Nashville & Decatur Rail Road v. Comans

45 Ala. 437
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 45 Ala. 437 (Nashville & Decatur Rail Road v. Comans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville & Decatur Rail Road v. Comans, 45 Ala. 437 (Ala. 1871).

Opinion

PETEBS, J.

This is an action of trespass, commenced on the 30th day of August, 1867. Comans was the plaintiff in the court below, and the Bail Eoad Company was the defendant. The complaint contains but a single count, which was in the following words — that is to say: “ The plaintiff claims of the defendant the sum of two hundred dollars for wrongfully killing a mule, the property of the plaintiff, by running over [it] with locomotive, on — day of August, 1867; therefore this suit.” The answer to this complaint was the plea of “not guilty,” and several [440]*440others, “with leave to give in evidence any matter which would be a good plea in bar of the plaintiff’s action.” There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff below, and the defendant brings the case to this court, and here assigns a great number of errors committed by the circuit court on the trial below.

There was proof to show that the mule of the plaintiff, when he received the hurt from which he died, was trespassing on the roadway of the company, and was stricken by its locomotive while engaged in its lawful and ordinary business. There was also proof showing that the mule unexpectedly came on the track of the road, some fifteen or twenty feet in front of the train, when in motion at a rate from ten to thirteen miles an hour, passing over “ a heavy down grade.” It was a loaded freight train of eight or ten cars. It was also shown that as soon as it was seen by the agents of the company that the mule was coming on to the track of the road, the engine was reversed, the brakes put down, the whistle blown almost continuously, and every thing was done by the engineer and conductor having charge of the train, in their power, known to skillful engineers, to stop the train and to avoid striking the mule, but it was all in vain.

The main question in the case is, was the mule unlawfully killed ? If it was, then the company ought to pay for it; if it was not, then the plaintiff ought not to recover.

The lawfulness or unlawfulness of the killing depends upon the diligence and care required of rail road companies in prosecuting their business in this State. Without any special legislation on this subject, a railroad company would be bound to such diligence in the prosecution of its business as would be dictated by sound reason, when applied to the successful use of the privileges necessarily’ incident to its franchise. No damages can be allowed for an injury accruing from a legal act performed in a legal manner. — Brown v. Kendal, 6 Cush. 292. Else, the ordinary pursuits of life would have to be suspended whenever there was danger of accidental injury to others, or to their property. It is the privilege of rail road companies, in [441]*441this State, to run their engines and trains at any rate of speed that would be safe for their passengers and freight. There is no rate of speed prescribed by law, except under special circumstances. Then, without our statute, rail road companies would be only bound to use such care in the movement of their cars and engines as belongs to the business they are engaged in. In such a case, what is called reasonable care would be sufficient to excuse. — Rail Road Company v. Skinner, 19 Penn. R. 298. The maxim, Sic utere tuo, applies not only to the company, but also to the owners of stock that may stray upon the track of the road. The privilege of the company is to have the track of the roadway for the exclusive use of its locomotives and trains. The company is not a tenant in common with the public and its stock, in the roadway and track of the improvement, but it is the sole and exclusive owner thereof. And the stock of the owners of the adjacent lands can not trespass upon the roadway of the company as a part of the public domain. The owners of such stock have no more right to permit it to trespass upon the roadway of the company, than the company has to quit its roadway with its engines and machinery and trespass upon the adjacent lands. The mule had no more lawful right, at common law, to be upon the rail way track when it was needed for the use of the company,' than it would have had to force itself into the parlor of the rail road station house. If, in either case, it should be casually hurt, without malice towards the owner, the injury could not be said to be unlawful. — Bordentown & S. A. Turnpike v. Camden & Amboy Railw., 2 Harrison, 314; Coy v. Utica (& Sch. Railw., 23 Barb. 643; Beers v. Housatonic Railw., 19 Conn. 566; 19 Penn. 298, supra; Bennis v. Conn. & Pass. Rivers R. R. Co., 42 Vt. R. 375.

But in this State, the general assembly has fixed the liability of rail road companies for killing and injuring stock found trespassing on the rail road track, and also the measure of the diligence which will excuse for such injuries. The whole law upon this subject is found in the Revised Code. The statute therein contained is compiled from the acts of the legislature, which were not carried [442]*442into the Code of 1852. — Rev. Code, p. 336, § 4399 to 1416, both inclusive. The first act passed on this important subject, was that of February 10, 1852, which is entitled, “An act to define and regulate the liability of rail road companies.”^Pamph. Acts 1851-2, p. 45, No. 34. The first section of this act is copied into the Revised Code at section 1406. This makes the liability for the killing of stock, or its injury, absolute and peremptory. — Rev. Code, § 1406 ; Act of 1852, supra, § 1; 25 Ala. 229. The next statute, in the order of its passage, was approved February 6, 1858, and is entitled, “An act to regulate and define the duties and liabilities of rail road companies in this State.”— Pamph. Acts 1857-8, p. 15, No. 13. The first and second sections of this latter act are substantially copied into the Revised Code at sections 1399, 1400. The third section of this last named enactment is in these words, to-wit: “ That all railroad companies in whose employment said engineers [those named in a former section] are at the time of any accident occasioned by failure to comply with the provision’s of the first section of this act, shall be liable for all damage done to persons, stock, or other property, on account of said failure to .comply with the provisions of this act, (Rev. Code, § 1399,) or on account of any negligence whatever on the part of the rail road company or its agents, and in no other case.” —Pamph. Acts 1857-8, p. 16, § 3. This section is also inserted in the Revised Code, except the words, “and in no other case.” — Rev. Code, § 1401. After the passage of this act, there were several others enacted during the war, which are also-partly, or in whole, copied into the Revised Code; but these insurgent enactments cannot have the force of laws, except so far as they have been re-enacted or adopted by the general assembly of the rightful government. — Texas v. White, 7 Wall. 700. The Revised Code, as it now stands, was received and adopted by the general assembly of the Provisional government of this State on February 19,1867. Pamph. Acts 1866-7, p. 718. And “ all laws and parts of laws of the Revised Code of Alabama, except such as conflict with the constitution 'and laws of the United States, or the constitution of this State,” were continued in full [443]*443force and effect by the act of July 27,1868.- — Pamph. Acts 1868, p. 7.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ala. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-decatur-rail-road-v-comans-ala-1871.