Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Co. v. Harris
Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Co. v. Harris
Opinion of the Court
The testimony shows that the horses of the plaintiff were killed near a wood-rack about a half-mile from his home, and a mile and a half from the town of Seville, and were found there by the plaintiff and the section boss and his hands and others, early in the morning of June 28th, 1888, lying on the side of the railroad, and that, as indicated by their tracks, they had walked through a gap in the railroad fence and on to the railroad. The gap was used for hauling in wood for the locomotives by two men named Stephens, who are spoken of by one witness as owning the rack. There was another rack in the same locality owned by another person, but on the opposite side of the gap. There was no railroad crossing at the gap. The plaintiff testifies that the gap was open when the horses were found, and he saw no bars or poles. One witness testified that he had seen bars or poles, about the size of his arm, up at the gap, but did not recollect that any were up when he and plaintiff found the horses on the named day. Another witness says that they were down, and that he had seen the gap the evening-before between sunset and dark and they, were down then, he having met the Stephenses coming home just before he got to the gap. The foreman of the section of the road where the horses were killed testified that it was a part of his duty to see that the road and fences were in proper condition, and that he found the horses on the morning stated, and that the bars were opened on the side that the Stephens rack was. That there were three bars provided for the gap, reaching from 3i to 4 feet from the ground. He had found the bars down before this, not knowing who left them
The first assignment of error is as to the admission in evidence of two letters offered by the plaintiff. One of them is dated July 4th, 1888, and is from the plaintiff, the substance of it being that the fast mail train going south on the morning of June 28th, killed two horses of the writer, near the 86-mile post, and that he was desirous of knowing -what the company would pay Mm for them; that the killing, had been reported by the section master; and requesting to be communicated with as early as possible relative to the matter, and to let him know what the company would do in the case.
The conclusion announced above disposes also-of one of the charges requested by the defendant.
The second assignment of error is as to a charge in-which the judge used, among others, the expression: “If you find that the plaintiff after the killing of the-horses gave notice of such killing as required by law, and made presentment of his claim in writing for such, killing.” The objection urged is, that as there was a question in the case whether or not the notice and. claim had been presented to any one of the officers specified in the statute, the jury should have been instructed what the law was in order that they might pass understandingly on that point. Under the facts-of the case we do not see that the instruction was calculated to mislead the jury. If defendant desired any further instruction they should have asked for it. It can not be assumed as a matter of law that the general attorney of the company, which Mr. Parrott, is testified by one of the witnesses to have been,, was not a general agent or officer of the company within the meaning of the act, or that. General Mason, to whom it must be concluded the letter from the plaintiff was written, was not a proper officer or agent within the meaning of the act to give notice to. Indianapolis, P. & C. R. Co. vs. Truitt, 24 Ind., 162. In the absence of any attempt upon the
Another charge requested by the defendant, and .properly refused, may be disposed of by saying of the provision of the statute requiring notice of claim to be given “to any general agent or officer of such corporation, or person, or to any station, depot or other ageiit or officer acting for said corporation in the county where said live stock was killed or injured,” that the words subsequent to the word “officer,” where it appears the second time, do not qualify any of the pre- • ceding words except those after the word “person.”
An instruction requested by the defendant, and the refusal of which is made the basis of an assignment of error, is: “If you find that the cause of the presence of the plaintiff’s horses on the defendant’s railroad track was the negligence of persons, not the agents or servants of the defendant, in leaving down the bars provided by the defendant to close an opening in the fence, and that the defendant, its agents and servants were not guilty of negligence in failing to replace the bars, you will find for the defendant.”
A disposal of this point requires some observations upon the nature of the statute. The general require.mentof the act is the erection and maintenance, by ■■ corporations and persons operating railroads in our
Under a statute of New York, requiring railroad corporations to erect and maintain fences on both sides-of their roads, no exception being made or permission given thereby for openings or gates for the use of the-corporation or its customers or the public generally, but only for the use of adjoining proprietors, it was decided in Spinner vs. New York Central & R. R. R. Co., 67 N. Y., 153, that if the company permits or acquiesces in the use, in its business, by its customers, of a gate constructed by it at a farm crossing, so that the gate does not serve the end of a fence, it is in default. The gate through which the plaintiff’s cattle-entered, had for several years been used almost daily in the business of loading and unloading freight, vehicles delivering or taking goods, passing in or out thereat; and in this business the company’s servants, had helped. In consequence the gate was left open at the close of the day’s business, and would be closed in the evening or at midnight by defendant’s servants. The adjoining proprietor for whose use the gate was. originally erected had not used it for six weeks before the accident, and had no knowledge of its use for his purposes on the preceding day. The cattle had escaped from plaintiff’s enclosure in the night time on to-the highway and thence through the gate and had got on to the railroad and been killed or injured by a passing train. It was held that the evidence was sufficient to authorize an inference by the jury that thégate was open by reason of its use by defendant’s customers during the day, or some day shortly prior; that the defendant had sufficient notice that the gateway had been diverted from its original purpose to a common passageway for its customers, and that it was often
In Cleveland, C., C. & I. R. R. Co. vs. Swift, 42 Ind., 119, the railroad had been fenced, but a panel of the-fence had been cut out and made into the form of agate, but not hung on hinges, and the opening was-, used by persons hauling wood and placing it near the-railroad track, and this wTas done with the consent of' the railroad company, or without objection from it, at
It could not be inferred, at all reasonably, from the •evidence that the bars were left down by any one but the men who were shown to have been engaged in 'hauling wood, and this being so, and those men, ac- • cording to the principles governing the case, not being :strangers to the company, there was no error in refusing the instruction. Considering the character of the 'testimony just referred to, the instruction was more or less irrelevant and was calculated to mislead the jury, if not accompanied by a qualification excluding the idea that those hauling -wood are not such strangers. 'The judge, among other instructions, told the jury that a railroad company is not liable for horses killed hy its trains unless it was negligent or failed to erect :and maintain proper fences and stock-guards, and that the burden was upon the plaintiff to show that the ■company did not maintain fences sufficient to exclude •and turn live stock.
