Railway Co. v. Allen
Railway Co. v. Allen
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff below, John C. Allen, was the owner and occupier of a tract of pasture land adjoining the field of one John Lucas, and separated by it from the railroad of the Pittsburg, Cincinnati & St. Louis Railway Company, upon which the Lucas field' abutted prior to the sale of a portion of said company’s right of way on the south of its track, as hereinafter mentioned. On the evening of November 5th, 1877, a large number o'f horses and other stock, belonging to Allen, escaped from said pasture, crossed the Little Miami river, and recrossing the same entered the Lucas field, whence, by reason of the fence along the line of the railroad being broken down and nut of repair, they strayed upon the railway track where one of them was killed, and others were more or less injured, by the railway company’s locomotive and cars. Allen filed his petition in the Court of Common Pleas of Greene county, against the railway company, claiming damages because of the defendant’s failure to construct and keep up a sufficient fence as required by statute, and because the defendant through its agents carelessly and negligently operated the train to the injury of the stock. The plaintiff recovered judgment in the common pleas, which was affirmed by the district court, and to reverse the judgment of the district court, the case comes into this court on the petition in error of the railway company.
By virtue of a contract between the two companies, the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad Company agreed to “ keep up and maintain lawful fences, crossings and cattle-guards, on the south side of the said dividing line ” between the two railroads; and the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad Company entered into a contract with Lucas, by which he bound himself to erect and maintain a fence between the railroad and his said field. In the construction of the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad, the fence erected by the P. C. & St. L. Railway Company along the south side of its track, was taken down from its original place, and located on the south side of the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad, but was only partly finished on the 5th of November, 1877. It was conceded by the parties, on the trial in the court below, that at the point where the stock of the plaintiff entered upon the railroad grounds, there was no good and sufficient fence, to turn stock, between the railroad and the adjoining field of Lucas.
In our view of this case, it becomes unnecessary to consider the question of negligence in the management of the defendant’s train, as we are of the opinion, that by reason of the insufficiency of the fence between said adjoining field and the railroad, the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Louis Railway Company became liable for the injury to the plaintiff’s stock.
It was held in Marietta & Cincinnati Railroad Co. v. Stephenson et al., 24 Ohio St., 48, that the obligation to construct and maintain fences upon both sides of railroads imposed by the act of March 25, 1859 (S. & C., 331), was
The railway company, among other things, set up ás a defense against the plaintiff’s claim, the contract it had entered into with the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad Company in reference to fencing on the south side of the dividing line between the two roads. Our attention has been called to the 4th section of the act of March 25, 1859, which provides, that “nothing contained in this act shall be held to affect in any manner any contract or agreement between any railroad company or other party having the control and management of a railroad, and the proprietors or occupiers of lands adjoining for the construction and maintenance of fences, cattle-guards and railroad crossings.” If under this section, the owner of adjoining lands elects, by contract, to assume an obligation to fence of which the law relieves him, he has not, in the absence of gross carelessness on the part of the railroad compan}1-, any ground of complaint if his cattle or oilier animals are killed upon thrailroad through his own breach of his contract. The C. H. & D. Railroad Company v. Waterson et al., 4 Ohio St., 424. But his neighbors, who are strangers to his contract with the railroad company, and whose stock without their knowledge or fault' stray upon his grounds and thence upon the track, are certainly not to be prejudiced in their legal rights by his laches or neglect in performing his agreement.
The competency of the railway company to enter into said contract with the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad Company will not be called in question, but, as its statutory duty was to keep its road properly fenced, it 'did not discharge that duty b}" contracting with another to perform it, if the performance itself was insufficient. Gill v. A. G. W. Railway Company, 27 Ohio St., 240. By selling a portion of its right of way for the purposes of a parallel
We need not here inquire, how far or in what manner, its contract with the Dayton & South-eastern Railroad Company, or the contract between the last named company and Lucas, affected the liability of the railway company to either of said contracting parties. The plaintiff in error can claim no benefit from said contracts, as against Allen, the plaintiff below. Not being an assignee of Lucas, not being a party or privy to said contracts, or connected with them in fact or law in any manner, the rights of Allen are not to be prejudiced by their provisions. In view of the aforegoing considerations, and upon a careful examination of the record in this case, we discover no error assigned for which the judgment of the district court should be reversed.
The judgment of the district court must therefore be affirmed.
Judgment accordingly.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.