Luke v. Morgan's La. & Texas R. R. & S. S. Co.
Luke v. Morgan's La. & Texas R. R. & S. S. Co.
Opinion of the Court
His Honor,
rendered the opinion and'decree of the Court, as follows:
Plaintiff sues for the loss of a colt which was run over and killed upon the tracks of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company, one of the defendants, by a passenger train owned and operated by the Morgan’s Louisiana & Texas Railroad & Steamship Company, the other defendant.
We are in agreement with the finding of the trial Judge that this evidence ‘ ‘ shows conclusively to the mind of the Court that the Morgan’s Louisiana .& Texas Railroad & Steamship Company is not liable for the killing of plaintiff’s horse.”
Mongogna vs. Illinois Central R. R. Co., 115 La., 597; Sanders vs. Illinois Central R. R. Co., 127 La., 917; Houston vs. Railroad Co., 39 An., 797; Thompson on Negligence, (2nd. Ed.) Sec. 2113; Act 70 of 1886.
The judgment, however, as to this defendant, should have been one of absolute dismissal and not one of non-.suit; and it will be amended in this respect in accordance with the answer to the appeal which was timely filed in this Court.
But plaintiff sought to hold the other defendant liable, not only upon the ground of its responsibility for the act of its co-defendant in the operation of the train, but also because it failed to properly jnaintain in good condition its cattle guards at crossings. The trial Judge found as
Conceding that tbe finding of fact be correct, tbe trial Court erred in its legal conclusions. Eailroads are under no legal obligation in this State either to fence their right of way or to provide cattle guards at crossings; and under Act 110 of 1886, the failure of a railroad to erect cattle guards of to keep them in good order does 'not constitute negligence, the effect of such failure being merely to "impose upon -it the burden of proving that injury to stock was not caused by its negligence.
Sanders vs. Illinois Central Railroad Co., 127 La., 917.
Consequently, the alleged liability of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad rests exclusively upon its .responsibility for the acts of a party other than itself, namely, of its co-defendant in the operation of the train; and as the latter has been shown to be free from negligence, it follows that no liability attaches to the former and that a judgment against it was error.
Muntz vs. Railroad, 116 La., 236.
. It. is accordingly ordered that as to the Morgan’s Louisiana & Texas Railroad & Steamship Company the judgment be amended and that as to the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad. Company it be reversed and set aside; and to this end, it is now adjudged and decreed that there be absolute judgment in favor of both defendants, dismissing plaintiff’s suit at his costs in both Courts.
Amended in part and in part reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.