Locke v. First Div. of the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad

15 Minn. 350
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 15 Minn. 350 (Locke v. First Div. of the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Locke v. First Div. of the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad, 15 Minn. 350 (Mich. 1870).

Opinion

Ripley, Oh. J.

By the Court This action was brought to recover damages for the killing plaintiff’s cow.

After verdict for plaintiff, defendant moved, upon a case settled, for a new trial upon the following grounds :

First. Errors in law occuring at the trial and excepted to by the defendant.

Second. The verdict is not justified by the evidence, and is contrary to law.

Third. Excessive damages, appearing , to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice. (This is not urged.)

Defendant appeals to this court from the order of the district court denying the motion.

The cow was killed on the 8th of March, 1869. The plaintiff then lived at Minnetonka, about one quarter of a mile southerly of the rail road. About noon .of that day, ho turned the cow out to water, and she, with some other cattle, followed some men who were hauling hay across the rail road, eating the hay that got scattered along the bushes. She was seen at about 2 p. ni., being then some sixty rods north of such crossing, heading north. About 3 o’clock in the afternoon of the same day she was run against and killed, at or near such crossing, by the defendant’s regular passenger train from the ivest, running upon its usual time, and in its usual manner, and at the usual rate of speed, from eighteen to twenty .miles an hour. The crossing was about one quarter of a mile west of Minnetonka státion, a way [353]*353station, the train not stopping there unless signaled, and not stopping on this occasion.

■The usual station whistle was blown before the train reached said crossing, but the evidence was conflicting as to where it was blown, the plaintiff testifying that it was just about where the cow was killed, and one of the witnesses that it was about eighty rods west of it. No one saw the cow at the time she was struck. Immediately after the train had passed, she was found lying lengthwise of, and north of "the ■ track, her back towards it, and extending about a foot over the north rail,- and having apparently been struck from behind. •

Plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that the rail road is straight for half a mile west of the place where the cow was struck, and that for sixty rods west of it, the track and adjacent grounds for thirty rods back on each side, was such as to afford a clear view.

Defendant was not required by law to fence its road, and it was not fenced. Section. 24, of its charter, reads as follows :

“A bell of at least thirty pounds weight, or a steam whistle, shall be placed on each locomotive engine, and shall be rung, or whistled at a distance of about eighty rods from the place where said road shall cross any other road, and be kept ringing or whistling, at intervals, until it shall have crossed said road or street, under penalty of fifty dollars fine, * * and to be liable for all damages by reason of neglect.”

No bell was rung, or whistle blown, except said whistle for the station, one long whistle, which was all that was usually done there.

The following evidence was introduced as to the character of the crossing.

[354]*354Plaintiff testified that his cow was struck “at' a crossing where people had drawn hay. The road which crossed the railroad here, has been there ever since I have been there, and the crossing has been there since the railroad was built. Planks were spiked down between and outside the rails with railroad spikes. On one side, the south, is a meadow or marsh, and the ground ascends on the north side from the track, by a gradual ascent. This crossing is on a kind of road that leads down to some meadows on the north side of the railroad, and is used mainly for hauling’ hay and wood; principal meadow may be one fourth of a mile from the railroad. Mr. Perkins owns the land on either side of the rail road.”

II. H. Knight, a witness for plaintiff, who saw the cow about sixty rods north of the crossing, at- 2 p. m., and who was then hauling hay over it, testified that “the road * * is used for hauling hay and wood, and was there before the railroad was built. I laid the plank down myself at the crossing-and somebody spiked them there afterwards. The crossing was put there shortly after the track was laid; think defendant laid its track there' two years ago last summer. There is probably from twenty to one hundred tons of hay drawn over that road some winters. Th;s hay road is not a public laid out road, so far as I know.”

John Donnelly, another witness for plaintiff, in rebuttal of defendant’s case, testified: “ I planked the crossing spoken of, by direction of defendant.” (The inference would seem to be, that he spiked down the planks laid down by Knight.)

Thomas H. Perkins, a witness for defendant, testified: “ There is a place on the railroad, a little west of Minnetonka station, that is planked over, and has the appearance of being traveled some in winter; have never seen any team [355]*355crossing there in summer; I own the land on either side of the railroad, ah the crossing; there is no public or laid out road there, so far as I know.” On cross-examination he said: “ I don’t think you can see that crossing from my house, but you can from my mill, which I was engaged in building the most of last summer; I did not see a team pass over that crossing last summer, and do not think there was one crossed there; don’t know where the x’oad leads to, except to some hay meadows over heyond the railroad.”

The decisions, upon the subject of injuries to domestic animals by railways, are very numex’ous, and, to some extent, difficult to reconcile. We take it howevex’, to be beyond question, that if such animals are on the track by the fault of the owner, such owner takes all reasonable risks of their being injured. The company, howevex”, “are not, on that account, authorized to injure them wilfully, or carelessly. Even in driving off animals trespassing upon one’s land, reasonable care must be used.” The company are, therefore, in such case as above supposed, “ bound to use reasonable care to avoid injuring them, and may not carelessly run upon them.” But they “ are not bound to presume that they will be upon the track.” (Eames vs. Salem & Lowell R. R., 98 Mass., 560.)

The only. question, therefore, in such case, would be, whether the company, if it find them on its track, has thereupon exercised reasonable and pi'oper care to avoid injui’ing them. It should, make the same effort to that end, as a prudent man woixld if he owned both train and cattle, propexdy considering the regard both to the tx’ain and cattle.

The owner of an animal, who has not kept it within his own exxclosure, when he might do so by proper care, cannot require the company, to regulate the management and speed of the train with reference to such animal coming upon its [356]*356track, and the burden of proof is on him, to show, that the train was carelessly managed after the peril of the animal was discovered. 1 Redfield on Railways, ch. xviii, ¶ 126, secs. 1, 9, 22. Eames vs. S. & L. R. R., 98 Mass., 560. Central Ohio R. R. Co. vs. Lawrence, 13 Ohio, R. 8. 66. Stearns vs. O. C. & F. R. R., 1 Allen, 493.

In applying these rules, which we consider to be well settled, to the case at bar, we are first to enquire whether the cow came upon the track through the fault of the plaintiff

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Bluebook (online)
15 Minn. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locke-v-first-div-of-the-st-paul-pacific-railroad-minn-1870.