Lawrence v. Milwaukee, Lake Shore & Western Railway Co.

Eyan, O. J.

The appellant gave no evidence showing or tending to show that the respondent was guilty of any negligence in running the train which killed the ox. Indeed, all the evidence on that subject goes to disprove any immediate negligence of the respondent in the mere killing of the animal. If the respondent, therefore, be chargeable with any negligence, it must he in something which led to the presence of the animal on the track, exposing it to inj ury by the passing train.

The want of fences on the line of the railroad, as required by law, is the excuse set up in the complaint for the presence of the ox on the railroad.

The appellant gave no evidence tending directly to show where or how the ox came upon the track. The animal was not seen on the track by any witness before the accident, which appears to have happened directly west of the appellant’s house, on land east of the railroad, hut not adjoining it.

The appellant gave some evidence of the want or insufficiency of fences on the west side of the railroad, opposite his *326premises on the east side. There is nothing in the evidence warranting a belief that the animal came upon the tract from the west. In order to have done so, indeed, it seems that it must have escaped from the east side and crossed the railroad to the west side. "We cannot, therefore, but regard the evidence of the condition of the fences on the west side as immaterial.

The appellant gave evidence tending to show that the respondent had built a sufficient fence bn the east side of the railroad, from the railroad crossing on the south road, so called, to a point some fifty rods north of the place of the accident, intersected by several cross fences; but that from thence north some sixty-four rods, to the railroad crossing on the Calumet road, so called, the respondent had built no fence; that there was no fence on the east line of the railroad for the latter distance; but that some six rods east of the railroad there was or had been a fence, and some rods east of it a second fence, presumably belonging to the owners of the land.

The appellant testified in his own behalf, that all the fences mentioned on the east side of the railroad, as well as his own fence nearest the railroad, had been blown down by a violent storm some few days before his ox was killed. He gave no evidence whatever tending to show notice, express or implied, to the respondent, or unreasonable delay of the respondent, under the circumstances, in restoring the fence so suddenly and recently prostrated. Brown v. M. & P. Railway Co., 21 Wis., 39.

Assuming the condition of things to which the appellant himself testified, it seems like wantonly courting such an accident, to turn his cattle loose for the day, in midwinter, so near the railroad, with no one to look after them; and we surely cannot be expected to accept as excuse, the negligence of' those to whom his sickness compelled him to trust the care of his cattle. This appears to us to be as bad a light as any in which the appellant’s case can be regarded.

*327But we cannot think that the court below; was bound to accept the appellant’s own evidence, in this respect, against that of his witnesses. None of them confirm thé appellant’s statement that any of the fences had been blown down at the time of the accident. On the contrary, some of them, with perhaps better opportunities of knowing, gave direct evidence that the railroad fence, west of the plaintiff’s house and premises, was standing at the time of the accident; and their evidence raises a strong presumption that the appellant was equally mistaken as to all the fences, and that all the fences mentioned on the east side of the railroad were standing at the time of the accident. If the kerned judge, who heard the witnesses, so held in granting the nonsuit, we cannot say that he was in error.

In either view of the case, the nonsuit appears to have been properly granted.

Whichever way we regard the evidence, it appears to be immaterial whether or how far ch. 248 of 1875 operates to modify secs. 30 and 31 of the general railroad act of 1872.

It must be confessed that there is some discrepancy in the cases in this court, construing and enforcing the liability of railroad companies upon failure of duties imposed by statute. In the case of Jones v. S. & F. R. R. Co., considered and decided at the same time as this [ante, p. 306], notwithstanding some things said or ruled in McCall v. Chamberlain, 13 Wis., 637, Brown v. M. & R. R. W. Co., 21 id., 39, Laude v. C. & N. W. Railway Co., 33 id., 640, and perhaps other cases, we hold that, while we are not now prepared to say whether or not contributory negligence would be a defense to an action for injury arising from the failure of a railroad company to construct a fence as required by the statute, contributory negligence of the plaintiff may defeat an action for injury arising from failure of a railroad company to maintain in repair such fence, once built. The principles on which numerous cases in this court rest, admitting contributory negligence as a defense in *328actions against railroad companies for injuries arising from unlawful speed of trains within corporate .limits, appear certainly to sanction the application of the same rule to the latter, if not to the former, class of cases under the statute requiring railroads to he fenced. The question will he fully considered in Jones v. S. & F. Railroad Co., and need not be further discussed here.

