Whitsky v. Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co.
Whitsky v. Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an action on the case, brought by the plaintiff for the value of an ox alleged to have been killed by the defendant’s cars upon a highway crossing.
The cause was then removed by the defendant to the circuit court for the county of St. Clair, where the same was heard upon certiorari, before Judge Stevens, and the judgment of the justice was reversed, and the plaintiff brings that judgment into this court for review.
The plaintiff’s declaration was in writing, and as follows :
“John "Whitsky, the above-named plaintiff, complains of. the Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Company, defendant herein, said defendant having been duly summoned to answer said plaintiff in a plea of trespass on the case.
“For that whereas, heretofore, to wit, on the seventeenth day of June, A. D. 1882, the said defendant, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan, owning and operating a railroad in and through the township of Kimball, in said county of St. Clair, having neglected to ■ construct and maintain proper fences, culverts, cattle-guards, and drains on the sides of said railway, and at the highway and street crossings within said township of Kimball, and within St. Clair county, Michigan, as required by the law, and as are sufficient to prevent cattle and other animals from getting on said railroad; and by reason of such neglect and carelessness of such defendant, and without any fault of the above-named plaintiff, one ox, the property of this plaintiff, got on the track of said railway, and was run over and killed by the locomotive and cars of said railway contipany, to the damage of the said plaintiff in the sum of three hundred dollars, and therefore he brings suit.”
The defendant pleaded the general issue. Upon the trial three witnesses were sworn on the part of the plaintiff. The defendant offered no testimony.
The affidavit made by the defendant’s attorney, who tried the cause, to obtain the writ, purports to give the substance of all the testimony and proceedings had on the trial before the magistrate.
The return of the justice is very brief, and was twice amended under orders made by the circuit judge requiring the same, and in his last return the justice says:
*248 “I have heretofore returned the proofs and testimony in the case as well as I could do it, * * * and I cannot say I have returned all of the testimony, or the substance of alJ of it, • * * * as I did not take it all down.”
In his first return he says the affidavit of the defendant’s attorney does not state all the testimony in the case, as ho then remembered, but does not say what is therein stated is incorrect.
The return shows, however, two rulings on the admission of testimony objected to by defendant’s counsel, and exceptions taken, one of which we think was clearly erroneous.
The testimony, as it appears in the record, shows that the defendant’s railroad was fenced at the crossing, and furnished with cattle-guards, and that the alleged neglect of the company actually relied upon for recovery was not that stated in the declaration, but its failure to cover a ditch running across the highway along its track, either side of the bridge crossing the ditch for the wagon track.
The ditch contained running water, and was constructed for .the purpose of preventing an overflow of the track, and was covered with a suitable bridge for highway purposes. It was with reference to this bridge, and the failure to cover the ditch on either side of it in the highway, that one of the questions propounded by plaintiff’s counsel to witness John Jahn was objected to. The question is as follows:
“ Did you ever complain to the section boss that this highway crossing was a nuisance ?” The objection was that it was incompetent and immaterial. The witness was permitted to answer, “ I told the section boss it was a harbor for cattle, and he had better fix it. He said he had nothing to do with it.”
The defendant’s exception was well taken. There is nothing in the statute requiring the defendant to cover such ditches the full width of the highway, neither does it appear that any such covering at the place referred to was necessary for any purpose. So far as the record shows, these cattle were running at large in the highway, and that, if any injury occurred to the plaintiff’s animal, it was not through any fault or neglect of the defendant.
The judgment of the circuit court was correct, and must be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Whitsky v. The Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co.
- Status
- Published