Crandall v. Eldridge

53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 411, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 399
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 411 (Crandall v. Eldridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crandall v. Eldridge, 53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 411, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 399 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Landon, J.:

Independently of the statute the plaintiff would have no right of recovery, first, because he would have been bound to restrain his'own cattle; second, the defendant may lawfully retain upon his premises the pit or morass which nature placed there. He is no more obliged to erect guards around it, than he would be around a natural lake or pond in which men or animals might be drowned. The statute, however, requires this defendant to keep the division fence between his and the plaintiff’s lands in repair. (1 R. S., m. p., 353, § 30.) It prescribes the nature of the liability incurred if he neglects this ■duty. That liability was by the Revised Statutes (id., § 37, m. p., 354), declared to be a liability to pay to the party injured all such damages :as shall accrue thereby.” An attempt was made in the case of Clark v. Brown (18 Wend., 213), to make a defendant liable under this .statute for the cattle of the plaintiff which passed from the plaintiff’s land upon the defendant’s land through a defective division fence which the defendant neglected to keep in repair, which cattle there died from eating too much green corn, which the defendant was lawfully raising. The case, as we are told in Stafford v. Ingersol (3 Hill, 38), led to the amendment of the statute the next year (chap. 261, Laws 1838 ; 3 Edm., 300) which restricts the recovery of the party injured to such damages as shall accrue to his lands, crops, fruit trees, [413]*413shrubbery and fixtures connected with the land; and thus the statute stands now. We are cited to no case in which relief under this statute has been given, because of injuries' sustained by cattle which escape from the owner’s inclosure by reason of such defective fence.

It is urged that since the statute enjoins a duty, the non-performance of it is negligence, and the injured party is entitled to full compensation for all the injuries he sustains. But the statute in regard to division fences authorizes the parties to elect between their common law rights and liabilities, and their statutory rights and liabilities, and the inference is strong that when the parties elect to be governed by their statutory rights and liabilities they only elect to assume such liabilities as the statute declares.

We have held at this term (Graham v. Pres., etc., of D. & H. C. Co.)

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Related

Van Wyck v. Seward
18 Wend. 198 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 411, 12 N.Y. St. Rep. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandall-v-eldridge-nysupct-1887.