This is an action to recover damages for the loss of a barn and several outbuildings destroyed by fire, which the plaintiff alleges was negligently kindled by the defendant. The plaintiff prevailed, and the defendant appeals.
There was no error in permitting the plaintiff to prove that Sheridan coal burns slowly and retains fire longer than bituminous coal. The testimony is undisputed that Sheridan coal is a lignite, and is used by the defendant in its locomotives on the division of the railway which includes the station of Broken Bow, where the plaintiff’s property was located. These facts, while collateral, tend in some degree to sustain the plaintiff’s contention that sparks emitted from the defendant’s engine will retain fire while traversing^ a space equal to that intervening between the railway and the plaintiff’s barn. Blomgren v. Anderson, 48 Neb. 240; Farmers State Bank v. Yenney, 73 Neb. 338; Fitch v. Martin, 84 Neb. 745; Young v. Kinney, 85 Neb. 131.
The assignment based upon the admission of testimony to the effect that about the time of the fire, and for some months prior thereto, the defendant’s engines cast out sparks in the neighborhood of the plaintiff’s barn, which were carried a distance equal to or greater than that intervening between said premises and the defendant’s main track, presents a more serious question. The rule stated in 2 Shearman and Redfield, Negligence (5th ed.), sec. 675, appeals to us as reasonable : “And when the particular engine which caused the fire cannot be fully identified, evidence that sparks and burning coals were frequently dropped by engines passing on the same road upon other occasions, at or about the time of the fire, before or after, is relevant and competent to show habitual negligence, and to make it probable that the plaintiff’s injury proceeded from the same cause.” If, however, the engine which emitted the fire is fully identified, then evi
Since the verdict is for the plaintiff, we should consider the evidence in the light most favorable to him. The plaintiff’s barn was south of the defendant’s right of way, which extends east and west, and was 135 feet from the nearest track and about 200 feet from the main track. The fire was discovered about 2 o’clock P. M. About 1 o’clock Mrs. Abbott went to -the barn to search for eggs, and she says no other person was in the building nor was there any fire therein at that time, and no one had occasion to
The judgment of the district court therefore is
Affirmed.