Saldi v. Brighton Stock Yard Co.

181 N.E.2d 687, 344 Mass. 89, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 706
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 5, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 181 N.E.2d 687 (Saldi v. Brighton Stock Yard Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saldi v. Brighton Stock Yard Co., 181 N.E.2d 687, 344 Mass. 89, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 706 (Mass. 1962).

Opinion

*90 Whittemore, J.

The plaintiff had verdicts against the corporate defendant (Brighton) on count 1 (negligence) and on count 3 (nuisance) for injuries to her testate (Saldi) caused on June 7, 1954, by a cow which had escaped from Brighton’s stockyard on Guest Street in the Brighton district of Boston. A verdict was directed under count 2 for the individual defendant, George McGovern, who, we assume, had been sued as the alleged owner of the cow. The case is here on Brighton’s bill of exceptions.

The jury could have found facts as stated in this and following paragraphs. Brighton maintained the stockyard for the sale and purchase of cows which had ceased to be milkers and were bought to be taken away for slaughter. Brighton stationed an employee at its scales and was paid by the seller for the service of weighing each cow sold. In the usual course of business a farmer delivering a cow or cows for sale would drive his truck from Guest Street northerly onto the defendant’s premises, unfenced on Guest Street, and to the rear thereof where he would back his truck against a “loading in” platform one hundred feet long and eight feet wide which stood in front of receiving pens. Having placed his truck opposite a gate barring one of six openings into pens, the farmer would swing the gate so as to extend it across the platform nearly to the truck; he would also extend across the platform a like gate which, hinged to a post at the other side of the opening, had been swung back against the pen fence. The gates were seven to seven and one half feet long and extended nearly to the back of the truck. The farmer would then drop the tailgate of his truck and prompt the cow or cows to walk across the platform in the lane made by the two gates and down a ramp into the pen. No employee of Brighton was stationed at the platform. The gates in place to form the lane were not fastened and there was nothing to prevent these gates, or at least one of them, “being swung closed so that the cow could get on the platform and go right off the platform back to where the truck was.” “The remaining areas where the cattle are” are fenced. The “loading out” plat *91 form at the front of the rows of pens, on Guest Street, was not described. Brighton weighed from 150 to 300 cows each day.

The cow which injured Saldi was first seen, out of control, by someone who shouted that a cow was loose; McGovern, who was unloading another cow, looked up and saw the escaped cow going away from the platform at a point two or three feet distant therefrom and a like distance from his truck. Other trucks were in place at the platform. McGovern, as soon as he had unloaded his cow, took up the chase in his truck. The escaped cow went westerly out of Brighton’s yard and, about 440 yards therefrom, near the corner of Guest and Market streets, on private property, she butted Saldi who was at work for his employer in the construction of a substation for the Boston Edison Company. The cow was thereafter pursued by the police and shot.

For years there had been no fence to Brighton’s premises along Guest Street although seventeen to twenty years earlier, “before they changed the buildings,” there had been a fence with a gate and watchman.

Cows had escaped from the premises on prior occasions. McGovern knew of some escapes; he had helped to bring cows back. Brighton’s president, connected with the corporation since 1936, knew of possibly five occasions of escapes since that date; “sometimes . . . [the cows] had to be corralled by the police”; the escapes on most of these occasions had been “from the unfenced area i.e. the platform.” Joseph L. Conroy, a police officer, prior to 1954 had been stationed at the Brighton Station, Division 14, for seven years, for four years of which he had been on the day shift. He had had personal experience with escaped cattle in the Market and Guest street area on four occasions including the escape on June 7, 1954. In the fall of 1946 five escaped at one time. To “the best of his knowledge” the escaped cattle came from the stockyard. About three quarters of a mile away was a slaughter house and abattoir which was fenced on all sides except along the river. He *92 had no knowledge of escapes from the abattoir. Officer Francis J. Handren had knowledge of one other animal “that escaped during that year [1954].” Officer Arthur Grinnetty, attached to the division for seven years prior to June 7,1954, had “cases with cows or bulls in that area before” that date; he “had one other and another officer.” The police in the Brighton division use shot of heavier gouge “specially designed for these animals.” The records of use of shot on animals was referred to unofficially by the officers of the division as the “cowboy record.” Brighton’s president, when asked if Brighton could have built additional fences on the platform answered: “And not do business.” When asked what Brighton did to prevent escapes, he answered: “We provide the facilities for the farmers to unload at but we take no part in the unloading.”

1. There was a basis of liability in the evidence. 1 In cases of escaped domestic animals “the measure of the plaintiff’s rights and the defendant’s duties is the common rule of due care.” Carrington v. Worcester Consol. St. Ry. 222 Mass. 120. O’Connor v. Hickey, 260 Mass. 110. Texeira v. Sundquist, 288 Mass. 93, 94-95. Woodman v. Haynes, 289 Mass. 114,116-117. The rule applies whether the accident is in the public way (see cases last cited) or on private property owned by the plaintiff, Lyons v. Merrick, 105 Mass. 71, 76; Walker v. Nickerson, 291 Mass. 522, 525, or by another, Baker v. Ratkiewicz, 275 Mass. 174,179-180. 2 It is unnecessary to show that the animal had vicious traits. Lyons v. Merrick, supra. Walker v. Nickerson, supra. *93 Action by the animal in accordance with its natural propensities is foreseeable and some control to prevent this is required. Woodman v. Haynes, supra (unattended horse).

The jury could have found that there was a risk that an escaped cow, even if “superannuated,” as Brighton’s brief suggests, in the strange environment of city streets, pursued or not, would be sufficiently disturbed to indulge the known propensity of her kind to butt. Lyons v. Merrick, supra (escaped cow). O’Connor v. Hickey, supra. Baker v. Ratkiewicz, supra (hobbled horse, likely to “flare up”). Woodman v. Haynes, supra.

Brighton contends that these principles are inapplicable because it was not shown to be in control of the cow. See Lyons v. Merrick, supra, p. 76 (a “person who in . . . place [of the owner] . . . has the exclusive . . . control”). In the circumstances, however, neither exclusive nor immediate control was required for another principle was also applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
181 N.E.2d 687, 344 Mass. 89, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saldi-v-brighton-stock-yard-co-mass-1962.