Court Opinion

ID: 6993339
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 03:28:52.097181+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:09:41.293442
License: Public Domain

Sample, J. Appellee’s hog was killed by appellant’s engine at a place called Carrier Mills. The right of recovery is based on the failure of appellant to fence its track at that place. The principal defense is that the company was not required to fence its track there. The undisputed facts are that Carrier Mills is a station on the line of the appellant’s road where it has a sidetrack, depot and cattle-pens as conveniences for the transaction of business for the public. There is also a grain or warehouse near its sidetrack from which grain is loaded into its cars. The village is unincorporated, but is laid out into lots, blocks, and streets. The tracks run through the village from northeast to southwest, on each side of which there are buildings; the usual business of a country village is represented in its makeup. The village is situated in a rich agricultural and timber country -which supplies large shipments, and, as we think the evidence fairly shows, requires substantially all the space along the sidetrack for the proper and convenient handling of products brought to that station for transportation. The hog in question was near the warehouse, probably eating grain that had fallen to the ground in loading it from the warehouse.into appellant’s cars, where the hog was killed. There is no evidence to indicate where it got on the track of appellant. The burden is on appellee to show that the hog got on the right of way at a place where appellant was requited to fence its road. This, appellee has failed to prove, and as no common law negligence is shown, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. In view of the numerous decisions of our courts, the appellant was not required to fence its track along the line of its switch, where, as the evidence shows, the space was substantially all used by the public in its transaction of business with the railroad company. This doctrine is so well established in this State that it is not necessary to reiterate the reasons upon which it is founded, or to cite the authorities so familiar to the profession. Judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. Reversed and remanded.