22 Ind. App. 466 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
— The appellant was sued by the appellee for damages for injury and destruction of his property by fire. It was stated in the complaint that the appellant, in running its locomotive engines on its railroad, carelessly and negligently omitted to use spark-arresters or proper appliances to prevent the. emisison of sparks from said locomotives, but used spark-arresters which were worn and defective, and which contained holes through which large coals of fire and sparks were emitted, and permitted to escape, and which did escape on account of the appellant’s using said engines, the spark-arresters of which were permitted to become out of repair as aforesaid; which said sparks and coals of fire so escaping and being permitted to escape were carried thence into the air, and fell in the dry grass on premises adjacent to the right of way of the appellant, which premises on which they fell are just north of, and contiguous to, the premises of the appellee, and they at once ignited into a flame of fire in said grass, and said fire then spread from the premises where it was so ignited to the premises of the appellee, etc. The answer was a general denial. There was a general verdict for the appellee for $600, the jury returning also answers to interrogatories submitted to them.
In the action of the court in overruling the appellant’s motion for judgment in its favor upon the answers to interrogatories, we think there was no error. One of the answers was to the effect that the spark-arrester of the engine which set out the fire was of the most approved kind. It is insisted that this answer was inconsistent with the general verdict. But it was immediately succeeded by interrogatories and answers as follows: Question four. “Was the spark-arrester in said engine in good repair?” Answer. “ISTo;
The appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled.
The appellant requested, and the court refused to give certain instructions which have been brought to our notice in argument. It was specially found by the jury that the fire which destroyed the appellee’s property was started outside the right of way by sparks emitted from engine number 109, drawing the appellant’s regular passenger train, at about 3 :15 p. m. on the 26th of September, 1897. There was evidence of a number of fires along the appellant’s line, occurring at various times before the fire in issue; and there was evidence tending to prove that at the times when some of these fires occurred, engine number 109 was in the repair shops undergoing a general overhauling and repairing.
In the instructions asked and refused, referred to above, the court was asked to instruct, in substance, that if the jury should find from the evidence that the fire which burned the appellee’s property was set out by engine number 109, they should not consider evidence of other fires before the one complained of set out by other engines, in determining whether the particular engine which set out the fire complained of was improperly or' negligently constructed, improperly handled, or in improper repair, but should disregard such evidence of other fires not set out by engine number
There the evidence shows that the fire may have been caused by sparks from an engine unknown and unidentified, or from one of several engines, some of which are unknown and unidentified, it is competent for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant’s locomotives generally, or many of them, at or about the time of the ocurrenee in issue, threw sparks of unusual size and kindled numerous fires on that part of the line; hut such proof should be confined exclusively to occurrences at or about the time of the fire, with such reasonable latitude as to render the proof practicable. Henderson v. Philadelphia, etc., R. Co., 144 Pa. St. 461, 22 Atl. 851, 16 L. R. A. 299. In Shearm. & Eedf. Teg., section 675, it is said, that “when the particular engine which caused the fire cannot be fully identified, evidence that sparks and burning coals were frequently dropped by engines passing on the same road upon other occasions, at or about the time of the fire, before or after, is relevant and competent to show habit
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.