Price v. St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado Railroad

113 S.W. 1136, 133 Mo. App. 653, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 382
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 113 S.W. 1136 (Price v. St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado Railroad, 113 S.W. 1136, 133 Mo. App. 653, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 382 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Defendant railroad company acquired, by condemnation proceedings, a right of way over plaintiff’s farm in Franklin county, laid its track thereon, began the operation of the railroad and for more than three months after completion of the road, failed to put in a necessary farm crossing for plaintiff. The road bisected the farm, and the absence of a crossing caused plaintiff much inconvenience and expense in farming the land north of the track.' He brought suit against defendant to recover damages for the injury thus inflicted and obtained judgment in the trial court in the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars. Defendant appealed.

It is alleged in the petition “that plaintiff’s said farm was and is bisected by defendant’s said railroad the same running over, through and across the same, dividing said farm into two separate and distinct tracts; that it was the duty of defendant to construct for the use of plaintiff a suitable farm crossing where defendant’s said railroad passed through plaintiff’s said farm, that said farm crossing was necessary to enable plaintiff to cross defendant’s said railroad for the purpose of operating his said farm, that defendant failed and refused from and after said — day of December, 1901, up to the — day of October, 1906, to construct such crossing, although plaintiff often requested defendant so to do; that by reason of defendant’s failure to construct such crossing plaintiff was compelled to lose much valuable time and labor and was put to great inconvenience and delay in the operation of his said farm, and was to a great extent deprived of the use of that part of his said farm lying north of defendant’s said railroad, to his damage in the sum of five hundred dollars.” The answer is a' general denial.

The evidence adduced by plaintiff tends to prove the allegations of the petition. It shows that he suffered pecuniary loss and great inconvenience on account of [655]*655the failure of defendant to put in a crossing for him. But defendant argues, and the point is preserved in the record, that since the cause of action is founded on section 1105, Revised Statutes 1899, and that statute is penal, plaintiff has no remedy beyond those provided by the statute and hence cannot maintain an action for damages. Plaintiff answers with the argument that “if the railroad fails to construct such crossing in accordance with the statute, the owner of the farm is not restricted to the statutory remedy but may maintain an action for damages.”

It is not claimed defendant was under any con: tractual obligation to construct the crossing, and it must be conceded that except for the statute, defendant was not required to construct and maintain farm crossings at its own expense. Therefore, any cause of action plaintiff may maintain against defendant necessarily must be grounded on the statute. Section 1105, Revised Statutes 1899, made it the duty of defendant to construct and maintain a crossing on plaintiff’s farm. The breach of that duty gave plaintiff a statutory right to construct a crossing and to recover from defendant the cost thereof, “together with a reasonable compensation for his time, trouble and labor . . . together with the ten per cent interest per annum thereon from the time of the service of process upon such corporation in such suit.” Further the statute provides “in every such action, if the plaintiff recover judgment there shall be taxed as costs against the defendant an attorney’s fee . . . as may be a reasonable compensation for all legal services rendered for plaintiff in the case.”

Another remedy the statute gives the farmer whose land adjoins or is crossed by a railroad is the right to recover double 'damages for domestic animals belonging to him which may be injured by engines or cars operated on the railroad in consequence of the failure of the company to build and maintain legal fences, cattle [656]*656guards, etc. The statute does not state in express terms that the farm owner may maintain an action for the damages he may sustain on account of any breach of duty imposed on the railroad company, and if the statute is to be regarded as wholly penal, the proposition is incontrovertible that the remedies it affords, being penalties, are exclusive and the cause of action here asserted must fail since it does not fall within the scope of the statute.

In an action against a railroad company for damages to animals resulting from a failure to fence, brought when the statute only authorized the recovery of single damages, the Supreme Court held that the statute should be regarded as a police regulation and, therefore, penal. [Gorman v. Railroad, 26 Mo. 450.] In Barnett v. Railroad, 68 Mo. l. c. 62, the Supreme Court said: “The statute under consideration is unquestionably a penal statute. It was so regarded by this court in the case of Gorman v. Railroad, 26 Mo. 450, when single damages only were recoverable under its provisions. In Trice v. Railroad, 49 Mo. 440, it was said, ‘while the protection of adjacent proprietors is an incidental object of the statute, its main and leading one is the protection of the traveling public. To insure such protection railroads are imperatively required to fence their tracks, and the penal liability deemed necessary to enforce this requirement, is a matter of legislative discretion.’ . . . Being a penal statute, in the absence of any constitutional restriction, the Legislature may lawfully make such disposition of the penalty imposed by it as will, in its discretion, best subserve the purpose of the enactment. Instead of giving the whole of the penalty to the State, or the county, or of dividing the penalty and providing for a qui twin action, the whole of the penalty is given to the party aggrieved, and the method adopted is doubtless a most efficient one for enforcing the statute.”

[657]*657Judge Black voiced the samé opinion in Perkins v. Railroad, 103 Mo. l. c. 57, saying: “Our statute giving the owner double damages for stock killed, where a railroad is not fenced as required by law, has been upheld in several cases on the ground that the law is a police regulation and designed not only to protect the owners of the stock, but also the traveling public, and that the Legislature might impose a penalty for a violation of the law and give the penalty to the owner of the stock killed. . . . The statute in question is as much a police regulation as is the double damage section, and the attorney’s fee may be lawfully imposed as a penalty for the violation of the law. It is a penalty allowed in all cases of a class, and the objection that the law is special legislation is not well taken.”

Afterward the Supreme Court, following the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in Railroad v. Ellis, 165 U. S. 150, held the provision allowing the recovery by the plaintiff of an attorney’s fee unconstitutional. [Paddock v. Railway, 155 Mo. 524.] But this ruling was placed on the ground that a penalty could not be inflicted on one class of litigants and not on others and is wholly foreign to the question of whether the remedies provided for breaches of the duties imposed by the statute are penal or otherwise. It is one thing to penalize a man for failing to perform a duty imposed on him by law and quite another thing to punish him for unsuccessfully defending a suit prosecuted against him.

The St. Louis Court of Appeals in Sheridan v. Railway, 56 Mo. App. l. c.

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Related

Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway Co. v. Ellis
165 U.S. 150 (Supreme Court, 1897)
Quantock v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.
74 S.W. 1034 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
Gorman v. Pacific Railroad
26 Mo. 441 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1858)
Trice v. Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad
49 Mo. 438 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1872)
State v. Maupin
57 Mo. 205 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1874)
Paddock v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
56 S.W. 453 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1900)
Quantock v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.
94 S.W. 978 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)
Mangold v. St. Louis, Memphis & Southeastern Railway Co.
92 S.W. 753 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 1136, 133 Mo. App. 653, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-st-louis-kansas-city-colorado-railroad-moctapp-1908.