98 Mo. App. 330 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
The plaintiff sues for the value of a quantity of hay alleged to have been destroyed on the 12th day of July, 1900, by fire set out by one of defendant’s engines while being operated on its line of railroad. The finding was for the plaintiff. The only question raised by the defendant is that the plaintiff failed to make a case.
It was shown that defendant’s track passed east and west through a station named Nyhart on to the town of Butler, and within one hundred and fifty feet of plaintiff’s ricks of hay; that 'south of defendant’s
Witness J. I. Ehardt testified that he was about one-half mile northwest of the rick of hay at the time he first saw the smoke, at which time it was on the south side of the hedge, and that he did not see any smoke or fire between the railroad track and the hedge before this time.
Á. A. Malone, a witness who saw the smoke while he was about a mile away, went to the place of the fire in two or three days afterwards. He testified that the fire had burned along the private crossing up to the end of the ties on the railroad.
Harrison Chipps testified that he lived about three-fourths of a mile from the place where the hay was destroyed; that in the forenoon of the day in question in company with one Abe Scoles he was west of Ny
Gr. A. Scoles corroborated Chipps in every particular except as to the length of time they stopped and talked with Hensley. He testified that he was sitting on the rear end of the wagon with his face to the north, watching the hayrake; that he was looking down and that there was nothing to- obstruct his view except said hayrake. He saw no smoke nor fire. He stated that the stack yard between the road and the ricks had not been burned off before he saw the fire on the ricks; but that in fifteen or twenty minutes afterwards he saw it was burned off.
For the purpose of showing that the progress of the fire from its inception was necessarily slow, plaintiff proved that the scattered hay in the road had been ground into the earth by passing teams and wagons. This was all the material evidence in the case.
The defendant contends that all the facts and circumstances did not raise the legitimate inference that the fire was caused by sparks thrown out by defendant’s engine. From the evidence, it may be safe to conclude that the fire was not set out previous to the passage of
In Peck v. Railroad, 31 Mo. App. 123, the plaintiff made out a stronger case than this, but the court held that he was not entitled to recover as there was no tangible evidence that defendant’s engine had set out the fire, and no fact proved from which a reasonable deduction could be made to that effect, and that it could only be a matter of conjecture. In Moore v. Railroad, 28 Mo. App. 622, it was held: “ A verdict founded upon mere conjecture of possibilities or probabilities, however reasonable, will not be permitted to stand.” And in Glick v. Railroad, 57 Mo. App. 97, it was held, “that appellate courts will draw with a firm hand the line between evidence and reasonable deductions on the one hand, and mere conjecture and speculation on the other. ”
■ There were other facts and circumstances that must be taken in connection with that which we have noted as constituting the total of plaintiff’s testimony upon which it claimed a verdict, viz.: The slight upward grade of defendant’s track approaching the place in question; the entire absence of evidence that the train in question was a heavy one necessitating the exertion of more than ordinary power by the engine, usually resulting in sparks from the smokestack, or that it did emit such sparks. And further, the undisputed testimony of witnesses Chipp and Scoles, who passed along the private roadway over the scattered hay ten minutes or more after the passage of defendant’s train, and stopping in the meantime to talk with Hensley in the proximity of the hay ricks, without seeing any smoke or fire, seems to rebut any inference, if any existed, that the engine set out the fire that destroyed plaintiff’s hay.
' For the reasons given we are of the opinion that defendant’s instruction to find a verdict for the defendant should have been given, as the plaintiff did not make out a case sufficient to recover. The cause is therefore reversed.