Chapin v. Sullivan Railroad

39 N.H. 53
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 N.H. 53 (Chapin v. Sullivan Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapin v. Sullivan Railroad, 39 N.H. 53 (N.H. 1859).

Opinion

Eowler, J.

This action is brought to recover damages which the plaintiff claims to have sustained to his lands adjoining the track of the defendants’ l’ailroad, by reason of the neglect of the defendants to erect and maintain sufficient fences between their railroad and those lands. The report of the commissioner finds the damages to have been occasioned by the ravages of cattle permitted by their owners to run at large upon the public highway, and which escaped from the highway upon the defendants’ railroad, and thence into the plaintiff’s rye field, one of the tracts [56]*56of land to recover damages for injury to which this suit is brought.

It is quite clear, upon the authority of numerous decisions in this State as well as elsewhere, that the cattle mentioned by the commissioner were wrongfully upon the highway, and -wrongfully upon the defendants’ railroad; and therefore, so far as the damages to the rye field are concerned, the case distinctly raises the question, whether or not a railroad borporation is responsible for the damages occasioned to the owner of lands adjoining their road, by the depredations of cattle wrongfully upon their track, and escaping therefrom into the lands of such adjoining owner, in consequence of their neglect to erect and maintain sufficient fences between their railroad and those lands.

As respects the damages to the plaintiff’s pasture, we are aware of no principle on which, under the state of facts found by the commissioner, the plaintiff can fairly claim to compel the defendants to pay him the amount thereof. The commissioner not only fails to find that the cattle committing the injury ever entered the plaintiff’s pasture from the defendants’railroad, but he does expressly find that they would most naturally thus enter directly from the highway, and not by passing first over the defendants’ railroad. The inevitable conclusion, therefore, from the report of the commissioner, would seem to be, that the damages to the pasture were committed by cattle which their owners suffered to run at large in the public highway, and which gassed directly from” that highway upon the plaintiff’s land, so that the neglect of the defendants to erect and maintain sufficient fence between their railroad and this portion of the plaintiff’s lands, in no way, directly or indirectly, contributed to the injury there sustained by the plaintiff!

In relation to the damages to the rye field, as before suggested, the simple question is, does the obligation of [57]*57the railroad corporation to erect and maintain a sufficient and lawful fence on each side of their track, imposed by the statute, [Rev. Stat., ch. 146, sec. 6 ; Comp. Laws 351; Dean v. The Sullivan Railroad, 22 N. H. 316] bind them to the erection and maintenance of such fences only against cattle rightfully running against them, or against all cattle, even those trespassing on the adjoining lands, or upon ■their own track ? We are entirely satisfied that only the former liability is imposed by the statute.

At common law the proprietor or tenant of land was not obliged to fence it. Every man was bound to keep his cattle upon his own premises at his peril, and he might do this in any manner he chose. Dovaston v. Payne, 2 H. Black. 527; Rust v. Low, 6 Mass. 90, 99; Jackson v. Rutland and Burlington Railroad, 25 Vt. 157, 158; Wells v. Howell, 19 Johns. 385; Man. & Lincolnshire Railway v. Wallis, 25 Eng. L. & E. 373; Morse v. Rutland & Burlington R. R., 27 Vt. 49; Lafayette & Indiana Railroad v. Shriner, 6 Porter 141; Woolson v. Northern Railroad, 19 N. H. 267; Indiana & Cincinnati R. R. v. Binney, 8 Ind. 402.

It has long been well settled, that where the owners of adjoining lands are bound by prescription, agreement, or the provisions of a statute, to maintain partition fences, they are obliged to maintain them only against animals rightfully upon the adjoining closes, and not against cattle trespassing thereon. Same authorities cited above, and also Lord v. Wormwood, 29 Maine 282.

So, too, where the owner of land is obliged by prescription or statute to maintain a fence against a highway, he is obliged to maintain it only against cattle rightfully upon the way. Same authorities, and Stackpole v. Healey, 16 Mass. 33.

These principles have been repeatedly affirmed by the courts of this State, [Avery v. Maxwell, 4 N. H. 36; York v. Davis, 11 N. H. 241; Page v. Olcott, 13 N. H. 399,] and they seem to us as applicable to railroad corporations, con[58]*58sidered as the tenants of their road-way, as to other land-holders. In Lawrence v. Combs, 37 N. H. 331, where the various authorities were carefully collected and fully examined, it was held that the defendant was not responsible for damages occasioned to the plaintiff’s crops, by cattle escaping from the highway, where they were running at large, upon the defendant’s land, and from thence, through an insufficient fence which the defendant was bound to maintain, upon the land of the plaintiff, notwithstanding the provisions of section 12 of chapter 136 of the Revised Statutes, that “ the pai’ty neglecting to build or keep in repair any partition fence which he is bound to maintain, shall be liable for all damages arising from such neglect, and shall have no remedy for any damage happening to himself therefrom. ’ ’ It would seem quite clear that there could be no stronger or more extensive liability upon a railroad corporation, implied from the obligation to maintain fences, than is expressed in relation to adjoining land-owners in the explicit and forcible language of the statute we have quoted. We can conceive of no sufficient reason why, if land-owners, bound by statute to support partition fences, and expressly made responsible for all damages happening to adjoining owners by reason of their neglect to do so, are held to be only responsible for damages occasioned by cattle rightfully running against such fences on the one side and the other, railroad corporations should be held to another and a different rule.

The question before us has, however, as we think, been substantially determined in several reported decisions in this State, as wTell as elsewhere.

In Woolson v. The Northern Railroad, 19 N. H. 267, it was held that a railroad corporation was not liable for damages done by their engines and cars to cattle which escaped from the highway upon the railroad track, because [59]*59such cattle, while thus upon their track, were wrongfully trespassing upon the corporation.

In Towns v. The Cheshire Railroad, 21 N. H. 363, it was expressly decided that railroad corporations were not bound under the statute to make or keep fences, except against the lands of adjoining owners, and cattle rightfully thereon, and not against cattle escaping from, a highway and trespassing upon the track of the railroad.

In Cornwall v. The Sullivan Railroad, 28 N. H.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Giles v. Boston & Maine Railroad
55 N.H. 552 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1875)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.H. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapin-v-sullivan-railroad-nh-1859.