Rowland v. Baird

18 Abb. N. Cas. 256
CourtNew York County Court, Montgomery County
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 Abb. N. Cas. 256 (Rowland v. Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Court, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland v. Baird, 18 Abb. N. Cas. 256 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

The following is the charge of the court to the jury:

Westbrook, J.

This action, gentlemen, is in tort, and is based upon the alleged unlawful acts of the defendant.

The plaintiff, Jay Howland, a farmer of the town of Florida, and the defendant, Benjamin Baird, of the same town, are adjoining owners of farms ; and it is alleged on the part of the plaintiff that the defendant has done a wrong by reason of which he has sustained damage, and this action has been brought to recover the damages which the plaintiff, alleges that he has sustained by reason of this wrong.

The particular wrong complained of is this: The plaintiff alleges that the defendant, in building and maintaining his part of the division line fence between their farms, as the law required him todo, failed to build and maintain a proper and suitable fence, but instead thereof he built an unlawful fence, an improper and unsuitable fence; that he built the same of sharp barbed wires strung from the tops of the fence stakes, and of such a dangerous character that one of the plaintiff’s young horses, running in his lot adjoining that of the defendant. in some way jumped upon the barbed wires of this fence and was seriously injured and damaged.

[After referring to a prior trial in which defendant had a verdict, and to the conflict of evidence as to the circumstances under which the plaintiff’s horse was injured.] There does not seem to be much conflict between the learned counsel for the parties as to the law upon this subject, though no authorities have been cited of cases of a like character.

Wire fences are of recent invention. It is but recently that wire fences have been invented and put into general use; and, therefore, it is quite important that we should consider carefully and thoroughly7 the questions involved in this case, so that their decision might guide us in the conclusion and determination of other cases of a like character that may7 occur hereafter.

This is the first case of the kind that has come before me for adjudication ; the first one, in fact, of the same serious character that has been called to my attention.

[259]*259In regard to the law of division fences, I would say the L'/v of this State requires that adjoining owners of open and cultivated lands shall build and maintain division line fences between them. The adjoining owners may, by oral or other agreement, or by acquiescence, divide a line fence and set aside the part that each shall build and maintain ; and, in case of failure to divide the fence between them by agreement or otherwise, the law provides the way by which the same may be divided by the fence-viewers of the town. After a line fence has been properly divided, then each adjoining owner is legally required to build and maintain his half or share of the fence 5 and, on the failure of one to do so, the other, after proper notice, may build the same and hold him responsible for the reasonable expense thereof.

The object of a division line fence is to separate the animals of each adjoining owner and prevent them from trespassing upon the premises of the other, and to restrain the animals of each adjoining owner to the inclosure of their respective owners. Each adjoining owner is legally required to build and maintain a proper and suitable fence, one that is reasonably sufficient for the objects and purposes of a division fence.

A division line fence is not legally required to be built of any particular height or size, or of any particular materials or particular style; but it must be so built as to size, height, and character, and kind of materials, that it will be proper and suitable for all the purposes of such fence, and will be reasonably safe, and not necessarily cause injury to the adjoining owner or his property or animals.

Therefore, you will consider in this case whether this fence was a proper and a suitable one. And, in reaching that conclusion, you will take into consideration all the facts and circumstances in regard to the fence ; its style; its size; its height; the material out of which it was built; the way in which it was built and maintained; the location of the fence; the knowledge that each adjoining owner had of the object and purposes for which the land of each was to be used, and how it was to [260]*260be used and occupied—all of these facts and circumstances you will take and consider in determining whether or not this fence was proper and suitable.

It is alleged on the part of the plaintiff that this fence was a nuisance; also that the defendant was guilty of negligence in constructing and maintaining it.

If this case comes down to the question of negligence merely, on the part of the defendant in building and maintain; ing this fence, then several propositions present themselves to be determined affirmatively against the defendant; and, upon those propositions, the plaintiff would have the burden of proof.

The plaintiff, upon the question of negligence of the defendant in building and maintaining this fence, must establish that the fence was a dangerous and an unlawful fence, and unfit for the purposes for which it was built, and was negligently constructed, and that that negligence of the defendant caused the injury to the plaintiff’s horse; and, furthermore, that the plaintiff himself was free from any negligence on his part which in any way contributed to the injury or the damage complained of. •

I think that this is not a case where the question of negligence necessarily enters into it, or where the case ougl.it properly to be disposed of upon the question or theory of negligence on the part of the defendant. It seems to me that the other position taken by the plaintiff is the one that he must stand upon and the sure and safe theory of the plaintiff’s case, if he is entitled to recover in this action; and that is, that this fence was a nuisance.

And that leads me to consider some other questions ana rules of law that are involved in and must be determined in the case.

The plaintiff alleges that this fence was of an unlawful and dangerous character, that is, was a nuisance; and, therefore, the defendant having built and maintained it, that he is liable to the plaintiff for all damages sustained, and therefore liable in this action for the injury to this horse in getting upon the fence.

[261]*261If this fence was a nuisance, it is not material, perhaps, that the fence was not built upon the line, but was built near to the line and upon the laud of the defendant.

The law is well settled that every owner of property must so use and maintain his property that he shall not cause any unnecessary injury or damage to his neighbor; and that is so in respect to fences and buildings, or erections of any kind, and as to excavations along or near to the line of the owner of property. If the owner of property erects and maintains upon or near the line of his own property any structure—any fence I might say—any erection that would be dangerous to persons or their animals, who, not knowing the condition, would come in contact with it and suffer serious injury, it would be a nuisance. Because, in such cases, the law makes it illegal and wrong to build and maintain such a nuisance there.

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Van Gorder v. Eastchester Estates, Inc.
207 Misc. 335 (New York Supreme Court, 1955)
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8 N.Y.S. 286 (New York Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
18 Abb. N. Cas. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-baird-nymontctyct-1886.