Strange v. Bodcaw Lumber Co.

96 S.W. 152, 79 Ark. 490, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 2, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 96 S.W. 152 (Strange v. Bodcaw Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strange v. Bodcaw Lumber Co., 96 S.W. 152, 79 Ark. 490, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 378 (Ark. 1906).

Opinion

Riddick, J.,

(after stating the facts.) This is an action by E. A. Strange against the Bodcaw Lumber Company to recover $100 of the company as damages for causing the death of plaintiff’s horse.

The company owns a sawmill plant near the town of Stamps in Lafayette County of this State. The town was west of the mill plant, and a public road (that entered the town from the east passed not far from the mill and crossed a small stream called Crooked Creek before reaching the town. In 1893 the lumber company made a large pond by constructing a dam across the valley of this creek. The public road crossed the road above where the dam was constructed. To prevent the water from overflowing 'the public road, the road was straightened, and a roadbed several feet high was constructed across the valley of this stream with a bridge across the channel of the creek. This work was done by the lumber; company with the consent of the county judge and with the assistance of the road overseer. -This elevated roadbed was about twenty feet wide, and near the creek was over,' ten feet high. After the • company had erected its dam across, the creek the water backed up around this public road, and at places was eight or ten feet deep on both sides of the road. When the 1 .roadbed was first constructed, posts with connecting rails were'placed along the edge of the roadbed to prevent wagons and teams from running off the dump into the pond. But, as the roadbed was raised from time to time by placing loads of dirt and sawdust thereon, the surface of the roadbed was finally raised about the rails, so that nothing but the posts,were left above the surface of the roadway. After this roadbed was constructed, it was under the control of the road overseer as one of the public roads of the county until, by an extension of the limits of the town of Stamps, it came within the limits of the town, and passed to the control of town authorities as a public street.

On the 5th of September, 1904, while this road or street was in this condition, Alvin Strange, a brother of the plaintiff, drove the horse '^of plaintiff to the town of Stamps to attend services at a church. In the buggy with him were his sister and another young lady. It was night, and while they were crossing this road and approaching the bridge over the creek the horse became frightened at a pair of goats hitched to a sled which a boj'had driven upon the bridge. The horse, on being frightened by the goats, began to backhand before he could be stopped he backed the buggy over the side of the roadbed into the water, which was at that place about ten feet deep. The occupants of the buggy got out and ¡ escaped, but the horse was drowned. The plaintiff, as the owner of the horse, brought this action against the mill, company, as before stated, to recover damages for the death of his horse. -The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and judgment was rendered accordingly, and the appeal taken by the plaintiff brings the case before us for review.

We will state at the outset that the defendant can not be held responsible for the condition of the roadway itself. It can not be held .■ responsible for the fact that the road at this point was elevated on an embankment several feet high, for this was a public road, and defendant had no right to reduce the height of this embankment or to change it. In order for the plaintiff to recover, he must show that the water which defendant placed around and against this road was so dangerous to travel that barriers were necessary to protect the public against the danger, and that the failure of the defendant to erect them •caused the injury.

The law is now well settled that it is unlawful to make an excavation or to put a dangerous obstruction of any kind adjoining .a public highway, and leave it in a condition to endanger the safety of those who are traveling thereon and who themselves are in the exercise of ordinary care. When one makes an excavation of that kind on his own grounds adjoining the public highway, he should exercise due care to protect the public against the danger to accidents caused by such excavations, and, if necessary, should erect a fence or guard rails for that purpose. This question was discussed and the law clearly stated in the case of Beck v. Carter, 68 N. Y. 283. See also Barnes v. Ward, 9 C. B. (Eng.), 392; Hadley v. Taylor, L. R. 1 C. P. 53; 1 Wood on Nuisances (3 Ed.), § 271, and cases cited.

The rule would be the same if one, after making an excavation adjoining the public highway, should fill it with water, and thus make a deep pond adjoining the highway. If such pond was dangerous to travelers on the highway who were exercising ordinary care, it would be the duty of the owner to erect barriers or guard rails or do whatever might ■ be necessary to protect the public against the danger he had created. And his duty would be the same whether the pond was caused by making an excavation adjoining the highway and filling it with water, or by damming a stream which crossed the highway, thus causing the water to back up on both sides of the highway. In either case it would be his duty to so exercise his own rights as to avoid injury to the public; and if the danger was such that it could be foreseen that a fence or railing was required to guard the public against ■danger, it would be the duty of the owner to put them up.

Now, in this case it is admitted that the defendant constructed an embankment across a stream, and thus backed up the water on both sides of the public highway where it crossed the valley of the stream. If the presence of this water added nothing of .danger to travelers on the highway who themselves exercised ordinary care, then the defendant was guilty of no wrong, and was not responsible for this injury. But if the water made the road more hazardous to travelers, it became the duty of the defendant company to do what was reasonably necessary to guard the public against danger caused by this act of damming the stream. If the danger was such-that guard rails were required to protect travelers, they should not only have been provided, but kept in .repair so as to serve the purpose.intended. And if, by reason of the failure of the company in this respect, a traveler along the public highway or his property was injured, the traveler or owner of the property can recover damages for the injury, unless his own carelessness, or that of his agent in charge of the property, contributed to the injury.

The case then turns first on the question of whether the presence of this water on either side of the public road was a source of danger to travelers on the highway who themselves-exercised due care. If this was so, it was the duty of the company to erect guard rails or do whatever was reasonably necessary to protect the public against the danger; and if it failed to do-so, and by .reason of such negligence the plaintiff's horse was drowned, the company is liable, unless the driver of the horse-was guilty of negligence contributing to the injury.

The fact that the pond was put there by permission of the-county judge does not alter the case, for the permission of the county judge can not authorize acts dangerous to the public, or relieve the defendant from the consequences of its own negligence. Nor is it any defense for defendant to say that it had no-authority to enter on the public highway to erect guard rails or barriers.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.W. 152, 79 Ark. 490, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strange-v-bodcaw-lumber-co-ark-1906.