Court Opinion

ID: 8263233
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:57:29.778353+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:14.037452
License: Public Domain

REYBURN, J.
This is a suit commenced before a justice of the peace in Scott county, to recover damages for the value of a bull killed by defendant in the operation of its railroad. On appeal to the circuit court a trial was had before a jury, which rendered a verdict for plaintiff, and defendant has. appealed to this court. The statement set forth that on the 16th of June, 1900, defendant was operating a railroad in Kelso township, Scott county; that on that day a Jersey bull owned by plaintiff, valued at $65, was run over and killed by the engine and cars of defendant; that the place at which the bull went upon the railroad and was killed was not at a point where the railroad was inclosed by a lawful fence, nor at the crossing of any public highway, and that the animal went upon the railroad and was killed at a place where the defendant might have lawfully erected and maintained fences on the sides of its railroad sufficient to prevent animals from getting on the road, but had failed to erect and maintain such fences, whereby the plaintiff had sustained the damages. The evidence in the case was brief, substantially undisputed, and established that G-raysboro, an unincorporated town at the terminus of *274defendant’s railroad on the Mississippi river, was divided into what was called Graysboro and Graysboro Addition or Grays Point, or the old town and the new town. Graysboro not being legally organized, had no town government, no streets laid ont, bnt there was a wagon road running along the defendant’s main track through its yards to the depot, which road, however, was not a public road, and there was a crossing near the depot used for wagons and the people going to and from the depot and from one part of the town to the other. The animal was killed in the yards of defendant, and its value and the place where it was killed were not disputed. The section of the statute under which this action is brought imposes no obligation upon a railroad to fence anywhere, bnt was intended to hold out an inducement for the railroads to fence their track where it was not deemed absolutely necessary to compel them by law to do so. Sec. 2867, R. S. 1899, p. 730. While the act does not require the railroad company to erect any fence, yet it relieves the plaintiff in a suit for damages for stock killed from the usual burden of proof of negligence, except where such accident occurred at a portion of the railroad inclosed by a lawful fence, or at the crossing of any public highway,, and makes proof of the fact of the injury and that the road was not fenced at the place of its occurrence, a prima facie case against the railroad. A railroad may fence or not, in its discretion, but if it fails to fence where it may properly do so, its action in such regard is at its own risk under peril of the application of this statute dispensing with proof of negligence, if stock he injured. Tiarks v. Railroad, 58 Mo. 45; Wymore v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 247; Young v. Railroad, 79 Mo. 336; Radcliffe v. Railroad, 90 Mo. 127.
In the construction of the statutes relating to fencing by railroads, the courts have excepted by necessary intendment from their application such grounds as are required to remain open for the use of the public and *275the transaction of the business at the railroad depot or station. Morris v. Railroad, 58 Mo. 78; Johnson v. Railroad, 27 Mo. App. 379; Russell v. Railroad, 26 Mo. App. 368; Lloyd v. Railroad, 49 Mo. 199.
Under this section a railroad can not arbitrarily determine for itself the question whether a space uninclosed claimed for station use, depot purposes and switch limits, was necessary for the convenient and safe transaction of its business and for the accommodation of the public, but where evidence has been introduced tending to show that the railroad might have fenced its road where the plaintiff’s animal' strayed upon its railway track without causing inconvenience to the railway or to those having business to transact with it, or to the public at such point, the jury should determine the question of the necessity of the land nninclosed for such uses. Straub v. Eddy, 47 Mo. App. 189. But in the case under consideration there is no such evidence, and while it is the province of the jury to determine all questions of fact, it is likewise the province of the court to determine all questions of law, especially whether there is any evidence entitling the submission of issues of fact to the jury. O’Malley v. Railroad, 113 Mo. 319 ; Boland v. Railroad, 36 Mo. 484. The plaintiff submitted the testimony of but two witnesses, the first of whom, a son, stated he resided and did business at Grays Point at the time of the killing of the bull, and that if the railroad yards were fenced in, neither he nor his neighbors could get out without climbing a barb-wire fence, and the people living outside would have to climb two barbed-wire fences to get to his place of business, and that the business of the town could not be transacted if the railroad was fenced, without new roads; that there were about fifty-five families in the town of Graysboro, living on both sides of the railroad, and that he did not know whether it was practicable to fence up the yards and switches. The remaining witness offered by plaintiff, stated that the *276depot of defendant was on the edge of the right of way and the track along the edge of the platform, that the town was divided into' Graysboro and Graysboro Addition, the addition to 'Graysboro was on the east side of the main track of the railroad, and Graysboro proper on the west side; that in June, 1900, there were three or four hundred people living there, and a good many people living north of the depot; that if the fence was built as suggested, the people could not get to and from the two towns without climbing the barbed-wire fence, that they could neither get in nor out, and that they could not get freight to or from the railroad depot, and that there were stores on both sides of the depot, and the two parts of the town would then be without communication with each other; that the road running east of the main track was the only way for people to get to and from Graysboro, and to and from the depot, although it was not a public road, but was in common use and the only means of getting to and from the town? that a person could not get to Graysboro if the fence was built around as indicated by the plaintiff, and that if the road was fenced a new road.might be built to get to the old town, but access to the new town would be cut-off. Thus, the plaintiff’s testimony, conclusively establishes that no fencing could have been made at the place where the animal was killed without serious inconvenience of the public in the transaction of its business, and in the communication between the two sections of the town, as well as interfering' with the Operation of the railroad and its business with the public. The trial court, therefore, erred in not withdrawing the case from the consideration of the jury by giving the instructions asked at the close of the evidence, and its judgment will be accordingly reversed.
Bland, P. J., and Goode, J., concur.