30 Conn. 304 | Conn. | 1861
We do not discover any error in the charge of the court below. The part of the charge complained of is, that the judge told the jury that, within the meaning of the statute on which the action was brought, fire might by natural causes be communicated from one field to another, without a continuous burning along the surface of the ground. In what particular manner it might be thus communicated within the statute he did not explain, nor was he requested to do so, but
The defendant claimed that there was a narrow strip of ground, (some sixteen feet wide,) between his own lot, where he set the fire, and the adjoining lot to and through which it spread and beyond which lay the plaintiff’s lot, on which narrow strip the grass was so short that it would not bum, and that in fact it did not burn ; and hence he claimed that the fire did not “ run ” to the adjoining land, although it in fact spread and passed from the lot where it was set into the adjoining lot.
This view of the statute is quite too constrained and narrow for a sensible application of it to the subject-matter. In our view the statute was designed to subject any person who should kindle afire on 1ns own land, to consume bushes, or for any like purpose, which should spread upon the land of others, to the payment of such damage as might be caused by it.
If the defendant’s view is correct, then a stone wall, a brook, a trodden path, or a ditch, over which the fire is communicable by heat, flames, burning branches of trees, or other combustible matter on fire, which may be carried along by the wind, prevents the application of the statute, although the mischief done, and the cause of the mischief, are precisely the same as if the fire had literally run along the surface of the ground without interruption.
The defendant’s counsel ask us whether, if fire set in a field should spread by flying sparks to another field at a considerable distance, this would be within the statute ? We need not express any opinion upon that point in order to decide the present case, for no such point was made in the case below; and upon the facts presented by the record no such question arises in the case. But we are not satisfied that there would be any difficulty in holding such a case within the statute were the question before us for decision.
The defendant’s counsel have built much of their argument upon the idea that the statute in question is penal in its character and must therefore be construed strictly. We think this is not so. Damages only are given, and that does
It is further asked whether, if a person makes a fire in his dwelling house for domestic purposes, and sparks escape from the chimney top, and do damage without any fault on his part, he would be liable to pay damages under this statute ? We answer that he would not, and that he would not be, in such a case, if the fire ran without his fault out of the fireplace along the floor of the house upon the adjoining lot of his neighbor and destroyed his crops or his buildings. A fire kindled in this manner is not such a fire as the statute contemplates. And it is on this ground that the case of Burroughs v. The Housatonic R. R. Co., 15 Conn., 124, which has been cited by the defendant’s counsel, is not applicable to the present case.
We do not advise a new trial.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.