The judgment is affirmed. ■
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company v. Stephen Harris
- Cited By
- 6 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. A letter from an owner of live stock to a railroad company notifying it of the killing of his stock by a train, giving also the time and place of the killing, and expressing a desire to be informed as early as possible what the company will pay him for the stock, is not inadmissible as evidence of notice and claim for damages under the statute making- railroad companies that fail to erect and maintain fences sufficient to turn and exclude all live stock from their railroads, with stock-guards at certain crossings, on account of the omission of the letter to state the amount of the damage claimed; nor is a letter stating the amount claimed inadmissible because it was not written at the time of the killing, nor until seventy-five days after, or because it offers to to take less than the owner believes he was entitled to. The two letters held to constitute ample notice and presentation of claim under the statute. '.3. Where an instruction is not calculated to mislead the jury, although not as full or specific as it might he, and no request has been made for a fuller instruction, no advantage can be taken by the losing party on account of such deficiency. 3. It can not be assumed as a matter of law that the general attorney of a railroad company is not a proper officer or agent to notify and present a claim to for damages to live stock under the railroad fence law, where the company has neither attempted to show that he was not suoli, and not made any objection to proof of demand upon him, on the ground that he was not such officer or agent. 4. The railroad fence statute requires notice of claim to be given ‘•to any general agent or officer of such corporation or person, or to any station, depot or other agent or officer acting for said corporation in the county where the live stock was killed or injured.” Held, That the words subsequent to the word “offi- ■ cer,” where it appears the second time, do not qualify any of the preceding words except those after the word “person.” 3. The general requirement of the railroad fence statute, wherever the act is operative, is the erection and maintenance, on both sides of any railroad, of substantial fences sirfficient to exclude or turn from the roads all live stock, or at least such stock as are-orderly, or not shown to be breachy; with the limitation, however, that in lieu of fences, stock-guards shall be erected and maintained at public crossings and at such other crossings as. may be necessary for the use of owners or tenants of land adjoining a railroad. Where there is no crossing of the character indicated, the duty is to maintain a fence .of the required character, and as between the owner of stock and the company, a gap and bars are to be regarded as a fence and kept in the condition necessary to serve all the purposes of a prescribed fence. It seems that where a company has erected a sufficient, fence and it is thrown down without the company’s knowledge, by the act of God, or by strangers without the company’s-knowledge or consent, the law accords to the company a reasonable time for ascertaining the fact and restoring the fence,, and if any damage is caused, by the fence being thus down, before there has been a reasonable time for the company to restore it after being so aware, or for learning of its being down and restoring it, the company will not be liable; and a doctrine, at least somewhat similar, is applicable where bars or gates at a crossing are left open without the company’s consent- or fault. 6. Where there is a gap, with bars, in a railroad fence, at a place where there is no public or other authorized crossing, and the-gap is used, with the knowledge of the company, by persons supplying the company with wood under contract, and engaged in hauling the same to a wood-rack on the road, to be used by the company’s engines, and such bars are left down by such persons so engaged, and live stock pass through the gap. and go on to the road and are killed, the persons so leaving the bars down can not be regarded as strangers to the company, but their acts will be regarded as the act of the company and it will be held liable for the damage resulting to the owner of the stock. 7. A declaration alleging that the railroad company did not maintain fences on the sides of its railroad sufficient to exclude and turn live stock therefrom, by means whereof and for the want of such fences two horses of the plaintiff, without default or-negligence on his part, strayed and went on such railroad, describing the point, at which place such a fence was necessary to exclude and turn live stock, which place was not in a town or city, nor at any crossing authorized by the statute, using its language in describing the same, and that said horses so being; on said railroad at the place stated, a certain engine ran upon and killed said horses, giving their value; is good as against a motion for arrest of judgment on the ground that the declaration does not show that the damage was caused by a failure to erect and maintain fences or stock-guards.