Louisville & Frankfort Railroad v. Milton

53 Ky. 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 28, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 Ky. 75 (Louisville & Frankfort Railroad v. Milton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Frankfort Railroad v. Milton, 53 Ky. 75 (Ky. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

Chief Justice Hise

delivered the opinion of the court.

Robert Milton, plaintiff, sued the Louisville and Frankfort Railroad Company, and presented in Ms petition, in separate paragraphs, as the grounds of Ms action, that the company, by their agents, had destroyed at different times, first, a brown mare, secondly, a sorrel horse, and thirdly, a cow and some hogs; all the property of the plaintiff, and in his possession. That tbey were destroyed whilst they were feeding within and upon the field or pasture of the plaintiff, in and through which the railroad of the company was situate and passed, and when they were upon or near the railroad; that the animals were destroyed by the locomotive and cars of the company having-been run upon or over them, whilst they were near or upon that part of the road which passed through the plaintiff’s field or pasture, through the negligence and carelessness of the company’s engineers, agents and conductors, in not giving the animals time to get out of the way, in not driving them off from the road, and by reason of their negligent arid improper manner of running the said locomotive and cars upon them.

[76]*76The company answer, and rely for their defense, upon the ground, that the plaintiff had granted to the company the right of way through the said field and pasture, and tho right to construct their railroad through and upon it, and exhibit the grant; that the railroad was the exclusive property of the company, and they had an exclusive and lawful right to use the same, by running upon it their locomotives and cars; and they deny that the destruction of the plaintiffs mare, horse and cow was caused by the negligence, unskillfulness, or improper conduct of their agents, in running their trains upon their railroad, but insist that the animals belonging to plaintiff, were do. stroyed if at all, by the fault and negligence of tho plaintiff, by permitting them to run at large upon the field through which their railroad passed, with the consent of the plaintiff himself, ’when there was no intervening fence to prevent them from trespassing upon the defendants road, and hindering and obstruct ing defendants in the use of the road, and causing thereby great delays and dangers to the passengers and property conveyed upon it.

So it appears that the plaintiff bases his right to a recovery in the case, upon the charge of the careless - ness and negligence of the company’s agents. The defendants deny that the injuries complained of were caused by tho negligence, carelessness, or want of skill of the agents employed to run and conduct the trains upon the road, but rather by the improper eon duct and negligence of the plaintiff, in permitting hki stock to roam at large and to stray upon the rail - road.

The jury, after having heard the evidence, and af ter having been instructed upon the law applicable to the case, by the court, returned their verdict in fa vor of tho plaintiff, for twelve dollars, in damages; whereupon, the court gave judgment for the damages and costs of suit.

[77]*77The defendants demanded that the verdict and judgment should be set aside, and new trial awarded, because^-

lst. The verdict of the jury was not supported by the proof, and unauthorized by law..

2d. Because the court misdirected the jury in respect to the law of the case.

From the amount of the damages found by the verdict, and from the proof in the cause, it is inferred that the jury regarded the company as only responsible for the value of the cow, and that with respect to the other animals, to-wit: the mare, the horse, and the hogs, that the proof did not justify a verdict for their value against the company.

John W. Byers was the only witness who proved that the cow was destroyed by the locomotive and train of the company. He proves, in substance, that the locomotive and train ran upon and destroyed the plaintiffs cow on that part of the track where it passes through the plaintiff’s pasture. That when he first saw the cow, she was trotting along on the track about one hundred yards in advance of the train, which was running at its usual speed. That when the train first came in view, he heard the sound of the whistle, and continued to hear it sounding until the train struck and killed the cow. The witness did not perceive that any eilbrt was made to stop the train.

Upon this state of pleadings and proof, the circuit judge overruled the motion of defendants’ attorney to instruct the jury as follows:

“The plaintiff, in permitting his stock to go at large in his field, through which the road of defendants passed, and said stock to go upon defendants road, in the way of the passage of defendants cars, was guilty of such a want of care on his part, as to prevent him from maintaining this action, and they must find for defendants.”

It is assigned for error, that the circuit judge refused to give this instruction. But no error in this was [78]*78committed, and the instruction was properly refused, as the court was asked thereby, to tell the jury in substance, that in no state of case could a railroad company be made lawfully responsible for the destruction of property on their road, by running their trains upon it or over it, although done intentionally, or in a wanton manner, when it could be conveniently avoided without incurring any great risk or danger to the persons or property in the cars. Or in other words, that inasmuch as the road belongs to the company exclusively, and that they alone have lawful right and authority to run their trains upon it, and that the lawful purpose, and the legitimate design of the creation of railroad companies, and the construction of their roads is, to have, conveyed, with the greatest possible speed, property and persons along such roads, that therefore, they have a right, recklessly, and wantonly, to run their trains upon or over whoever or whatever comes upon or obstructs their track, although they might avoid it without being unreasonably delayed, and without danger or injury to the train and its contents — that is to say, “stand off the track, keep off your stock, and let nothing obstruct our trains, if you do, we may,- and will, though it be not necessary, and can be easily avoided, with but inconsiderable loss of time, run over all such obstructions, and destroy all persons or property which may be in our way.” Railroad companies have no such license as this, and the first instruction was therefore properly refused.

On motion of the plaintiff’s attorney the court instructed the jury: “That although the plaintiff granted to defendants the right of way for their said road, through his, plaintiff’s field or pasture, he, plaintiff, did not, by such grant, bind himself to make a fence on both sides of said road, through said field or pas • Lure, or deprive himself of the use of said field or pasture, by suffering his horses, cattle, and other stock to'be and remain on said field and pasture.” [79]*79This instruction is conveyed in language unskillfulJy selected; but stripped of its verbiage it is understood to mean simply, that the plaintiff had not surrendered his right to pasture his stock upon his field, by granting to the railroad company the privilege of building their road upon it and through it, and that he was not bound to inclose his field so as to keep his stock from straying upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Ky. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-frankfort-railroad-v-milton-kyctapp-1853.