Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Timmons
Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Timmons
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This Avas an action originally brought before a justice of the peace, of Williamson county, and from his judgment carried by appeal to the circuit court of that county, Avhere, on a trial had before Judge Cartwright and a jury, verdict and judgment tvere rendered in favor of defendant in error for $155.
On August 18, 1905, before the trial of the cause, the plaintiff in error moved the court to remand it to the nonjury docket, because the record failed to show affirmatively that the jury was called for at the time required by law.
The case had been appealed to the April term of the circuit court. The entries of record at that term were the following: On the judge’s docket, opposite the style of the case, these words: “Jury demanded.” On the clerk’s docket at that term, opposite the style of the case, the following appears: “5) jury.”
His honor overruled the motion, and his action upon this matter is assigned as error.
The following sections of Shannon’s Code contain the provisions of the law applicable to the subject:
“4611. When any civil suit is originally brought in any of the courts of record in this State, which is triable by jury, either party desiring a jury shall demand a jury in his first pleading tendering an issue triable by jury, or he shall call for the same on the first day of any
“4612. In the case of all other suits, either party desiring a jury shall call for the same, and have an entry made on the trial docket that he calls for a jury, and unless such demand is made and entry thereof on the trial docket, it shall be the duty of the court to try the case without a jury; and if no such demand or call is made as aforesaid, and in the manner and time aforesaid, the clerk shall place such cause on the docket to be styled the ‘Nonjury Docket.’
“4613. A failure to demand or to call for a jury as aforesaid, shall be deemed and held, conclusively, an agreement of the parties to submit all issues and questions of fact to the decision of the judge without a jury; and if such demand or call is made as aforesaid, then the clerk shall place the cause wherein the demand or call is made, upon a docket to be styled ‘Jury Docket.’ ”
Under these provisions of the statute, it is the duty of the party desiring a jury, in a case appealed from the judgment of a justice of the peace, to make demand on the first day of the term of the court to which the cause shall be appealed, and, in default thereof, then on the first day of any succeeding term at which the cause
The entries above copied from the judge’s docket and from the clerk’s docket were not a compliance with this rule. It is impossible to tell from them on what day of the term the application was made. It was the intention of the legislature that the evidence of the demand for a jury should affirmatively appear upon the trial docket. The date being of the essence of the demand, there could be no compliance with the statutory requirement in the absence of the appearance of such date. The matter cannot be covered by the mere presumption that the entry was made of the true date. Our attention is called by counsel for defendant in error to the figure 5 appearing on the clerk’s entry, and it is said that the court met on the fifth of the month. The figure is unmeaning, and we cannot supply the words necessary to give it the meaning insisted upon by the defendant in error.
We may add that it does not appear that any demand was made for a jury on the first day of the term at which the cause was actually tried. Such demand would, of course, have been in time. Swink v. McKnight, 88 Tenn., 765, 14 S. W., 311.
To shorten the litigation, however, we deem it proper to express our opinion upon the question of law raised in the assignment of errors and the reply brief, in so for as we consider these questions material.
The action was based upon the provisions of the following sections of Shannon’s Code:
“1595. Each and every railroad company whose unfenced track passes through a field or inclosure is hereby required to place a good and sufficient cattle guard or stops at the points of entering such field or inclosure, and keep the same in good repair.
“1596. In case a field or inclosure through which such unfenced railroad track passes shall be enlarged or extended, or the owner of the land over which such unfenced track passes shall open a field so as to embrace the track of such railroad, such railroad company is hereby required to place good and sufficient cattle guards or stops at the margin of such inclosure of fields, and keep the same in repair: Provided, such OAvner shall give the nearest or most accessible agent of such company thirty days’ notice of such change.
“1597. Any railroad company neglecting or refusing to comply with the provisions of sections 1595 and 1596 shall be liable for all damages sustained by anyone by reason of such neglect or refusal; and, in order for the
1. The statute was intended to protect the lands and crops of adjacent landowners or their tenants from the incursions of straying cattle and other live stock, and also to prevent the escape of such animals from the premises.
The damages are to be measured in relation to the use to which the land is put by the owner. When it is prepared and usable for pasturage, as in the present instance, and the owner is wholly deprived of the enjoyment of it for such purpose, by reason of the absence of cattle guards, he is entitled to recover its rental value for that purpose during the time he is so deprived or to such an extent as he may be deprived. This was in substance the measure of damages recognized in Gould v. Great Northern Ry. Co. (Minn.), 65 N. W., 125, 30 L. R. A., 590, 591, 593, 56 Am. St. Rep., 453, and it is a reasonable rule.
2. It is the duty of the railway company to construct cattle guards where it enters and leaves the land through which it passes, and to extend them by wing fences or other structures over so much of the right of way as it occupies to the point where the land is occupied by
3. There is evidence in the record tending to show that a few hundred feet from where the railway entered defendant in error’s land and a few hunderd feet from where it left this land, there was a cul-de-sac, made by cattle guards on the track opposite the land of neighboring owners and the peculiar configuration of the adjoining land, and that in the absence of a cattle guard upon the defendant in error’s land cattle could stray down into this place, where there was great danger of injury to them; that in fact they were frequently killed in this manner; that this condition of things was productive of injury to the defendant in error, in lessening the usable value of his land as a place for the pasturage of cattle. This evidence, however, would be of no practical value, in the absence of evidence on the part of the owner that he had constructed a fence on his land of such a character as to make the cattle guard and its connecting wings available as a protection to his land.
5. There was evidence tending to- show that negotiations were under way for a considerable time between the defendant in error and the plaintiff in error for the fencing of the land of the former on a division of expenses in lieu of putting in cattle guards. This evidence was held incompetent by his honor. It was insisted by plaintiff in error that the evidence was competent, and that during the pendency of such negotiations the landowner would not be entitled to claim damages for the absence of cattle guards. In opposition to this it was insisted for the defendant in error that the obligation to put in cattle guards was mandatory, under the statute, and that such negotiations could not excuse the company.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
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