Gorman v. Pacific Railroad

26 Mo. 441
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 26 Mo. 441 (Gorman v. Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorman v. Pacific Railroad, 26 Mo. 441 (Mo. 1858).

Opinion

Scott, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It has always been the understanding as to the law in this state that our statute concerning inclosures entirely abrogated that principle of the common law which exempted the proprietor of land from the obligation of fencing it, and imposed on the owner of animals the duty of confining them to his own premises. No conviction has more thoroughly occupied the public mind than this, and nothing would sooner arouse the attention of the community than an apprehension that the old rule of the common law was to any extent to be revived. As early as the 27th October, 1808, the act for regulating inclosures became a law, and from that time the people have rested in the belief that they incurred no responsibility and were not guilty of any fault or negligence towards others by turning loose their cattle, unless when their cattle trespassed upon fields inclosed in the manner pre[446]*446scribed by law. An injury to cattle, unless trespassing on fields legally inclosed, was redressed without any inquiry whether the cattle, when they received the injury, were on the land of the owner or that of the individual committing the wrong; and this court here takes occasion to express its dissent to the applicability in this state of the doctrine and spirit, of the case of the Kailway Company v. Skinner, 19 Penn. 304, which concludes with the opinion that an owner of cattle killed or injured on a railway has no recourse to the company or its servants; and that he is liable for damage done by them to the company or the passengers.” Our cattle in their range allowed by law do better than the Pennsylvania cattle running at large, which pick up a scanty subsistence on waste fields and lands.” The range, as it is called, is a source of wealth to many of our citizens, and nothing would induce them more resolutely to oppose the location of a railroad in their vicinity than the knowledge that it would impose on them the obligation of keeping their cattle and stock in inclosures. That obligation would not be confined to those in the immediate neighborhood of the road, for cattle, when not confined, frequently stray much farther from their proprietor than would bo supposed by those unacquainted with their habits. Many farmers have a sufficiency of uninclosed land for the pasturage of their cattle. Shall they be bound to inclose it at the peril of a suit for an injury caused by their cattle which may cost them their estates ? The other interests in the state ai’e not all to be made subservient to the railroad interest. That interest enters into competition with other pursuits with the advantages and privileges the law confers upon it, but there is nothing in it of so overshadowing a character that all other pursuits must yield to it. There are none who are not impressed with the importance of railroads, and their great utility as the medium of intercourse and commerce. No state that will keep pace with the age but must build and encourage them. But we should be cautious how we clothe them with privileges and immunities, at the cost of the rest of the community, which may [447]*447enkindle a spirit -hostile to their existence and seeking its gratification in their destruction.

A railroad company is entitled to the free and uninterrupted enjoyment of the road which has been constructed for its use. No one can molest it in the enjoyment of this right, and lie who by his wantonness or his negligence has received an injury by its machinery or otherwise has no just cause of complaint. But the steam engine, whilst it is very useful, is at the same time a very dangerous agent, and he who undertakes to use it must, in order to avoid doing injuries to others, employ a skill and diligence proportionate to its dangerous nature. The diligence necessary to avoid injuries in driving an ordinary wagon on the highway furnishes no idea of the care and circumspection exacted of those who use the steam engine. Although the duty of the company as a carrier extends only to the passengers and freight on the trains, and the law of carriers is only applicable to .it as the transporter of passengers and freight, yet as regards the persons and things to which it does not stand in that relation it is under that law which enjoins on it the duty of so using the thiugs over which it has control as not to do harm to others, and which exacts of it a caution and prudence commensurate to the dangerous nature of the means which it employs. Whilst its first duty is the preservation of the passengers and freight, yet, consistent with that duty, in order to avoid injury, it is required to use the care and diligence of a prudent man, knowing that he is using a powerful and dangerous agent. As proprietor, the company is under no greater obligation to fence its road than any other owner of land. But, in the' event of an injury, the fact that the road was not fenced must and should exercise an influence in weighing the degree of care to be employed by the company. When an injury is done, the omission to fence will be weighed along with the other circumstances in determining the measure of diligence to be used by the company or its agents. The want of the fence will increase the care required in order to prevent wrongs. In leaving the road unprotected the company .is [448]*448aware tliat cattle may stray upon it, and its exertions must be increased in order to avoid injuries under such circumstances. The owner of cattle, as we have said, is under no obligation to inclose them. If he permits them to go at large and they should wander upon the road and be injured Unavoidably, he can have no redress ; but if a loss occurs for the want of care and attention on the part of the company or its agents, it must be repaired by those who have caused it. It may be asked, why make the company increase its diligence for the want of a fence, and not hold the owner of cattle in the vicinity of a road guilty of negligence in not inclosing thorn ? The answer is obvious. The obligation of the company to increased care arises from the dangerous nature of the business it pursues. The care in conducting any business must be proportionate to its dangerous nature. This is a universal principle not applicable alone to railroad companies. Although railroad corporations are organized for the public benefit, are matters in which the state takes a deep interest and regards as of public concern; although they may be looked upon as bodies endowed with capacities for the promotion of the public good and for the diffusion of advantages to the state, yet it must not be overlooked that such corporations are entirely managed by private individuals over whose selection the state has no control, and that their pecuniary profits belong exclusively to the companies and their stockholders. Here there is a motive to selfishness. In this respect they do not differ from any other private corporation whose sole aim is the making of money, and they should be subjected to the same control, for the safety and protection of the rights of individuals.

We are fully aware that the views herein expressed are seemingly in conflict with opinions declared in some of the states in relation to injuries done to animals by railroads. That difference arises in a great measure from the different views entertained in regard to the duty of the owner as to the confinement of his animals. Those courts which maintain that a railroad company is not liable for the destruction [449]

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Bluebook (online)
26 Mo. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-pacific-railroad-mo-1858.