Rinehart v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.

80 S.W. 910, 126 Mo. App. 446, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 220
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 80 S.W. 910 (Rinehart v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.) 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
Rinehart v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 80 S.W. 910, 126 Mo. App. 446, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 220 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

This is an action under the provisions of section 1105, Revised Statutes 1899, to recover double damages for the killing of plaintiff’s colt by defendant’s engine and cars. The petition alleges that “said animal went upon the railroad of defendant and was killed, as aforesaid, at a point in Henry township, Vernon county, where said railroad passes through, along and adjoining uninclosed cultivated land; that at the point where said animal went upon said railroad, the defendant, on and before said date, failed to erect and maintain lawful fences on the sides of its road in this, to-wit: at the point where said animal went upon said railroad, a gate through which said animal passed was standing open and had been so standing open for a [449]*449long time prior to the twenty-fifth day of December, 1901, the gate being so out of repair at said time, and long prior thereto, that it could not be closed.”

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that the colt sued for escaped with other horses in the village of Richards; that it traveled about two miles upon the public highway, passed through an open gate into a forty-acre field of one Kaufman, and from thence through defendant’s open right of way gate onto the defendant’s right of way where it was run over and killed by the engine and cars of the defendant; that both the gate through which the colt passed into Kaufman’s field and the defendant’s right of way gate through which it passed out of Kaufman’s field onto the right of way were not only open on the day of the injury, but that they had been continuously open for several days and weeks prior thereto; that the defendant’s right of way gate, through which it passed onto the right of way, was defective, in that the posts were spread apart so that there was a space of about a foot between the gate and the post to which it was intended to be latched or hooked, even when the gate was closed, and that it had been in this condition for something like a year, and that Kaufman’s outside gate through which the colt passed was only four feet high so when closed the fence of which it was a part was not a lawful fence. [R. S. 1899, sec. 3295.]

Defendant offered testimony tending to prove that Kaufman’s gate had been closed at about four o’clock in the afternoon of the twenty-fourth day of December, 1901, and that the right of way gate was closed by being tied with a wire from two to five days prior to the day on which plaintiff’s colt was killed. Defendant’s evidence further tended to prove that plaintiff resided in the village of Eichards and about two and a half miles from the point on defendant’s roadway where the [450]*450colt entered Kaufman’s field and was killed, and between wbicb points there were several tracts of land belonging to different owners, none of which were owned by plaintiff nor in none of which he (plaintiff) had any express or implied right to have his colt. And further, • that on the evening of the day preceding that of the accident the gate opening into Kaufman’s field had been closed by him; and that defendant’s section foreman had closed the right of way gate between two and five days before the accident.

The question which we are obliged to decide is whether or not on the evidence tending to establish the facts as we have just stated them the plaintiff was entitled to a submission of the case to the jury. It is the defendant’s contention, that since the plaintiff was not an adjoining owner or proprietor within the meaning of the statute requiring railroad companies to fence their right of way through enclosed lands, that he was not entitled to recover; and in support of this contention it cites and relies on Ferris v. Railway, '30 Mo. App. 122. In the course of the opinion delivered in the case just cited it is said that, the “evidence is conclusive that the plaintiff was not an adjoining landowner, nor a next adjoining owner. In fact, it stands conceded that the field from which the mare strayed was four miles in a direct line from the defendant’s track, the land of a number of other proprietors intervening. It does not appear that the mare was in the field adjoining the railroad right of way, or in the field next adjoining, by the license or consent, express or implied, of either of the owners; on the contrary, it expressly appears that the mare, after leaving plaintiff’s premises, traversed the lands of a number of intervening proprietors as a trespasser. On this state of the evidence there can be no recovery against the defendant under the provisions of section 809 (now section 1105), Revised Statutes,” citing Berry v. Railway, 65 Mo. 172; Harrington [451]*451v. Railway, 71 Mo. 384; Johnson v. Railway, 80 Mo. 620; Busby v. Railway, 81 Mo. 49; Stanley v. Railway, 84 Mo. 631; Peddicord v. Railway, 85 Mo. 160; Carpenter v. Railway, 25 Mo. App. 110; Smith v. Railway, 25 Mo. App. 113.

An examination of these cases has not convinced us that they authorize the deduction that the law is as stated in the excerpt just quoted. The common law exempted the owners of lands from the obligation to fence and imposed on the owners of domestic animals that of confining them on their own premises. But this old rule of the common law has never been revived nor recognized in this State. [Gorman v. Railway, 26 Mo. 441; Kirkpatrick v. Railway, 71 Mo. App. 263.] While it is true that the stock law of this State — Article II, chapter 69, Revised Statutes, in its* general application is somewhat analogous in its requirements to the common law it does not, however, lessen or interfere with the obligations of the several railroads in this State to fence their right of way as now required by law. [Secs. 4777, 4781, R. S. 1899; Growney v. Railway, 102 Mo. App. 442, and cases there cited.] It results that the case here is in no way affected by the provisions of the stock law.

Berry v. Railway, and the other cases which were cited as supporting the deduction in Ferris v. Railway, supra, when examined, will, we think, be found to go no further than in effect to hold that the duty of fencing the sides of their roads where they pass through enclosed and cultivated fields is not imposed upon railway companies for the exclusive benefit of the owner or proprietor of such fields; that if by an arrangement between the company and the owner of an enclosed or cultivated field the former is relieved of the duty of building fences, it omits to do so at its peril if the field be not enclosed with a lawful fence and cattle get into the field and from there go upon the road and are [452]*452killed by a passing train; and that if the field is sufficiently enclosed, that is all the protection that strangers are entitled to, and as to their stock, additional fences along the sides of the road are not necessary nor are they required by the statute, for as to them the sides of the road are already fenced by the fences enclosing the field. In Johnson v. Railway, 80 Mo. l. c. 624, it was held that, if the field of the abutting landowner is enclosed by a lawful fence and an animal breaks over it, and gets on the track of the railway company and is there struck and injured by a passing train, it is not liable therefor. In Harrington v. Railway, 71 Mo. 384, it was held that “it was equally as incumbent upon the plaintiff when not an adjoining proprietor, and not having the right to the possession, to show that the fence of the adjoining proprietor was not a lawful fence as it would have been if the horse had gone upon the track over a fence erected by defendant along the line of its road under the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W. 910, 126 Mo. App. 446, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rinehart-v-kansas-city-southern-railway-co-moctapp-1904.