Kane v. New York & New England Railroad

Pardee, J.

On October 10th, 1879,- a mule belonging to the plaintiff escaped from his premises without his fault or neglect, and there being no fence between, ran upon the adjoining premises of the defendant, and was killed by its locomotive without its fault or negligence. He instituted a suit for damages in the Court of Common Pleas for Hartford County, and upon the trial claimed that at the time named the defendant was under obligation to fence its track by virtue of an order of the railroad commissioners made on the 28th day of March, 1874, under a statute passed in 1873; and that by reason of its neglect to comply with that order it was liable in damages to Mm. But the court held that the defendant was not then under any obligation to fence its track and rendered judgment for it. The plaintiff filed a motion in error.

By chapter 69, page 161, of the session laws of 1873, it *140was made the duty of every railroad company to erect and maintain a fence on both sides of its railroad, wherever the railroad commissioners should adjudge it to be neoessary; </ and whenever they determined that such necessity existed they were to issue a written order to the secretary of any railroad company, directing it when and where to erect a fence; and this order was to be served upon such secretary by leaving an attested copy with him or at his usual place of abode. On March 28th, 1874, the commissioners signed an order to the trustees of the holders of the mortgage bonds of the defendant, requiring them to fence the railroad. A copy of this order was served upon J. M. Belden, but he was not at the time of such service secretary of the trustees, and there was no proof that he was secretary of the defendant.

But, beyond this, the act of 1878 was repealed on July 25th, 1874. With this repeal there ceased to be upon the defendant any obligation to fence its railroad. The determination and order of the commissioners did not constitute a judgment against the defendant in favor of the plaintiff of perpetual force; did not vest in him any right to compel it to maintain a fence through all time; the whole matter remained within legislative power; the order reached no further into the future than the statute under which it came into existence; and if the defendant had erected a fence in compliance therewith, it had the right to take it down upon the removal of all obligation to fence.

In 1875 the legislature passed an act (Session Laws of 1875, chap. 94, page 56,) which is substantially in the terms of that of 1873, The effect of this last is to establish a different rule for determining the duty of railroad companies in the matter of erecting fences from that previously in existence; of course the last in point of time displaces all different and consequently inconsistent ones. But the enactment of a law in terms identical with those of the law under which the order was made could not revive the obligation of the defendant to fence under that order. In this respect it stood as if no duty to fence had previously *141existed; and that duty could only come into existence by the combined force of the law of-1875 and of an order under and in accordance with it.

There is no error in the judgment complained of.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.