Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Attaway
Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Attaway
Opinion of the Court
Appellee sued appellant in justice court, precint No. 4, Wood county, according to the transcript “account damages to live stock $195.00.” The pleading of appellant by the same record was the “general, denial.” Upon trial before the justice of the peace judgment was for appellee for $150. In the time and manner provided by law appeal was taken to the county court of Wood county, where there was trial de novo before the court upon the same pleading, resulting again in judgment for appellee for $150, from which last judgment appeal has been prosecuted to this court.
The county judge, upon request of appellee, filed conclusions of fact, but inasmuch as appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the court’s conclusions of fact, we will, in our own language, state the substance of the essential facts deducible from the evidence. Appellee lives on his farm, a short distance west of Neweome, a station on appellant’s railroad in Wood county. The railroad crosses his farm. His residence is south of the railroad. Opposite his residence and across the railroad is his pasture, which is under fence. The residence is connected with the pasture by a fenced passageway or lane which leads from the farmhouse across the railroad track to the pasture. Where the lane crosses the railroad there are cattle guards on each side. Appel-lee’s father, with the consent of appellant, built the lane, to be used as a private crossing for his stock from his residence into the pasture. Appellant put in the cattle guards about 10 years prior to the injury. When the guards were put in, nothing was said concerning their upkeep. Stock was turned into the lane at appellee’s residence through a gate there, and found their way thence across the railway into the pasture. Prior to instituting this suit appellee turned two mares into the lane, and when they reached the crossing they walked over and across the cattle guards onto the track and into a public road, which crosses the railway track at said point just outside the lane. There is no detailed discription of the guards in the record, but it does appear that the guards are made from a solid sheet of iron, presumably to fit in between the tracks and outside thereof, into which interstices are cut, and the cut part then raised to ah upright position, which results in a sharp upright spike about two inches high. When the mares crossed over the guards these spikes entered their feet, injuring them seriously, as a result of which one died and the other was disabled for two weeks. Due to the slope of the land where the guards were built, when rain fell the water would wash sand upon the guards, and at the time the mares were injured the guards, save a few spikes, were covered by such deposit and not visible to the eye. Appellee knew the condition of the guards before his mares were injured, but made no complaint thereof to the company. The evidence supports the amount of the verdict.
“The cattle guard itself may have been in good condition, and defendant in error may have strictly performed its statutory duty in the selection of the guard used, and in the manner of constructing and placing it upon its roadbed, yet guilty of such negligence in respect to permitting grass to grow up through and around said guard, whereby plaintiff in error’s horses were induced to cross over the same, as rendered it liable for the injury thereby inflicted upon them.”
In the case from which we have just quoted, the live stock entered over the defective guard from the commons into a private field, while in the instant case they entered from a private inclosure over a defective guard upon the commons. But we fail to see that such fact affects the rule, as is contended by appellant. Every inclosure through which the road passes must be protected by cattle guards, which of course include private in-elosures. While the statute may conceivably have contemplated public inelosures, it is beyond question that it did contemplate private inclosures. Such a holding, in effect, under facts nearly identical with those in the instant case, will be found in Stephenville N. & S. T. Ry. Co. v. Schrank, 175 S. W. 471. See, also, T. & P. Ry. Co. v. Sproles, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 294, 105 S. W. 521. There is a broad distinction to be drawn between the case at bar and the many cases which have been passed upon by the appellate courts and cited by appellant, holding, in effect, that a railway company is not liable, under the facts in those cases, for injuries received by live stock while upon its tracks not resulting from contract with its locomotives or cars. Railway companies are not required to so construct their railways as to prevent injury to stock which may stray thereon and negligence vel non is always an issue in such cases, save when it appears that the railway company ran its locomotives or cars upon such live stock; but an entirely different rule pertains when the railway company is by statute, charged with the specific duty of maintaining a defined condition at inclosures, and the failure to maintain such condition is the proximate cause of the injury as in the ease at bar. We accordingly feel constrained to overrule appellant’s first assignment of error on the ground that evidence sustains the conclusion of the trial judge that the appellant had failed to keep its guards at the point where its tracks crossed appellee’s in- ' closure in repair.
“While the authorities seem somewhat conflicting upon this question, we believe the better reason is with those cases which hold that the owner of land adjacent to a railroad cannot thus be deprived of the ordinary use of his property, but, rather, that the railway company in such cases assumes the risk of the accident as a consequence of its neglect to properly discharge a statutory duty; that it undertakes at its peril to see that no harm comes to stock from running its trains under such conditions.”
*1154 In St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co. of Tex. v. Blackwell, 40 S. W. 860, after citing Clark v. Dyer, 81 Tex. 340, 16 S. W. 1063, in support of the rule, it is said:
“The statute [article 6599] authorizes the owner, in case the railway company fails to construct and keep in repair needed cattle guards, to construct them and keep them in repair at the expense of the company; but the company cannot shield itself from liability upon the ground that the owner did not avail himself of the privilege of doing the work himself. There are obvious reasons for this.”
One of the obvious reasons is stated to be that:
“The owner in lawful possession of his land is entitled to use it, in any lawful manner he may desire, for any purpose for which it may be adapted. The law does not require that the owner shall preserve and guard his premises from the effects of injuries caused by the wrongful acts of another before he is justified in the use thereof. A different rule would virtually deprive the owner of the beneficial rights incident to the enjoyment of his estate.”
Por the reasons stated, we conclude that the evidence did not raise the issue of contributory negligence.
The judgment is affirmed.
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