Hayes v. Michigan Central Railroad

111 U.S. 228, 4 S. Ct. 369, 28 L. Ed. 410, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1779
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 7, 1884
Docket263
StatusPublished
Cited by178 cases

This text of 111 U.S. 228 (Hayes v. Michigan Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Michigan Central Railroad, 111 U.S. 228, 4 S. Ct. 369, 28 L. Ed. 410, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1779 (1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court. He stated the facts in the foregoing language and continued:

The question of contributory negligence does not appear to us to arise upon this record. It is not contended by the counsel for the defendant in error, that, if there was evidence tending to prove negligence on its part, the case could properly have been withdrawn from the jury on the ground that it appeared as matter of law that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover by reason of his own contributory negligence. The single question, therefore, for present decision is whether there was evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant which should have been submitted to the jury.

The particular negligence charged in the declaration and relied on in argument, is the omission of the railroad company to build a fence on the west line of its right of way, dividing it fiom Lake Park; a duty, it is alleged, imposed upon it by the ordinance of June 14th, 1852, a breach of which resulting in his injury, confers on the plaintiff a right of action for damages.

It is not claimed on the part of the plaintiff in error that the railroad company was under an obligation, at common law, to fence its tracks generally, but that, at common law, the question is always whether, under the circumstances of the particular case, the railroad has been constructed or operated with *235 such reasonable precautions for the safety of others, not in fault, as is required by the maxim sic utere tuo ut non alienum laidas; that, consequently, in circumstances where the public safety requires such a precaution as a fence, to prevent danger from the ordinary operations of the railroad, to strangers not themselves in fault, the omission of it is negligence; and that it is a question of fact for a jury, whether the circumstances exist which create such a duty. ' •

This principle has been recognized and applied in cases of collisions at crossings of railroads and public highways, when injuries' have occurred to persons necessarily passing upon and across railroad tracks in the use of an ordinary highway. “ These cases,” said the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in . Eaton v. Fitchburg Railroad Company, 129 Mass. 364, “ all rest on the common-law rule that when there are different public easements to be enjoyed by two parties at the same time and in the same place, each must use his privilege with due care, so as not to injure the other. The rule applies to grade crossings, because the traveller and the railroad each has common rights in the highway at those points. The fact that the legislature has seen fit, for the additional safety of travellers, imperatively to require the corporation to give certain warnings at such crossings, does not relieve it from the duty of doing whatever else may be reasonably necessary.” It was accordingly held in that case, that the jury might properly consider, whether, under all the circumstances, the defendant was guilty of negligence in not having a gate or a flagman at the crossing, although not expressly required to do so by any statute or public authority invested with discretionary powers to establish such regulations.

And the same principle has been applied in other cases than those of the actual coincidence, at crossings, of public highways. In Barnes v. Ward, 9 C. B. 392, it was decided, after much ..consideration, that,the proprietor and occupier of land making an excavation on his own land, but adjoining a public highway, rendering the way unsafe to those who used it- with ordinary care, was guilty of a public nuisance, even though the danger consisted in the risk of accidentally deviating from the road, *236 and liable to an action for damages to one injured by reason thereof; for the danger thus created may reasonably deter prudent persons from using the way, and thus the full enjoyment of it by the public is, in effect, as much impeded as in the case of an ordinary nuisance to a highway. This doctrine has always since been recognized in England. Hardcastle v. South Yorkshire Ry. Co. 4 Hurl. & Nor. 67; Hounsell v. Smyth, 7 C. B. N. S. 731; Binks v. South Yorkshire Ry. Co., 3 B. & S. 244.

It has also been generally adopted in this country. Norwich v. Breed, 30 Conn. 535; Beck v. Carter, 68 N. Y. 283; Homan v. Stanley, 66 Penn. St. 464; B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Boteler, 38 Md. 568; Stratton v. Staples, 59 Me. 94; Young v. Harvey, 16 Ind. 314; Coggswell v. Inhabitants of Lexington, 4 Cush. 307; although Howland v. Vincent, 10 Mete. 371, is an exception.

The enforcement' of this rule in. regard to excavations made by proprietors of lots adjacent to streets and public grounds in cities and towns, in .the prosecution of building enterprises, and in the construction of permanent areas for cellar ways, is universally recognized as an obvious and salutary exercise of the common police powers of municipal government; and the omission to provide barriers and signals, prescribed by ordinance in such cases for the safety of individuals in the use of thoroughfares, is a failure of duty, charged with all the consequences of negligence, including that of liability for personal injuries of which it is the responsible cause. The true test is, as said by Hoar, J., in Alger v. City of Lowell, 3 Allen,'402, “ not whether the dangerous place is outside of the way, or whether some small slip of ground not included in the way must be traversed in reaching the danger, but whether there is such a risk of a traveller, using ordinary care, in passing along the street, being thrown or falling into the dangerous place, that a railing is requisite to make the way itself safe and convenient.”

As the ground of liability in these cases is that of a public nuisance, causing special injury, the rule, of course, does not apply where the structure complained of on the defendant’s property, and the mode of its use, are authorized by law; and, *237 consequently, what has been said is not supposed to bear directly and strictly on the question in the present case, but rather as inducement, showing the ground of legislative authority implied in the ordinance, the breach of which is imputed to the defendant as negligence towards the plaintiff, and as serving to interpret the meaning and application of its provisions.

The ordinance cannot, we think, be treated as a mere contract between the city, as proprietor of the land over which the right of way is granted, and the railroad company, to which no one else is privy, and under which no third person can derive immediately any private right, prescribing conditions of the grant, to be enforced only by the city itself.

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Bluebook (online)
111 U.S. 228, 4 S. Ct. 369, 28 L. Ed. 410, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-michigan-central-railroad-scotus-1884.