Section 2087 of the Compiled Laws of Utah, which provides
that
"Any person who drives a herd of horses, mules, asses, cattle,
sheep, goats or swine over a public highway where such highway is
constructed on a hillside shall be liable for all damage done by
such animals in destroying the banks or rolling rocks into or upon
such highway"
is not in conflict with the Constitution of the United
States.
Page 165 U. S. 181
This action was originally instituted in June, 1893, before a
justice of the peace in the then Territory of Utah, to recover the
sum of ten dollars for damages alleged to have resulted from
destroying the banks on the side of, and from rolling rocks into
and upon, a public highway situated on a hillside, caused by a band
of sheep owned by the defendant while being driven upon such
highway.
The supreme court of the territory, on review of the judgment of
a district court in favor of the defendant, held that the statute
upon which the cause of action was founded was valid, adjudged that
the petition stated a cause of action, and remanded the cause to
the district court. 11 Utah 200. Subsequently the supreme court of
the state affirmed a judgment of the district court, which had been
entered for the amount claimed. The defendant sued out this writ of
error.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
The sole question presented for our consideration is whether
section 2087 of the Compiled Laws of Utah (vol. 1, p. 743) is in
conflict with the Constitution of the United States. The section
reads as follows:
"SEC. 2087. Any person who drives a herd of horses, mules,
asses, cattle, sheep, goats, or swine over a public highway where
such highway is constructed on a hillside shall be liable for all
damage done by such animals in destroying the banks or rolling
rocks into or upon such highway."
Plaintiff in error claims that the law in question deprives the
class of persons mentioned in it of their property without due
process of law and denies to them the equal protection of the laws,
and that consequently its provisions contravene that portion of the
first section of the Fourteenth Amendment
Page 165 U. S. 182
to the Constitution of the United States, which provides
that
"No state shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property,
without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
The denial of the equal protection of the laws is asserted to
consist in an unjust and illegal discrimination against persons who
"drive herds of horses, mules, asses, cattle, sheep, goats or swine
over a public highway where such highway is constructed on a
hillside" by making them liable for damage done by them in using
the highway while all other persons are permitted to use it without
liability.
We premise that the clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution referred to was undoubtedly intended to prohibit an
arbitrary deprivation of life or liberty, or arbitrary spoliation
of property.
Barbier v. Connolly, 113 U.
S. 53. But it does not limit, nor was it designed to
limit, the subjects upon which the police power of a state may be
lawfully exerted.
Minneapolis Railway Co. v. Beckwith,
129 U. S. 29.
Embraced within the police powers of a state is the establishment,
maintenance, and control of public highways.
New Orleans Gas
Co. v. Louisiana Light Co., 115 U. S. 661.
The legislation in question would clearly seem, therefore, to come
within the narrowest definition of the police power, and be
properly classed as a reasonable regulation incident to the right
to establish and maintain such highways. The statute is analogous
in principle to the one considered in the case of
St. Louis
& San Francisco Railway Co. v. Mathews, 165 U. S.
1, wherein it was held that a law of Missouri was valid
which made every railroad corporation owning or operating a
railroad in the state absolutely responsible in damages for the
property of any person injured or destroyed by fire communicated by
its locomotive engines. That decision was based upon the right of a
state, in the exercise of its police power, to classify occupations
with relation to their peculiar liability to cause injury to
property from the dangerous nature of the implements employed in
the business. The legislation here in question undoubtedly proceeds
upon this theory. The
Page 165 U. S. 183
statute was manifestly not designed to impose a liability upon
the owners of herds for damage occasioned by the mere passage of a
drove of animals over a hillside road. If these herds were kept in
the road, the banks would not be caved, or rocks rolled into the
traveled way. The damage contemplated must therefore be occasioned
by animals going outside the beaten roadway. In effect, the
legislature declared that the passage of droves or herds of animals
over a hillside highway was so likely, if great precautions were
not observed, to result in damage to the road that where this
damage followed such driving, there ought to be no controversy over
the existence or nonexistence of negligence, but that there should
be an absolute legal presumption to that effect resulting from the
fact of having driven the herd. The confusion of thought involved
in the reasoning of the plaintiff in error not only results from
failing to consider that the statute simply creates a conclusive
presumption of negligence from a particular state of facts, but
also is caused by treating the law as one imposing a liability on
the owners of herds when liability does not also exist as to
others. It is reasonable to infer that the lawmaker contemplated
that, if only a few animals were driven over a road, and damage
resulted from their being allowed to leave the road and go upon the
sides, so as to cause injury, that there would be no practical
difficulty in establishing the want of due care on the part of
those in charge of the animals driven, and therefore there was no
necessity in such case of creating a conclusive presumption of
negligence, while, on the other hand, the driving of a herd might
require such a degree of care, and leave room to so much question
as to whether due care had been taken that where damage resulted,
the conclusive presumption of neglect should be entailed.
It was obviously the province of the state legislature to
provide the nature and extent of the legal presumption to be
deduced from a given state of facts, and the creation by law of
such presumption is, after all, but an illustration of the power to
classify. When the statute is properly understood, therefore, the
argument of the plaintiff in error amounts to an assertion that the
whole subject of the probative force
Page 165 U. S. 184
to arise by operation of law from any specified state of fact is
in every sense, by the effect of the Fourteenth Amendment, removed
from the jurisdiction of the local authorities.
The statute, being general in its application, embracing all
persons under substantially like circumstances, and not being an
arbitrary exercise of power, does not deny to the defendant the
equal protection of the laws.
Lowe v. Kansas, 163 U. S.
81,
163 U. S. 88;
Duncan v. Missouri, 152 U. S. 377. So
also, as the statute clearly specifies the condition under which
the presumption of neglect arises and provides for the
ascertainment of liability by judicial proceedings, there is no
foundation for the assertion that the enforcement of such
ascertained liability constitutes a taking of property without due
process of law.
Judgment affirmed.