Woodward v. Griffith
Woodward v. Griffith
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
(Transferred from Austin.)
§ 360. Domestic animals may run at large; owner may recover damages for injury to; case stated. Griffith constructed a barbed wire fence around a lot of land belong
§ 361. Fence; an owner of land may fence it; barbed wire fence, when lawful. It is also the law of this state, that the owner of land may inclose it with a fence — with a barbed wire fence—if he so chooses. But the law expressly and specifically provides the hind of such fence. It must have three strands of barbed wire, with posts not farther apart than fifteen feet, with a board not less than four inches wide and one-half inch thick, hung to the top wire; or two strands of barbed wire and a board not less than five inches wide and one inch thick; or two
§ 362. Negligence in constructing such fence; liability for injury caused thereby. Was appellee, by the construction of this fence upon his own land, guilty of negligence such as would make him chargeable for injuries received by stock running at large, occasioned by contact therewith? We think so. It was made his duty by statute to construct the fence in a particular manner. The object of this requirement was to protect individuals and their property from being injured by barbed wire fences, it being well known that they were dangerous when constructed with posts far apart, and without board or rail, and especially dangerous in the night-time, the wire alone being almost invisible in the dark. “The statute evidently intended that such fences should be so constructed as to be readily seen by persons and animals passing near them, and the danger of contact with them be thus averted.” [Williams v. Mudgett, 2 Tex. Law Rev. 331.] When a duty is imposed by statute, it is negligence to fail to perform such duty. [Cooley on Torts, 650 et seq.] “'If a duty is enjoined upon A. by express statute, and B. is, without fault on his part, injured by reason of the fact that A. has failed to perform it, B. makes out a case of damages against A. by merely showing that A.’s neglect to comply with the statute was the proximate cause of the injury which he sustained.” [2 Thomp. on Neg. 1232, § 5.]
§ 363. Same; what constitutes negligence. Negligence is the omission to perform a statutoiy duty, or “ it is the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided by those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or the doing of something which a prudent and reasonable man would
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.