Hildebrand v. Chicago B. & Q. R. R.

17 P.2d 651, 45 Wyo. 175, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 2
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1933
Docket1744
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 651 (Hildebrand v. Chicago B. & Q. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hildebrand v. Chicago B. & Q. R. R., 17 P.2d 651, 45 Wyo. 175, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 2 (Wyo. 1933).

Opinion

*179 Blume, Justice.

This is an action instituted by the plaintiff Hildebrand against the defendant railroad company to recover damages for cattle killed on the latter’s right of way. The petition was in three counts, claiming damages for cattle killed in August, 1929, in August, 1930, and in December, 1930. Judgment was in favor of the plaintiff, and that judgment was affirmed in this court. 13 Pac. (2d) 1081. *180 A rebearing was granted as to the first and second causes of action; that is to say, for the causes of action arising in August, 1929 and in August, 1930, and the case has been re-argued orally and ably, the points urged being mentioned hereafter. The situation, as to both causes of action are similar, and both can be decided upon the same grounds, without mentioning the special ground on which the first cause of action was decided in the original opinion, and to make the situation clear, the essential facts, not all heretofore set out, will be stated here.

It is admitted that the cattle in question were killed on defendant’s tracks by its trains, and that this was at a farm where the railroad company was required to fence, or at least the case was tried on that theory. There is testimony indicating that those killed in August, 1929, entered the right of way through an open gate at a place about two miles west of plaintiff’s land. The right of way at that place was under the supervision of defendant’s section foreman Reas. The nature of the gate and crossing is not shown. Reas testified that he closed the gate on the evening before the cattle were killed; that he often found the gate open, in fact nearly every morning. The cattle killed in August, 1930, entered the right of way through a gate and crossing situated just east of plaintiff’s land, the crossing leading to a tank farm. The right of way along that place was under the supervision of defendant’s section foreman Day. He testified that he closed the gate the evening before the cattle were killed; that it was in good condition; that it was open practically all the time; that he would close it every time that he saw it open, sometimes three or four times a day. This crossing was apparently constructed mainly for the benefit of the people going to and from the tank farm. Seemingly both of the crossings in question were private, neither being provided with cattle guards, but there is nothing in the record to indicate that they are “farm crossings” contemplated by *181 Section 38-236, Rev. St. 1931, or that they were otherwise required or permitted by statute; in fact the record indicates the contrary in connection with the crossing east of plaintiff’s land.

1. The first point urged herein is that we erred in stating in the original opinion that “the bnrden of proving want of negligence” was on the railroad company. The statement does not refer to the burden of proof in the ease as a whole, but merely to the burden of the evidence at a particular stage of the case. It was made in view of the provision of Section 96-117, Rev. St. 1931, that a plaintiff in a ease of this character makes out a prima facie ease for recovery by proving the loss or injury of his property, and in view of the admission that the cattle in question were killed on defendant’s right of way by its trains, and the evidence as to the ownership of the property and the value thereof. We have been favored, both orally and in the briefs, with an analytical discussion as to the difference between burden of proof and burden of the evidence, and our attention is called to a lengthy consideration of that subject in the ease of First National Bank v. Ford, 30 Wyo. 110, 216 Pac. 691, 31 A. L. R. 1441. Our statement in the original opinion, and above mentioned, accords with that made in Elliott on Railroads (3rd Ed.) Sec. 1729, where the author says-.

“Thus statutes are in force which make the mere proof of the killing of or injury to an animal by the cars or locomotives of a railway company sufficient to raise a presumption of negligence against it. As soon as this presumption arises the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case and will recover unless the defendant introduces evidence to show that it exercised due care and was not guilty of negligence.”

And in 52 C. J. 109, it is said:

*182 “In order to rebut the presumption (created by statute), defendant must show affirmatively that there was no negligence, or default in performance of a statutory duty, directing and confining his proof to the particular acts of negligence or statutory default charged in plaintiff’s pleading.”

And this statement is in line with one made in First National Bank v. Ford, supra, where we said that when a party has made a prima facie case, and this case is not met, “the verdict or judgment must necessarily go for the party in whose favor the presumption operates.” It should, however, be borne in mind in that connection that there is a difference in the effect of presumptions, if we include inferences and so-called — newly-coined—pseudo-presumptions under that term; that the term presumption of law — said to be the only true presumption — being a deduction which the law directs to be made from particular facts, has no absolute boundary which is equally limited by all the courts, and that when a prima facie case is made by the aid of what are recognized as merely inferences or pseudo-presumptions, and is not rebutted, this simply authorizes, but does not compel, the jury to find in favor of the party so making such ease. Sweeney v. Erving, 228 U. S. 233, 33 Sup. Ct. 416, 57 L. Ed. 815, Ann. Cas. 1914D (involving the doctrine of res ipsa loquitor); Niebel v. Winslow, 88 N. J. L. 191, 95 A. 995; McDaniel v. R. R. Co., 190 N. C. 474,130 S. E. 208; Wigmore, Ev. (2nd Ed.) Sec. 2491; Jones, Ev. (2nd Ed.) Sec. 27. The ease at bar, we think, conj.es within the rule stated in National Bank v. Ford, supra. Howsoever that may be, while the burden of proof of the case as a whole was on the plaintiff in this case, the prima facie case made under the statute would in any event authorize a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, unless this prima facie case was met by evidence which dissipated it. But counsel for defendant strenuously contend that such prima facie ease need not be wholly met; that a presumption will not stand against *183 or in the face of evidence, and, if we understand them correctly, that when any evidence at all is introduced on the subject to which the prima facie case relates, then the presumption, or prima facie case, is by that fact alone removed from the case; that, accordingly, when some evidence of care on the part of the railroad company was introduced, the prima facie ease made under the statute, or the presumption created thereby, disappeared, whether the evidence to cause such appearance was adequate for that purpose or not. Specifically, counsel claim that when they introduced evidence to the effect that the gates in question here were closed on the evening before the cattle were killed, that ended the presumption herein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 651, 45 Wyo. 175, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hildebrand-v-chicago-b-q-r-r-wyo-1933.