Wallace v. Oregon Short Line Railroad

100 P. 904, 16 Idaho 103, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 28
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 100 P. 904 (Wallace v. Oregon Short Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Oregon Short Line Railroad, 100 P. 904, 16 Idaho 103, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 28 (Idaho 1909).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This action was commenced in the probate court for the negligent killing of a colt and resulted there in a judgment for the plaintiff for $100 damages. The defendant appealed from that judgment to the district court and the case was tried there anew before a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $130 damages.

It appears from the record that the colt was pasturing at the time it was killed upon the inclosed farm of one Lee, [106]*106and that the defendant company maintains a right of way fence across said Lee’s land, and a gate therein for the use and benefit of the land owner, at a private crossing, and it is alleged that the defendant removed the fastening from said gate and permitted the gate to remain without a suitable fastening, and said colt passed through said gate upon defendant’s right of way and was killed by one of its trains. It is also alleged that within three months after the date of said killing plaintiff made a claim in writing upon the defendant for $150 for the killing of said colt, and that said claim was signed by the owner of said animal, and that the defendant failed and refused to pay the same or any part thereof.

All of the material allegations of the complaint that would entitle the plaintiff to recover are put in issue by the answer, and the answer avers that in the killing of said colt the defendant was without fault or negligence, and avers that the killing of said animal was due entirely to the carelessness and negligence of the plaintiff.

A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and this appeal is from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

One question discussed by counsel for appellant is the sufficiency of the evidence to show that the agents or servants of the railroad company were negligent in the maintenance of the gate through which said colt entered upon the defendant’s right of way.

It appears from the evidence that the railroad right of way where the animal was killed is inclosed by a fence; that a private road for the accommodation and use of the land owner, through whose land the railroad ran, was made by the railroad company, and a gate put in the fence on each side of the track. It also appears that said gates were properly made, and when properly shut would prevent animals from getting on the railway right of way; that on the evening of the accident the owner of the colt, with the owner' of the land and the latter’s small boy and another person or two, passed through said gates, and the boy stopped be[107]*107hind to close the gate. The evidence shows that he closed the gate, and it does not appear that anyone passed through said gate from that time until ■ after the colt had passed through it and was killed by a passing train. It is admitted that if said gate had been properly closed, said animal could not have gotten through it.

It also appears that a short time before the accident, the railway company fence gang had put in some new posts at the point where said gate is situated, and prior to that time the railroad company had furnished a chain and lock and key for said gate, and also for the gate on the opposite side of the track; that when said fence gang repaired said fence, they left the old post, around which was the chain, lying on the ground near where the new post was put in, and did not put it around the new post and lock the gate. It also appears that the private land owner left said gate unlocked, especially during the seasons when he was going through it quite often, and it further appears that such land owner took the lock from the gate, through which the colt passed, to the gate on the opposite side of the track and used it there. It is conceded that the fence gang put said new post in properly and put thereon proper cleats between which the ends of the boards composing the gate could be put. From all of the testimony upon this point, it clearly appears that it is insufficient to establish any negligence whatever on the part of the railroad company so far as the maintenance of and keeping this gate closed is concerned, as it shows the railroad company had placed a good and sufficient gate there with proper fastenings, and that if it had been properly closed, the animal would not have gotten through. If the private land owner had not taken the lock away, but had used it for the purposes for which the company had left it there,- — ■ that is, for locking the gate, — this accident would not have occurred. Had the private land owner locked the gate when he went through on the evening the colt was killed, the accident would not have occurred.

Judge Elliott in his work on Railroads, 2d ed., vol. 3, sec. 1200, clearly states the rules of law governing the question [108]*108of the maintenance of and the closing of such gates. He states as follows:

“At private crossings, as. we have before seen, railway companies are often bound to fence their tracks. But at such places a permanent and immovable fence cannot be maintained, for such a fence would prevent the crossing from being used. At such points openings are usually left in the fence and gates or bars erected through which the adjoining owners may pass, and at such places the railway company is bound to erect gates, bars or other appliances which will prevent the entry of animals and yet enable adjoining owners to pass over the right of way. The company must also exercise due care to see that gates and bars which it erects are kept in proper repair. As a general rule, it is the duty of the company to exercise care to keep gates and bars erected in fences along its right of way. closed, and to see that such gates are provided with proper fastenings for keeping them closed. Where such gates are left open by the agents, servants or customers of the railway company, the railway company will generally be liable for injuries to animals which come upon the track through.such open gates. And the company will generally be liable where the gates are left open by third persons or strangers if the company knows that they are open or they have been open for such a length of time as to charge the company with notice, but not otherwise. The company is entitled to a reasonable time in which to learn that gates and bars are open or out of repair, and it will not be liable until it has had reasonable opportunity to close the gate or bars or make repairs. Where gates are left open by the adjoining owner for whose benefit they were erected, or by his servants, the company is not liable to him.”

We think that a correct statement of the law, and that where such gates are left open or not properly closed by the adjoining land owner for whose benefit they were erected, the company is not liable for damages that result therefrom.

Something has been said in regard to the duty of the railroad company to see that said gate was locked 'at all times. [109]*109From the' evidence it appears that the company did furnish a chain and lock and furnish the private land owner with one key to the lock and that the foreman or boss of the section kept the other key, but there is no requirement of the law that compels the railroad company to keep a farm crossing gate locked. The railroad company is not required to keep a man stationed at such gate all the time to lock it whenever the private land owner goes through. The company provided the chain and the lock, the land owner unlocked the gate and fastened the chain around the post, left the gate unlocked and took the lock away from that gate.

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Related

Harris v. Drenning
168 P. 1106 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1917)
Preece v. Oregon Short Line R.
161 P. 40 (Utah Supreme Court, 1916)
Adair v. McFarlin
1911 OK 129 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 904, 16 Idaho 103, 1909 Ida. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-oregon-short-line-railroad-idaho-1909.