railroad act, it must erect and maintain fences on the sides of its road, with openings or gates, or bars therein, at the farm crossings, for the use of the proprietors of the land adjoining, and so long as such fences shall not be made, and when made not kept in good repair, such railroad corporation shall be liable for damages which shall be done by the agents or engines of such corporation to any cattle.

I am of the opinion that a company is bound to see to it, that all gates on its road are kept closed, and it is liable if they are left open, even by the persons for whose convenience they are constructed. Such owner owes no duty to the owners of cattle that may be in the highways or adjoining fields. But it is not necessary to go that length in this case, as the court instructed the jury the defendant was not liable unless it was carelessly left open by defendant’s agents or servants, or by those doing business with it.

The jury must have found that the gate was carelessly left open by some of the persons referred to, or a verdict could not have been rendered.

If I am right in this, the court properly refused to charge that *603defendant had sufficiently erected and maintained a fence along its line, unless qualified as suggested by the court.

The refusal of the court to charge that the mere presence of plaintiffs cattle on defendant’s road barred the right of recovery was correct, unless that fact is evidence of negligence on the part of the owner of the cattle.

How the breach was made in plaintiff’s fence, through which the cattle passed into the highway from his field, does not appear, nor is there any proof as to the condition of that' fence. The plaintiff says the fence was apparently torn down. He was not asked if he knew how, or by whom, it was torn down, and it is fairly inferable, from the language, that it was not done by him or his orders. If the fence was sufficient to restrain cattle, and was broken down by some agency over which plaintiff had no control, then plaintiff was not chargeable with negligence contributing to the injury.

The jury were told that if they found any evidence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff, they should find for the defendant.

Their finding negatives any negligence on the part of the plaintiff.

The answer to the exception to the refusal to charge as requested just considered, answers the exception to the refusal to charge that finding the cattle on defendant’s track, without any evidence of right or authority from defendant, was conclusive evidence of negligence.

When a gate is put in a fence for the convenience of the owners of land adjoining the railroad, and it is not kept shut, the fence is not maintained within the true intent and meaning of the section above cited.

The object of the legislature in requiring a railroad company to fence on each side of its track, was to prevent the cattle of the persons over whose lands it crossed, and the cattle of others rightfully on such land, from straying on the track and being injured or killed, and to 'transfer the duty of fencing from the owners of the land to the company. If there is a gate in the fence on each farm, and they may be left open, of what value is the fence, and what security have the owners of the land that their cattle will not be destroyed ? The former request embraced this.

I have not seen the ease presented to this court when it was before it on a former appeal, and I am not, for that reason, able *604to say whether the facts are so nearly alike, as that the opinion of my brother Smith applies to the case as it is now presented.

The judgment and order must be affirmed.

Present — Mullin, P. J., Smith and Gilbert, JJ.

Ordered accordingly.