71 Ind. App. 451 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1919
— This is an action instituted by appellants to recover for the loss by fire of a certain barn. At the time of the fire appellees’ threshing outfit was being operated near said barn on appellants’ farm, under contract between the parties. It is the theory of the complaint that the fire was caused by the negligence of appellees in operating, without a sparkarrester, a steam engine which constituted a part of the threshing outfit. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees. The only error assigned is the action of the court in overruling the
The only objection urged against this instruction rests on the rule that a person may not lawfully contract to exempt himself from the results of his own negligence. We are unable to discover the relation of that rule to said instruction. The use of wood for fuel was not in itself negligence, hut its use is perhaps more hazardous, under ordinary conditions, than the use of coal. The assumption of this extra hazard by appellants, who under the agreement were to furnish the fuel, was a proper subject of contract, and did not lessen the responsibility of appellees for the results of actual negligence, if any, in their use of such fuel. Their conduct was still to he measured in the light of -the increased hazard, hut they were not to he responsible for loss arising from such hazard, independently of such negligence on their part. The provision of the contract was lawful, and its application to the facts in issue is correctly set forth in the instruction.
There is no reversible error. Judgment affirmed.