Illinois Central Railroad v. Davidson

80 N.E. 250, 225 Ill. 618
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 250 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Central Railroad v. Davidson, 80 N.E. 250, 225 Ill. 618 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice VicicErs

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee brought this suit against the Illinois Central Railroad Company to recover damages to eight horses and one mule, and attorney’s fees, under the Railroad Fencing act of this State, caused by the engine and cars of the railroad company. The facts are undisputed, and the sole question for our determination is whether the railroad company is liable for the injuries under section 68 of chapter 114. (3 Starr & Cur. Stat. p. 3253.)

There is a grade crossing of the Illinois Central railroad and the Pawnee railroad at Pawnee Junction, Illinois,- at right angles. The fences of the two roads join, so as to enclose the crossing. Neither road has constructed wing fences or cattle-guards, so as to prevent animals that might get upon the crossing from wandering along the right of way of either railroad. Appellee’s horses got onto the right of way of the Pawnee railroad through a defect iñ the fence about a quarter of a mile east of the crossing of the two roads. They passed down west to the crossing, turned south on the Illinois Central railroad right of way and traveled about a mile. Here they encountered a cattle-guar.d and turned north on the Illinois Central, and were struck and injured by one of appellant’s trains about three-quarters of a mile south of the crossing. The judgment below was for $1375 as the value of the animals and $150 attorney’s fee. The judgment has been affirmed by the Appellate Court for the Third District, and the Illinois Central Railroad Company has prosecuted this further appeal.

The circuit court refused to direct a verdict for appellant, and also refused general' instructions based upon the theory that appellant was not required to construct wing fences and cattle-guards at the crossing .described. Exceptions to these rulings of the court were preserved, and the errors assigned thereon present the only question involved.

The section of the statute upon which appellee relies for recovery reads as follows: “That evejry railroad corporation shall, within six months after any part of its line is open for use, erect and thereafter maintain fences on both sides of its road or so much thereof as is open for use, suitable and sufficient to prevent cattle, horses, sheep, hogs or other stock from getting on such railroad, except at the crossings of public roads and highways, and within such portion of cities and incorporated towns and villages as are or may be hereafter laid out and platted into lots and blocks, with gates or bars at the farm crossings of such railroad, which farm crossings shall be constructed by such corporation when and where the same may become necessary, for the use of the proprietors of the lands adjoining such railroad ; and shall also construct, where. the same has not already been done, and thereafter maintain at all road crossings now existing or hereafter established, cattle-guards, suitable and sufficient to prevent cattle, horses, sheep, hogs and other stock from getting on such railroad; and when such fences or cattle-guards are not made as aforesaid, or when such fences or cattle-guards are not kept in good repair, such railroad corporations shall be liable for all damages which may be done by the agents, engines or cars of such corporation, to such cattle, horses, sheep, hogs or other stock thereon, and reasonable attorney’s fees, in any court wherein suit is brought for such damages, or to which the same may be appealed; but where such fences and guards have been duly made and kept in good repair, such railroad corporation shall not be liable for any such damages, unless negligently or willfully done.”

Whether or not appellant is required by the foregoing statute to construct and maintain cattle-guards and wing fences at the crossing in question is a question of law, (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Whalen, 42 Ill. 396,) and it must be determined from a construction of the statute in question. The object sought to be accomplished by the enactment of this statute was to prevent injury to domestic animals and to protect employees and the. traveling public from the danger resulting from the obstruction of railroad tracks. (Terre Haute and Indianapolis Railway Co. v. Williams, 172 Ill. 379.) The statute should receive a liberal construction in furtherance of its objects. Public roads and highways and platted portions of cities, towns and villages are expressly excepted from the general purview of the statute in question, and by construction it has been held that other places where public' convenience forbids fencing were also excepted as being within the spirit and intent of the statute. (Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. v. Guertin, 115 Ill. 466; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Hans, 111 id. 114.) It has also been settled that where the' railroad is exempt, either expressly or by necessary implication, from fencing certain portions of its road, cattle-guards, ■connected with wing fences, must be placed at the terminus of the exempt portions, to prevent animals from going to ' portions of the right of way required to be fenced. . (Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Co. v. Elder, 149 Ill. 173; Toledo, St. Louis and Kansas City Railroad Co. v. Franklin, 159 id. 99.) In Elliott on Railroads (vol. 3, sec. 1198,) the rule is laid down as follows: “The general rule is, that wherever a railroad company is under obligation to fence its tracks it is bound to maintain cattle-guards at the boundary line between the fenced and unfenced parts of its track.” Clearly, there is an implied exemption from the duty to fence the right of way at a grade crossing of one railroad over anothér, and yet, unless a railroad is included in the words “public roads and highways,” it is not expressly ex- ■ cepted by the language of the statute, but it would be so absurd and impracticable to give the statute a construction requiring one railroad to build a fence across the track of another that we have no hesitation in holding that such railroad crossing is excepted, whether it be included in the words “public roads and highways” or not. There is here, therefore, an exception, and appellant was not required to fence its right of way across the Pawnee railroad right of way; and this brings us to the precise and only frictional question in the case: whether appellant was required to construct cattle-guards and wing fences so as to prevent domestic animals from getting upon its right of way from the right of way of the Pawnee Railroad Company.

Appellant contends, with much force and reason, that a distinction exists between this crossing, and other places where railroads are not required to fence, in that as to all other such places where public convenience requires the road to be left open the public have a right to use such open places, and that domestic animals may be rightfully there and may stray upon the railroad unless prevented by wing fences and cattle-guards, while as to the crossing in question the public have no right to use said crossing except to cross over it on the cars of one or the other of the railroads, and that in no event can domestic animals get upon said crossing without passing over the line fence of one of the railroads.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.E. 250, 225 Ill. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-davidson-ill-1907.