Payne v. Clifford

211 P. 566, 24 Ariz. 489, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 236
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1922
DocketCivil No. 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 211 P. 566 (Payne v. Clifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payne v. Clifford, 211 P. 566, 24 Ariz. 489, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 236 (Ark. 1922).

Opinions

JENCKES, Superior Judge.

The plaintiff, appellee, brings this action against the defendant, appellant, to recover damages for the killing of three head of livestock by defendant’s railroad train. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff upon which judgment was entered. Appellant’s first assignment of error challenges the sufficiency of the complaint, the trial court having overruled his general demurrer. The complaint alleges, substantially, the killing of the [491]*491stock by one of defendant’s trains at a stated time and place—

“occasioned by tbe negligent manner in which the servants and employees of defendant maintained the fences along said line of railroad; that the defendant permitted said fences inclosing said railroad track to become dilapidated and torn down, by reason of which plaintiff’s cattle were permitted to stray upon the tracks and right of way of defendant.”

This sufficiently states a cause of action against the defendant for the killing of livestock under paragraph 3779, Revised Statutes of 1913. It is not necessary to set forth the precise location of the defective fence; neither is it necessary, as urged by appellant, to allege expresses verbia that such fence or other barrier was located at a place where the statute permits a fence or other barrier to be maintained, because the failure to maintain a good and sufficient fence at any other point would not be negligence, and proof of such failure would not support the allegation of the complaint. The allegation of negligence in the maintenance of the fence, coupled with the allegation of the killing of the stock by reason thereof, is a sufficient charge of failure to maintain the fence at a point where the statute permits a fence to be maintained. The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled.

Appellant’s second assignment of error is the refusal of the -trial court to grant his motion for an instructed verdict at the close of all the evidence, on the ground that the evidence does not support the allegations of the complaint. The evidence shows that the stock came upon the right of way from plaintiff’s pasture through a gap in the right of way fence, where it was torn down for about eig’hty rods. Some of them later on got into the field on the opposite side of the track belonging to one H. R. Nelson, who, [492]*492finding them there, drove all of the stock, including those which remained upon the right of way, out into the public highway at a point about a quarter of a mile distant from the railroad crossing where the killing occurred. His testimony in this respect was as follows:

“In the morning before the killing of these animals they were, some of them, in my field, and some of them on the right of way. I gathered them all up and drove them out on the road. ... I drove them all out of the right of way and all out of my pasture through my corral into the highway, . . . fifteen or twenty head.”

Shortly thereafter the stock went on to the premises of one Eliza R. Johns, across the highway from the Nelson place. Mrs. Johns, seeing them in her inelosure, drove them back into the highway. From the Johns place they passed directly along the highway and on to the railroad crossing, where three of their number were struck and killed by defendant’s train. There is no dispute about the facts presented by the foregoing statement of the evidence, and if they do not support the judgment, it must be .reversed.

One line of appellant’s argument upon this assignment of error is directed to the proposition that, as the agency of third parties over which he had no control intervened, the failure to fence could not have been the proximate cause of the killing of the livestock. Appellee’s answer to that argument is that as such third parties were acting within their legal rights in driving the stock from their respective premises, their acts in so doing could not operate as an intervening efficient cause. The conclusion which we have reached upon the whole case, however, disposes of that question; for, even if the failure to fence were the proximate cause of the killing of the [493]*493stock, nevertheless it conld not give rise to a cause of action, unless such failure were also a violation of plaintiff’s legal rights — that is to say, unless it constituted a breach of a legal duty which the defendant owed to the plaintiff.

This action is brought under paragraph 3779, Revised Statutes of 1913, which reads as follows:

“In all cases where the livestock of any person is injured or killed by locomotive or cars of [on] any portion of the line of any railroad company within this state unfenced by good and sufficient fence or other barrier sufficient to turn livestock, the company . . . shall be liable in damage therefor to the owner of such livestock, to be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction within this state, unless it be shown on the trial of any action instituted for the recovery of such damages, that the owner of such livestock, his agent or servants, immediately contributed to such killing or injury. ...”

Public highway crossings are not within the purview of the statute as being “any portion of the line unfenced,” etc., public convenience and necessity requiring, of course, that such crossings be kept open. Bechdolt v. Grand Rapids & I. Ry. Co., 113 Ind. 343, 15 N. E. 686; Prickett v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., 33 Kan. 748, 7 Pac. 611; Corcoran v. Wabash R. Co., 138 Mo. App. 408, 122 S. W. 743.

Section 568 of the Penal Code of 1913 makes it a misdemeanor for any person willfully to obstruct any road by placing therein any impediment to transportation or travel thereupon. This is an express prohibition against the fencing in of highway crossings by railroad companies. So of course no action will lie for the killing or injury of livestock upon a public highway crossing because of the failure to maintain at such crossing “a good and sufficient fence or other barrier sufficient to turn livestock. ’ ’

[494]*494Appellee contends that, even though the proven facts do not show the stock to have been killed on an unfenced part of the line at a point where defendant is permitted by law to maintain a fence, but, on the contrary, show the killing’ to have taken place upon a public highway crossing which defendant is prohibited by law from fencing, nevertheless he is entitled to recover any damages consequent upon defendant’s failure to maintain a sufficient fence, where such failure is the proximate cause of the injuries complained of; that, as the statute creates a right in his favor to have the right of way fenced for his protection, a remedy must exist to redress the violation of that right.

Appellant argues, however, that as paragraph 3779 does not make it the duty of the railroád company to fence its line of road, but merely creates a liability for the killing and injury of livestock on unfenced portions of its line, and there being no other provision of statute creating the duty to fence, no action for negligence will lie, because there is no breach of a legal duty.

That the basis of the action under paragraph 3779 is negligence has already been declared by this court in Atchison etc. R. Co. v. Carrow, 18 Ariz. 83, 156 Pac. 961. Also in passing upon the same question in determining the constitutionality of an Iowa statute similar in nature to paragraph 3779, the Supreme Court of the United States said:

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Related

Musgrave v. Southern Pacific Co.
68 P.2d 202 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1937)
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237 P. 384 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
211 P. 566, 24 Ariz. 489, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-clifford-ariz-1922.