From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Barr v. Green

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 24, 1914
104 N.E. 619 (N.Y. 1914)

Summary

In Barr v. Green (210 N.Y. 252, 255) the plaintiff was injured by a barbed wire fence constructed by the defendant in violation of a statute.

Summary of this case from Amberg v. Kinley

Opinion

Argued January 21, 1914

Decided February 24, 1914

John Knight for appellant.

Frank W. Brown for respondent.


The schoolhouse site of school district No. 10 in the town of Arcade, county of Wyoming, is located on the easterly side of a highway and consists of a lot about eighty-five feet front and one hundred and twelve feet deep. The schoolhouse faces the south side of the lot.

The defendant is the owner of a farm which adjoins the schoolhouse lot on the south, east and north sides thereof. He erected ordinary fence posts by setting them in the ground twelve feet apart on or near the division line between his lands and the lands of said school district and along the highway adjoining his lands north and south of the schoolhouse lot. Sometime thereafter he fastened a barbed wire on said posts, about four feet from the ground, along said highway and around the three sides of said lot. The barbs on the wire were six inches apart. He left the fence in such incomplete condition, intending, as he asserts, later to place on said posts two lines of wire under the one fastened thereon, and also to fasten a line of poles on the posts above the top wire.

The plaintiff is a child eleven years old and an attendant at the public school in said district. She was absent from school the afternoon that the wire was fastened on the posts as stated, but came to the school the next day, and at an intermission in the school work ran from the door of the schoolhouse southerly, looking over her shoulder and calling as she ran to another attendant of the school, and while so running and without knowing that the wire had been fastened on the posts, her neck came in contact with the barbed wire and it was to some extent lacerated, and she suffered the injuries for which this action is brought.

Section 369 of the Town Law (Consolidated Laws, chapter 62), as it existed at the times mentioned in the complaint, provided: "Barbed wire may be used in the construction of any division fence, provided, however, that the person or corporation desiring to use such material shall first obtain from the owner of the adjoining property his written consent that it may be so used. If the owner of the adjoining property refuses to consent to the building of such a fence, it may nevertheless be built in the following manner: the fence shall be four strands of wire with a sufficient bar of wood at the top; and the size of such top bars and of the posts and supports of such fence, and their distances apart, shall be such as the fence viewers of the town may prescribe. * * * But any person building such a fence without the written consent of the owner of the adjoining property shall be liable to all damages that may be occasioned by reason of such fence. * * *."

Division fences are not erected solely for the purpose of preventing animals from crossing division lines, but also to protect real property from being trespassed upon in any way or for any purpose, and to mark the boundaries and the possession of the person claiming title to the inclosed land. The statute is general in its terms and not confined in its application to any particular purpose. It is not claimed that the defendant has complied with it. Its provisions should be considered in determining whether the defendant was negligent. ( Kelley v. N.Y. State Railways, 207 N.Y. 342; Union Pac. Ry. Co. v. McDonald, 152 U.S. 262.)

We are of opinion that a barbed wire fence is not a nuisance as a matter of law. Whether it is or is not negligence to erect and maintain a barbed wire fence is a question of fact. A person may or may not be negligent in building or maintaining such a fence depending upon the place where the same is erected or maintained and the circumstances affecting the question whether such a fence would in any way constitute a source of danger. The practice of children playing about a school yard during the hours of intermission is well known, and in this case it appears that the lands adjoining the schoolhouse grounds had theretofore been unfenced and it had been the custom of the children attending the public school to run from the schoolhouse grounds upon the lands of the defendant. The plaintiff and other children had also been accustomed to go upon the lands of the defendant to pick strawberries. It was the plaintiff's intention to go upon the defendant's lands and pick strawberries at the time she was injured. The contracted lines of the schoolhouse lot and the fact that his lands adjoining such lot had previously remained unfenced were known to the defendant. The question arises as to whether he should not have apprehended that some attendant of the school would run or fall against the barbs on the fence wire erected by him.

Whether a person is liable for injuries arising from the erection of a fence depends upon the ordinary principles or rules as to what constitutes negligence. If a fence or other structure is erected in a place where in case of its fall other people would be in danger of injury therefrom, it is the duty of a person erecting such a fence or structure to do so in such a manner that an ordinarily prudent person would not apprehend danger of its falling. We see no difference in the principle involved if instead of a person building a fence or structure in a way that an ordinarily prudent man would have apprehended that it might fall and cause injury to others, and a person who builds a fence or structure of such materials or in such form that an ordinarily prudent man would have apprehended that it might result in injury to others through contact with it.

The facts narrated and shown by the record in this case are such that it should have been left to the jury to determine whether the defendant was negligent in the erection of the barbed wire fence and in leaving the same unmarked and unprotected by a bar of wood as provided by statute or otherwise. The question whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence was also under the circumstances disclosed a question of fact for the jury.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.

WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., COLLIN, HOGAN and MILLER, JJ., concur; WERNER, J., dissents on ground there is no evidence of negligence on part of defendant; CUDDEBACK, J., dissents.

Judgment reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Barr v. Green

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 24, 1914
104 N.E. 619 (N.Y. 1914)

In Barr v. Green (210 N.Y. 252, 255) the plaintiff was injured by a barbed wire fence constructed by the defendant in violation of a statute.

Summary of this case from Amberg v. Kinley

In Barr v. Green (210 N.Y. 252) it was held that a recovery might be had on the theory of negligence but not of nuisance, against one who strung barbed wire on a fence on his own boundary line in violation of law in the vicinity of a school where one of the school children accustomed to trespass and play there was injured by coming in contact therewith.

Summary of this case from Robertson v. Rockland Light Power Co.
Case details for

Barr v. Green

Case Details

Full title:LAURA BARR, an Infant, by JOHN F. BARR, Her Guardian ad Litem, Appellant…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Feb 24, 1914

Citations

104 N.E. 619 (N.Y. 1914)
104 N.E. 619

Citing Cases

Baisley v. Missisquoi Cemetery Ass'n

The fence is the landowner's face to the public and the users of adjoining lands. It is hardly unexpectable…

Robertson v. Rockland Light Power Co.

(See Johnson v. City of New York, supra.) In Barr v. Green ( 210 N.Y. 252) it was held that a recovery might…