98 Mo. App. 166 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
This is a suit to recover the value of certain personal property which was destroyed by fire alleged to have been communicated to a barn by an engine operated by defendant on its railroad, said personal property being in the barn at the time of said fire. The plaintiff was a tenant and did not own the fee to the premises on which said barn was situated. A part of the property belonged to another and the plaintiff sues not only for the loss of his own property, but also as the assignee of said other person.
The fire occurred on the 24th day of June, 1901, at about 11:30 o’clock p. m. A diagram showing the location of the bam and railroad track in question and surroundings was in evidence and as it will be useful to a proper understanding of the case it is inserted here:
It will be seen by said diagram.'that the barn in question was situated near the northwest corner of section 22 and that the plaintiff’s house was in the northeast corner of section 21, apd that a public road was located between the two sections, running north and south; that the west end of the barn came up to the public road, and that defendant’s track passed over said public road in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction.
The evidence disclosed that the northwest corner of the barn was fifty-four feet south of the center of defendant’s track where it crosses the public road, at which point defendant had a cattle guard; that at the time of the fire there was some loose hay and trash in said cattle guard, that hay was scattered along the public road from defendant’s track at said cattle guard to the barn, and that the weather was very dry.
, In brief, the testimony tending to show that the fire was communicated to the barn by fire from defendant’s, engine was as follows: John McBride, who lived south and west of the barn, testified that on the night of the fire he heard a heavily-loaded freight train going east over defendant’s road towards plaintiff’s place; that defendant’s track is located south of his house, where he was at the time he heard the train pass, about eight rods; and that it passed after defendant’s passenger train went east at 8 A5 o’clock p. m. Charles McBride, the son of said John McBride, testified that he had been on a visit to a neighbor and that after coming home to his father’s house he heard a heavy freight train going west over defendant’s track. He thought at the time that it was about 10:30 o’clock p. m., but he had no timepiece to go by. • S. W. Hackney testified that he heard a freight train pass over defendant’s road on the night in question, but could not say which, way it was going. He said that there was a long trestle east of his house which caused a great rumbling noise when trains passed over it. He was not certain as to the time when the train passed but thought it was between eleven and twelve o’clock at night. He lived about a quarter of a. mile west from the railroad. Alexander Monroe, a farmer living one and a half miles west of plaintiff’s house,.
It seems from the evidence of the persons who were first at the fire that it had made considerable progress fit 11:30 o’clock, and at that time the grass and hay in the public road leading to the barn from the cattle guard had been burned. It is therefore reasonable to infer that it must have started not far from eleven o’clock, but a little after that time, according to the evidence of the witness Wade. Whereas the witnesses differ as to the time they heard 'or saw a train passing over defendant’s road a mile or more west of the barn, yet some of them fix the time so near to eleven o’clock that the conclusion (if they tell the truth), taken in connection with the trail- of the fire from the cattle guards to the northwest corner of the barn, the nearest point to the railroad track, the heavily loaded train laboring up the grade, most reasonable is, that the defendant’s engine
But it is a rule of physics that sparks, emitted from the smokestack of an engine while in motion at ordinary speed during a slight wind, are not entirely controlled in the direction which they take, after being thrown out, by the wind, but by friction with the atmosphere caused by the forward movement of the engine, and the heavier sparks descend on a line corresponding with that pursued by the engine. By this means we may account for the starting of the fire in or near said cattle guards. It was a question of the preponderance of one of the two forces — the momentum of the engine or the'speed of the wind. It is true that no one saw sparks thrown out from the smokestack of the engine, yet if the description of the laborious movement of the train be true it would be a legitimate conclusion that it did throw out sparks, which engines invariably do under such circumstances. Torpey v. Railway, 64 Mo. App. 382.
Without countervailing testimony, no court nor jury would be authorized to say that no freight train passed over the defendant’s road at the point in question about the hour of eleven o’clock; that no fire occurred soon thereafter which destroyed plaintiff’s property; and that the surrounding circumstances do not naturally
The defense was that no such train as the one described by plaintiff’s witnesses, nor in fact any train whatever, passed over defendant’s road going either east or west on the night in question after that of its 8:30 o ’clock p. m. passenger train. It was insisted that plaintiff’s witnesses were misled by mistaking a train that passed over the tracks of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroad at about the same time, said road being located about two miles distant from that of defendant. The defendant introduced its train dispatchers and their record, as well as its books, in which conductors register their arrivals at the different stations on its railroad. These train dispatchers testified that no trains whatever went out upon the railroad without their orders; that there was no order for any train over said railroad on said night except the regular passenger train mentioned and that their records show no such other train; and the book kept for conductors shows none such was registered. The evidence thus introduced was sufficient to convince any reasonable mind, unaccompanied with suspicion as to the good faith with which it was offered, and without any contradictory testimony, that no freight train passed over defendant’s road at the time in question after the passage of its regular passenger train. That was just its value, and no more. It is not in the nature of physical facts, which the courts and juries are bound to recognize and nothing can overturn as evidence. It is not probable, but it is possible, for a train dispatcher and his records to be in error, and fQr the
But defendant contends that the plaintiff did not show that thp freight train alleged to have passed over its track on the night in question was controlled and operated by defendant, and cites us to certain authorities to sustain such contention. The foundation for this claim is that the law presumes every one does his duty and as the defendant’s train dispatchers testified that no freight trains were dispatched over its road at the time alleged, the presumption is that none went over it. But it is sufficient to say, in answer to this, that the evidence was conflicting in that respect, for which reason the presumption did not unqualifiedly obtain. And we think it safe to say that the presumption would be, that an engine found being operated over defendant’s road was the defendant’s property and was under its control. We do not think the authorities cited have any application.
The defendant objects to plaintiff’s instruction numbered one, which is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence, that on the 24th day of June, 1901, the plaintiff herein was the owner of and in possession'of the personal property described in the first count of his petition, and that on said date the same was located in a barn used by plaintiff adjacent to the defendant’s line of railway, and that on said date fire was communicated to said barn from a locomotive engine of defendant, in use upon its said line of railway; and that said fire communicated as aforesaid burned up and destroyed the said personal property of plaintiff contained in said barn, then your finding must be for the plaintiff on the first count of his petition, and you will assess his damages on said first
The objection is that it fails to state that the engine in question was being operated by defendant. In Cousins v. Railway, 66 Mo. 572, it was held: “A railroad company is not liable . . . for stock killed by one of its locomotives which was at the time being used by a servant of the company without authority, for his own purposes, and outside of the line<of his employment.” It was also there held that such defense need not be specially pleaded but may be given in evidence under the general issue. In that case the defense was interposed'by the introduction of evidence on the part of defendant to show the servant was operating the engine without the authority of the railroad company, for his own purposes, and while not in the line of his duty.
It has never been held, to our knowledge, otherwise than that if an engine and cars are being us&d on the road of a company, the presumption is that they are being controlled by such company. We' believe it universally understood that a railroad company that is in control and operating a particular railroad is controlling and operating it to the exclusion of all other railroads or persons. And this is true notwithstanding the engines and cars of other railroads are permitted to use such railroad. There was no pretense but what ■the defendant was in the exclusive possession of the railroad in question, and the presumption would necessarily follow that an engine and cars found passing, over its tracks were under its operation and control.- A similar objection is made to- plaintiff’s second instruction. • • '
Finding no error in the trial, the cause is affirmed.