Finch v. Central Railroad
Finch v. Central Railroad
Opinion of the Court
On the trial in the Circuit Court, the plaintiff offered in evidence the following notice and affidavit:
“ To the Central Railroad Company of Iowa:
“You are hereby notified that the undersigned, Theron Einch, claims of you the sum of fifty-two dollars as damages on account of your neglect in not fencing the line of your 'track in Worth county, Iowa, whereby the said Theron Einch lost a cow, as shown by the following affidavit.
Dated at Nortliwood, Iowa, March 21,1873.”
Theron Finch.
“State oe Iowa, 1 Worth County, \
“I, Theron Finch, on oath depose and say that on the 3d day of December, 1872, I was the owner of a spotted red and white cow, three years old; that said cow was worth the sum of forty dollars; that on said day the cow above described was injured by a train of the Central Railroad Company of Iowa, so that said cow died on the 19th day of March, 1873, in consequence of the injury aforesaid; that I have sustained damages by reason of the neglect of said railroad company to fence their track, in the loss of the aforesaid cow, in the sum of forty dollars, the value of the cow December 3, 1872, and the further sum of twelve dollars in the expenses of keeping said cow from December 3, 1872, to March 19, 1873, said cow being entirely useless during this time.
Theron Einch.” •
“ Subscribed and sworn to before me this 21st day of March, A. D. 1873. Ed. Collin, Notary Public.”
[Notarial Seal.]
The defendant’s counsel objected to their admission, which being overruled, he urges the ruling as error.
“Defendant moves for a more specific statement. Court sustains the motion. Plaintiff amends by saying that he charges twelve dollars for the care and keeping of the cow from the time of injury until the time of death; forty dollars as the value of the cow; and that, not being paid within thirty days after notice given to the company, he claims that it should be double.”
II. The other assigned errors involve the questiomwhether plaintiff may recover double the value of the animal injured or killed, and also expenses for taking care of and endeavoring to cure her after the injury has happened.
• We are of opinion that, under the circumstances of this case, a recovery may be had for such expenses.
While the statute fixes the value of the property as the measure of damages for its injury or destruction, it does not necessarily exclude the claim of the plaintiff for taking care of his property in case of injury. The railroad company, being in the wrong in doing the injury, should either take the proper and necessary care of the injured animal or compensate the owner for so doing, where the injury is such as to justify and demand such care. And upon principle, if the railroad company neglects to care for an animal so injured ■by it, the owner is in duty bound to do it himself, when he can do so by the exercise of reasonable diligence. A man has no right to carelessly look on at the destruction of his property. It is his duty to use reasonable care to prevent such destruction. Mather v. Butler County, 28 Iowa, 253; Simpson v. The City of Keokuk, 34 Id., 568; Little v. McGuire, 38 Id., 560; and where the wrongful act of another has made it necessary for the owner of property to expend money or perform labor in order to prevent a greater damage the latter should be reimbursed by the wrong-doer. Mather v. Butler Co., supra. See, also, Van Pelt v. City of Davenport, infra.
We find no error in the record to the prejudice of the defendant. The judgment must, therefore, stand.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Finch v. The Central Railroad of Iowa
- Status
- Published