Roberts v. Salt Lake & O. Ry. Co.

176 P. 856, 53 Utah 30, 1918 Utah LEXIS 3
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1918
DocketNo. 3245
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 P. 856 (Roberts v. Salt Lake & O. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Salt Lake & O. Ry. Co., 176 P. 856, 53 Utah 30, 1918 Utah LEXIS 3 (Utah 1918).

Opinion

FRICK, C.' J.

The plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendant for the value of a horse which was killed by one of its trains at a point where its railroad passes through cultivated land owned by private persons, and where, plaintiff alleged, the statute required the defendant to construct and maintain fences along its right of way and cattle guards at a certain public railroad crossing, all of which he alleged it failed and neglected to do, by reason of which his horse had entered upon its right of way and railroad track and was killed. The defendant, in answer to the complaint, admitted that it owned and operated the railroad in question; that it had not constructed fences nor cattle guards at the places sthted in the' complaint; and that one of its cars had collided with and killed plaintiff’s horse' at the. place stated in the complaint.. Defendant denied all other allegations. It also averred, as an affirmative defense, that at the places and at the times stated in the complaint the defendant maintained a station [32]*32and station grounds which it was necessary to keep open, and which were kept open to afford the necessary ingress and egress to and from said station and grounds to the public for the purpose' of delivering and receiving freight, and to accommodate passengers, etc., and that the place where the accident occurred was necessarily kept open for the purposes stated. Upon these issues a trial was had to a jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff for the value of the horse. Judgment was duly entered on the verdict, from which the defendant appeals.

The plaintiff produced no evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence in killing the horse, and- the court withdrew that question from the jury. It will thus be perceived that the questions presented for trial were merely whether the place where the horse entered upon defendant’s right of way should have been fenced, and whether it should have maintained a cattle guard at the point where a certain public road intersected the defendant’s right of way.

The following rough sketch will aid the readers to a better understanding of the real merits of the controversy:

The two parallel lines marked “R R” represent defendant’s double-track railroad. The parallel lines running north [33]*33and south, marked, “P R ” on the sketch represent a.public road or highway which crosses defendant’s railroad at the point indicated. The parallel lines to the west of the railroad tracks, also marked. “P R,” indicate a public road entering upon defendant’s right of way and station grounds. The parallel lines marked “C C” represent an irrigation canal in which water was conveyed to irrigate private lands. The shaded points marked “B B” between the parallel lines indicate bridges on the public roads over the canal. The lands lying both east and west of the railroad tracks were owned and cultivated by private owners. The line leading off from the west track in a northwesterly direction marked “S T” represents a spur track used for loading and unloading freight, and before the road was double-tracked, was at times used to permit trains to pass -each other. The shaded square marked “P H” represents the power house which was used by the defendant to provide power to propel the trains, the railroad being electrically equipped and operated by an overhead trolley system. The railroad right of way was fenced on the east on both sides of the public road and along the same. It was also fenced on the west from the north line of the public road running east and west, and in a northwesterly direction along the spur track. The fences also extended along the public roads on the west. The space marked “V S” was a vacant space between the railroad track and the canal. There was also a brush fence along the west bank of the canal to the south. There was, however, nothing to prevent live stock from passing along the public roads nor from entering the defendant’s right of way and station grounds. All of the open space between the points marked “E E” on the sketch and to the west of the railroad tracks is claimed as station grounds by the defendant. The distance between the points “E E” is 827 feet, and the distance between the point where the spur track deflects from the main track to the point where the canal passes under the railroad track is 227 feet. The shaded squares on the track at the south end of the sketch represent bridges over the canal which were used as cattle guards to' prevent live stock from passing south on the tracks.

[34]*34No one, so far as the record discloses, saw the horse killed, but, as we have seen, the defendant admitted that it was killed by one of its cars. The horse was found dead at the point marked “A” between the two tracks.

The plaintiff contended at the trial that the space marked “V S,” that is, what we have indicated as vacant space, was not used for station grounds and was not necessary for such a purpose. Upon the other hand, defendant contended at the trial, and here contends, that all the space between the extremes marked “E E” and to the west of the tracks was used for station grounds and for switching and operating its trains. There were no station buildings maintained at the station in question by the defendant. The only building that was maintained was the power house. Trains would stop, however, and receive and discharge passengers, and freight' would also be received and delivered while cars would be from time to time loaded and unloaded on the spur track. There was no cattle guard maintained at any point along the right of way on the west side of the track to prevent live stock from entering on the track.

’ The evidence shows that plaintiff kept his horses in a pasture or corral some little distance from the point where the horse was found dead; that all of the horses on the night in question, except one, in some way got out of the corral; that there were horse tracks on and near the track near the point “A,” where the horse was found dead, and that there was some hair and blood on the bridge at that point' and it was assumed that the horse tried to enter onto the right of way and onto the vacant space lying between the tracks and the canal from the public road.

It is not necessary to set forth the evidence in detail. It is sufficient to state that the whole matter respecting the use that was made of the alleged station grounds, and the amount of business that was transacted, and how it was conducted, was all testified to by the several witnesses. It was also made to appear on the part of the defendant how and why it contended that it was necessary to keep open the vacant space and why cattle guards and the fences were not maintained at the points to which we have hereinbefore referred. The [35]*35evidence respecting all those contentions was submitted to the jury, and they found the facts in favor of the plaintiff.

Plaintiff contends that the vacant space, left open as it was, was a place of danger and a mere trap for live stock which might depart from the public road, and hence it was defendant’s duty to guard against live stock entering upon its tracks from the public road by constructing a eattle guard, and by maintaining a wing fence from the cattle guard to the fence along the public road. The defendant, as before stated, insists that the space was necessary for station grounds, and more especially for the convenience and protection of the trainmen.

We have a statute (Comp. Laws 1907, section 456x, as amended by Laws Utah 1913, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 856, 53 Utah 30, 1918 Utah LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-salt-lake-o-ry-co-utah-1918.