New Albany & Salem Railroad v. Tilton

12 Ind. 3
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 12 Ind. 3 (New Albany & Salem Railroad v. Tilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Albany & Salem Railroad v. Tilton, 12 Ind. 3 (Ind. 1859).

Opinion

Hanna, J.

This was an action commenced before a justice of the peace by Tilton, to recover of the appellant the value of a mare, alleged to have been lulled by the locomotive, &c., of said company.

There was a recovery of 100 dollars before the justice, and also for the same amount in the Circuit Court upon appeal.

There is no allegation in the pleadings of negligence; nor was there any evidence upon the trial upon that point; nor was there any evidence of any order, under the statute, of the county authorities, in relation to the kind of animals that should be permitted to run at large.

[4]*4The suit was evidently instituted under the act of March 1, 1853, copied at large in The Madison, &c., Co. v. Whiteneck, 8 Ind. R. 218.

The main point argued in this case is, as to whether the act referred to is constitutional.

Before proceeding to the examination of that question, we will dispose of some others that are raised and argued, although heretofore either directly or indirectly decided.

First. It is insisted that the service of a notice of the day of trial on a conductor of a train, was not such service as should compel the appearance of the defendant, although the statute expressly provides therefor.

In addition to the reasons given in The New Albany, SfC., Co. v. Grooms, 9 Ind. R. -243, sustaining such service, we might say, that the policy of our system of jurisprudence requires that the party to be affected directly by a judgment, should, in some form, have notice of the pendency of proceedings in a Court of justice, which might ultimately result in such a judgment. Where the proceedings are against a natural person, the best mode, and therefore the one that should be adopted where it can be, keeping the ends of justice to both parties in view, is, by personal service; but as to one of those impalpable and imperceptible bodies, known as artificial persons, or bodies corporate, such a rule cannot prevail; for a service upon a director, an officer, or an agent of such an institution, could not, in point of fact, be said to be a service upon the person sued—the artificial person before then created by the law. The power that created and breathed into being such a person, ought to, and in our opinion does, possess the right to prescribe the mode of bringing such persons to the bar of judgment.

Second. That proof ought to have been made by the plaintiff that the animal, for the killing of which suit was brought, was such an one as, by order of the board of commissioners of that county, was permitted to go at large. 1 R. S. p. 102.

The most that can be said in reference to the necessity of such an order and the proof thereof is, that domestic [5]*5animals which are, in the absence of such order, permitted by their owner to pass off his premises on to the premises of another, or on to a public or private way—in a word, . Vr-n .1 i ... to run at large—are trespassers. W hether such a position is correct or not, we shall not examine, for the reason that, in our view, such proposition might be conceded, and yet the company would be liable in the case at bar.

In the argument, this question is treated as one affecting the rights of the parties to this suit alone. This is too circumscribed a view of the intention of the law-making power in the enactment of the statutes regulating the fencing of railroads, and in reference to animals running at large. It is clear from the context of the latter statute, that the legislature, by its enactment, was looking more to agricultural interests than to the protection of railroad property.

The former statute is, in our opinion, in the nature of a police regulation. By its terms, railroad companies are required to fence their roads, or hold themselves liable, to a certain extent, for animals injured for the want of such fences. The legislature certainly possessed the power to incorporate such a provision in a charter, or in a general law authorizing the formation of companies. Such power has been heretofore exercised and sustained in New York. Laws of 1850, p. 233.— Corwin v. The New York, &c. Railroad Co., 3 Kernan, 42.

Here, our legislature did not incorporate the regulation in the charter of the appellants, but, after the construction of the road, attempted to prescribe it. It is insisted that by the act additional and heavy burdens are attempted to be fastened upon the company; that it is in reality an alteration of the charter, when it was provided in the original charter that no alteration should be made, &c. (Local Laws of 1848, p. 456); in a word, that the act is unconstitutional, because it interferes with vested rights, and impairs the obligations of a contract. It is assumed that the act of the legislature granting to the appellants certain franchises, and the acceptance of' the act and exercise of the franchises by the company, are a contract.

[6]*6We shall not stop to inquire into the rights, or rather to limit our inquiry into the rights and remedies which exist as between the company and the owner of an animal that might chance to be injured on the road, or the power of the legislature to prescribe rules in reference thereto, if his rights were alone involved. The stockholders of a railroad company may have large amounts vested in the enterprise, and those who avail themselves of that mode of transporting property, from point to point, might likewise risk large amounts in value aboard the cars of such company. Whilst the business of the company should be confined to the transportation of property alone, the power of the legislature to impose new and additional burdens regulating such manner of transportation may be, in our opinion, in some instances questioned, where no serious question could arise as to the exercise of that power if the company should undertake to transport passengers. This arises out of the fact that the preservation of the life and limb of the citizen is, by the law, regarded as of more consequence than the protection of his property. When power is granted to organizations to prepare ways for carrying passengers from point to point, with great celerity, but by the application of a propelling agent of known danger and almost irresistible force, it would appear but reasonable that a right should be lodged somewhere to maintain over such organizations a supervisory control, by which they might be compelled, under penalties, to adopt approved means, when discovered, of lessening the great danger arising from the use of such agent and mode of conveyance. Such would be a police regulation—a regulation for the protection of the public. It is but the application of the principle that he who possesses a right shall exercise it in a manner the least detrimental, injurious, or dangerous to his neighbor. The penalty under the regulation, in the case at bar, is the payment to the owner of the value of the animal killed. It is, in that respect, better calculated to accomplish the desired end, than a fine paid to the public might be. To the company it is the same, whether the individual or the public should receive [7]*7that amount; but to others it is different; the reception by the owner, of the value of his property, is intended to prevent heart-burnings and disputes, and to check the outburst of angry passions, in a form that might be disastrous to human life, by the perpetration of malicious mischief to the work itself. See The Madison, &c., Co.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ind. 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-albany-salem-railroad-v-tilton-ind-1859.