114 Ga. 312 | Ga. | 1901
Trammell & McCowan brought suit to recover from the railroad company as damages the value of certain buildings
The evidence warranted the verdict. It was claimed that a cottonseed-house belonging to the plaintiffs was set on fire by sparks emitted from the defendant’s locomotive, and that the fire was communicated from this house to other houses belonging to the plaintiffs situated near the cottonseed-house. The evidence on this point was entirely circumstantial, but there was evidence showing that the cottonseed-house was located near enough to the railroad-track to have been set fire to from the sparks of a passing train; that no fire had heen in the house on the day of the night upon which the house was burned; that it had not rained for about a month, and that consequently it was very dry; that the house was seen on fire a few minutes after one of the defendant’s trains had passed along the track; and that the engine of this train had emitted sparks as it passed the seed-house. This evidence, in connection with other circumstances about which there was testimony, as to the direction in which the wind was blowing and the part of the building
Judgment affirmed.