It was said in argument, that this construction goes to neutralize the statiite, and to relegate the subject to the common law. That is a mistake. Without the statute, railway companies would not be obliged to fence. Stucke v. M. & M. Railroad,. Co., 9 Wis., 202.

This rule ;would undoubtedly defeat the appellant in this case, viewed in the light of his own testimony alone. For, assuming" the negligence of the' respondent in not restoring the fence within a reasonable time, which we are not quite prepared to hold in the circumstances disclosed, it would have been his own negligence, contributing directly to the injury, to leave his cattle at large for the day, without purpose and by mere inadvertence, after the object for which they had been turned out had been effected, within some seventy rods of an operated railroad,. without fence or obstacle to keep them from it. The appellant himself appears to have felt this, and throws the responsibility upon his sons. But they were his servants^ and their negligence in his service was his. In case of sudden destruction of a railroad fence by the elements, in midwinter, at a time of successive and severe storms, it would be an abuse of sound principle, and unjust, to hold the respondent to so severe a rule of diligence, and to hold the appellant to so lax a rule, as would support this action, upon the appellant’s own statement of the facts.

In the case made-by the appellant’s other witnesses, the railroad was duly fenced where the extension of the appellant’s lines would strike it, and where the injury occurred, and for some distance either way. North of the appellant, it was not *329fenced by the respondent, although there were two fences which the' ox must have passed to reach the railroad at that place. There is no probability established hy the evidence, far less a reasonable certainty, that it was there that the ox found its way to the railroad. If there had been a total want of railroad or other fence between the appellant’s premises and the railroad, the jury might havebeen warranted in finding that the animal strayed directly from the place where he was left at large, to the railroad; and that the injury was therefore occasioned by want of fence there. But when there was a fence there and for some distance either way, and the evidence leaves it wholly uncertain where or how the ox, having strayed from the appellant’s premises, got upon the track, the jury would not have been warranted in finding that the animal reached the track at a place not fenced by the respondent, merely because of the failure to fence there. The animal may have reached the track thereby passing the two fences; or by the letting down of some bars giving access to the railroad near the spot where he was killed; or he may possibly have wandered to either of the highways mentioned, and scrambled over the cattle guards. He may have reached the track in some way which we cannot, and a jury could not properly conjecture. The trouble is, that the evidence leaves it wholly uncertain. Indeed, what seems to have been the first conjecture of the appellant, that the ox had been maliciously driven through the bars mentioned, appears to be as plausible a solution of the doubt as any other; a conjecture, by the way, not very consistent with the appellant’s statement that the fences were then, all down.

The case was evidently tried for the appellant upon the theory that the failure of the railroad company to fence elsewhere, and the killing of the ox by the passing train, constituted an absolute right of action. Ho construction of any of the statutes would warrant that position. Sec. 1, ch. 268 of 1860, pleaded in the complaint, and sec. 30 of ch. 119 of 1872, *330in force at tbe time, mate tbe railroad companies responsible for damages occasioned by failure to fence. Tbe injury complained of must therefore be shown-to be occasioned, that is, caused, by tbe want of a proper railroad fence. The injury must be affirmatively shown to be a consequence of tbe absence of a fence. It is true, that tbe injury may be caused by tbe absence of a proper fence at any place, whether adjoining or near or distant. But tbe evidence must connect tbe injury with the want of fence, aná show that tbe one was a consequence of tbe other. Otherwise, railroad companies would be liable for injuries occurring where their roads are legally fenced, if they should be .left unfenced at any point, however distant, or unconnected with such injuries. That is not the statute, and ought not to be.

By the Cowrt. — The judgment of the court below is affirmed.