Baxter v. Great Northern Railway Co.

73 Minn. 189 | Minn. | 1898

MITCHELL, J.

This is an action to recover damages for the destruction of plaintiff’s property by means of a fire alleged to have been negligently set by defendant’s sectionmen on its right of way.

There is evidence tending to prove that about the middle of August, 1894, defendant’s sectionmen set fire to a pile of old ties and rubbish on its right of way, at a point about 80 rods east of plaintiff’s premises, and that this fire escaped from the right of way into a ravine immediately west of it. It is this fire which plaintiff claims spread and finally reached his premises, and destroyed his property, on September 1, the day of the well-remembered Hinckley *191•fire. This was a timbered country, and everything was exceedingly ■ dry. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff.

Defendant’s counsel raise two points, viz.: First, that there is no evidence that in setting this fire the sectionmen were acting within the scope of their employment; and, second, that the fire which destroyed plaintiff’s property is not identified with or traced to the fire started on defendant’s right of way.

The fact that defendant’s sectionmen were engaged, during the ordinary hours of labor, in performing work usually done by railroad companies through sectionmen at that time of year (a fact of which courts and juries may take notice, as a matter of common knowledge) was sufficient, in the absence of any rebutting evidence, to justify the jury in finding that the sectionmen were acting within the scope of their employment. See Mattoon v. Fremont, 6 S. D. 301, 60 N. W. 69.

Counsel for defendant rely on what is said or implied in Morier v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co., 31 Minn. 351, 17 N. W. 952; but, on reflection, we are of opinion that we went too far in assuming that there is no presumption that the extinguishment of fires on the railroad right of way, however started, is within the line of duty of sectionmen.

2. But in our opinion the second point is well taken, and is fatal to plaintiff’s case. It will be noted that two weeks or more intervened between the setting of the fire on defendant’s right of way and the destruction of plaintiff’s property. The plaintiff attempted to trace that fire during that time, in a southwesterly direction, down a ravine and through the timber, to some point on section 10 or 11 in the town immediately south of the one in which plaintiff’s premises are situated (his land is in section 35), and then back, in a northerly or northeasterly direction, to plaintiff’s land, which it reached, if at all, on September 1. According to the evidence, it was not a sweeping, rapidly advancing fire across a prairie, but one that progressed slowly through the timber, sometimes nearly dying out, and then starting up again, according to the changes of the wind and weather.

“Some of it was burning [to use the language of one witness] in *192the earth under the roots of the trees, others in old logs, and others in old stumps, and others seemed to be creeping along in the grass.”

It is also apparent from the evidence that during this time there were other forest fires smoldering in that part of the country, notably to the west or southwest of plaintiff’s premises, for which the defendants were in no way responsible, and that finally, on the memorable 1st of September, 1894, the whole country, including plaintiff’s premises, was swept over by a fire which consumed almost everything in its track. It is undisputed that this conflagration was caused, in part at least, by a fire from the west, or, to use the language of some of the witnesses, “from the direction of St. Cloud,” which it is claimed united on or near plaintiff’s premises-with the fire alleged to have been originally set on defendant’s right of way.

Under such circumstances it was necessary that the fire should be carefully traced and identified by the evidence from the right of way to plaintiff’s premises. The jury were not at liberty to arrive at the result by mere guess or conjecture, but must have had some substantial evidence on which to base their verdict. We have carefully read and studied the evidence, and are clearly of the opinion that there was no sufficient tracing of the fire, either by any one witness or by all the witnesses together, from the point where the sectionmen ignited the pile of ties and rubbish on tho right of way, to plaintiff’s premises. Neither was it traced by proof of facts and circumstances from which the inference could be legitimately drawn that it was the same fire. The most that can be claimed for the evidence is that it is possible that the-fire started on the right of way might have been, in whole or in part, the fire which consumed plaintiff’s property. Anything like-an analysis of all the evidence would be impracticable and useless. A careful reading of it in the light of a sectional map of the country-will, we think, satisfy any one that our conclusion as to its probative force is correct.

It may be remarked, however, that it appeared from their cross-examination that the plaintiff and several of his apparently most important witnesses were not on or near the premises on September 1, and hence that much to which they testified on direct exam*193ination must have been mere conjecture or inference. See Montague v. Minneapolis, 96 Wis. 366, 72 N. W. 41.

Counsel for the plaintiff makes the point that the case does not contain all the evidence, because a map used on the trial is not made a part of it. It is true that the trial judge states in his certificate that the case is signed as containing all the evidence, “with the understanding that the map used upon the trial be attached as a part of the case.” This map was used on the trial for the convenience of counsel, witnesses and jurors, so that the evidence might be better understood. The witnesses, in their testimony, referred specifically to certain points in or parts of the government survey, according to the government subdivisions, of which the courts take judicial notice; and any sectional map would aid in understanding the evidence as well as the one used on the trial.

Order reversed, and a new trial granted.