Court Opinion

ID: 4734971
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:58:56.166088+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:08:13.880812
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
Respondents own land adjoining the right of way of the appellant. The right of way was not fenced. *517Stock wandered from the right of way onto respondents’ land, and this action is brought to recover damages which they suffered. The only question is whether a railroad company is liable to an adjoining owner for trespassing stock which wander from its unfenced right of way. Respondents rely upon the statute, Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 8730, 8731 (P. C. 433 §§ 89, 91). They insist: (a) that these statutes are declaratory of the common law, and in addition declare a rule of evidence; or (b), if a recovery may not be had under the statute, that respondents are entitled to a recovery as upon an action on the case at common law, under the maxim sic utere tuo ut aliennm non laedes.
The statutes have no bearing on the case. Reference to the original act of 1893, Laws 1893, p. 418, and the acts amendatory thereof, Laws 1903, p. 33£, and Laws 1907, p. 169, as well as the cases arising thereunder, will show that the legislature did not assume to do more than make the killing of stock upon an unfenced right of way prima facie evidence of negligence. The object of the statute is twofold; to put the burden of proof upon the railroad company where stock is killed upon its right of way, and to protect those who operate and travel upon trains from the hazard of derailment and other accidents.
We find no room for the application of the principles relied on. It is true, as suggested, that the common law assumed to give a remedy for every wrong.
The obligations of those who have adjoining land or land fenced in a common inclosure are noted in Kobayashi v. Strangeway, 64 Wash. 36, 116 Pac. 461. It was there held that the owner of land is bound to keep his cattle upon his own lands, and although his lands were fenced with other lands, that he may not allow his cattle to graze or trespass upon the land of the other although within the same inclosure. These ai’e the rules of the common law, and to sustain an action, it must appear that there has been a breach of duty. Appellant owed no duty to respondents to turn cattle which *518were trespassing upon its land away from respondents’ land. To hold appellant to a liability, it must be made to appear that it knew of the presence of the trespassing cattle, and wilfully turned them upon respondents’ land. No such facts appear in this case.
Rem. & Bal. Code, § 4982 (P. C. 183 § 11), seems to have been designed, because of changed conditions, to save the owner from any hardships that the common law rule imposed. It was recognized that, under the conditions prevailing in this country, lands which were subject to cultivation should be fenced, and it was provided that an owner who would protect his lands from trespass might demand of his adjoining proprietor that he join in fencing his land, and failing to do so, an action might be brought for the cost thereof.
It is generally held that “stock killing” statutes are not applicable where stock wander from an unfenced right of way onto the lands of another. The latest expression of this rule is in Missouri, O & G. R. Co. v. Brown (Okl.), 148 Pac. 1040, and this we understand to have been the rule declared in Hubert v. Connell Northern R. Co., 71 Wash. 567, 129 Pac. 105, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 447, where a number of cases are cited, although it was finally held that the.company was liable because it had torn out the fences so that stock might enter. In that case, the right of way and the fields of the plaintiff were a common inclosure. We held, under the facts in the case, that one owner could not throw his neighbor’s land out to the commons without doing violence to the maxim relied on.
“For if mine and my neighbor’s field are in one inclosure, neither is liable to the other for damage done by trespassing cattle which wander from one ownership to another. But if either myself or my neighbor, in wilful disregard of the rights of the other, break the outer inclosure and leave it open so that cattle may wander at will over the premises belonging to both of us, the oifender should be held to the rule that no man may so use his property as to injure that of another.”
*519And further:
“If, for its own purposes or because of its necessities, a railroad company breaks the continuity of the fence so that its common owner is damaged, it is liable; for the proximate cause is not the trespass of wandering stock, but the wilful disregard of the right of another by the party charged.”
Respondents are without remedy. The judgment of the > lower court is reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to dismiss..