3 S.D. 93 | S.D. | 1892
This action was brought by plaintiff to recover damages resulting from a fire alleged to have been set out by the negligence of defendant. The allegation of the complaint
The case was tried to a jury which was instructed by the court to find and return answers to particular questions of fact. The questions, with the answers so found and returned, were as follows: “Question 1. Did the fire which destroyed the plaintiff’s property originate from defendant’s engine 356? Answer. Yes. Q. 2. Was said engine at the time of said fire equipped with approved appliances to prevent the escape of fire? A. Yes. Q. 3. Were there any holes in the netting of said engine larger than those- made by the meshes of the wire, except the place covered by the patch. A. No. Q. 4. Was the patch on said netting in good condition, and fastened close and tight to the netting? A. Yes. Q. 5. Were the ash pan, dampers, and other portions of said engine in good condition, at the time of said fire? A. Yes. Q. 6. If you find that any portion of said engine was out of repair at the time of said fire, state what it was. A. We find none. Q. 7. Were the engineer and fireman in charge of said engine prudent and competent persons to perform their duty? A. Yes. Q. 8. Did the engineer and fireman handle and operate said engine with ordinary care and prudence at the time? A. No. Q. 9. By plaintiff: Was the engine No. 356 in good condition on October 10,1885, at the time it is claimed the fire was set? A. Yes.” With these special questions and an
One of the errors assigned and the one principally relied upon by the appellant is the refusal of the court to set aside the answer to said question No. 8, as unsupported by the evidence, and to render judgment for defendant notwithstanding the general verdict for plaintiff. Respondent maintains “that to entitle a party to a judgment on a special verdict against a general one in favor of the other party the special verdicts must be inconsistent with the general one, and must of themselves, or when taken together with the facts admitted by the pleadings, cover all the issues, and be sufficient to establish or defeat, as the case may be, the right to recover,” and under the shadow of such general proposition insists that, inasmuch as the special questions do not cover all the issues, the general verdict must stand. If by the term “all the issues” respondent means all the issues raised by the pleadings, the proposition is clearly untenable. One of the issues in this case made by defendant’s answer was the ownership of the property alleged to have been destroyed, but of course it was not necessary that the jury should find that the plaintiff was or was not the owner in order to entitle defendant to a judgment if they found there was no negligence on its part, for without negligence it would not be liable no matter who owned the property. None of the cases cited by respondent require that such answers must necessarily cover “all the issues” in order to make them control the general verdict. Section 5061, Comp. Laws, covers and rules this whole subjest: “Where a special finding of facts is inconsist
As already noticed, two distinct conditions or acts of negligence on the part of appellant are alleged as the cause of this fire and resulting damage, — defect in the locomotive, and want of care in the management of it. As to the first,- — the condition of the locomotive,- — the jury found for the defendant, and negatived the allegation of the complaint that the locomotive was defective; so that the verdict must stand, if at all, upon the evidence tending to show negligence in its management. Respondent contends that, all the other questions submitted being determined by the jury in favor of appellant, still its liability did not depend upon the answer to question No. 8, which was whether the locomotive was handled with “ordinary care and prudence,” for the reason •that, the day being very windy, more was required of the company than the exercise of “ordinary care and prudence,and that, therefore, even if the jury had found and answered that the locomotive was managed with “ordinary care and prudence,” the special findings would not then be inconsistent with the general verdict; for it might rest upon the judgment of the jury that the comp,any had failed to exercise the extraordinary .“care and prudence” required by the circumstances. The force of this suggestion, depends.upon the meaning of the expression “ordinary care and prudence.” The argument of appellant assumes it to mean only average or usual care, without regard to circumstances, but we think the expression has usually been taken by the courts to mean that ■degree of care which a person of ordinary prudence would exercise under the particular circumstances of the case. In Railway Co. v. McDaniels, 107 U. S. 460, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 932, Justice Harlan says: ^’“Ordinary care implies the exercise of reasonable diligence, and reasonable diligence implies * * * such watch: fulness, caution, and-.foresight as, under all the circumstances, * . * * prudent officers ought to exercise. * * * A degree
Appellant claims that the evidence in this case did not justify the answer of the jury to said question No. 8, by which they found
As before remarked, the jury found in favor of the company upon the charge of negligence, except in respect to the management of the locomotive, and as to that it found against the company, so that the general verdict must stand or fall upon the evidence upon that specific issue. Is there any substantial evidence in the case to sustain the finding of the jury that the defendant company did not handle its locomotive as a competent man of ordinary prudence would have done under the circumstances then existing? In Kelsey v. Railway Co., (S. D.) 45 N. W. Rep. 204, and again in White v. Railway Co., (S. D.) 47 N. W. Rep. 146, this court held that when negligence complained of consisted in defective appliances or careless management a prima facie case was made when the damage was shown to have been caused by sparks from the locomotive, and that it then devolved upon the company, in order to avoid liability, to show that the locomotive was not in a defective condition, and was not unskillfully or carelessly handled. If, upon all the evidence in this case, it was permissible for the jury to find that the locomotive was not handled as a skillful engineer of ordinary prudence would have handled it under the circumstances, then the answer to question No." 8 was proper, and the general verdict was right; otherwise the answer ¿nd the general verdict were wrong. The jury specifically found that the ash pan, dampers, and other portions of the engine were in good condition at the time of the fire. They specifically found that the engineer and fireman in charge of the engine were prudent and competent persons to perform their duties. ‘ With these facts established, let us look a little further at the evidence bearing upon the manner of handling the engine: Both’ the engineer and- fire
In Johnson v. Railway Co., supra, the opinion of the court says: “The fact as to whether proper care was exercised was left to rest only upon the opinion of the engineer. None of the
• When the jury found and replied .to questions Nos. 2,. 3, 4,-5, and 6, that the engine at the time of the fire was equipped.with.
So far we have treated this case as though without question the fire was set while the train was making the up grade referred to, — that appearing to be the theory upon, which respondent has considered and argued the case,- — -and upon that theory even we should find it difficult to justify the verdict. But appellant claims, and we think the evidence more strongly tends to that view, that the fire occurred after the train had made the up grade, and was on a nearly level track. The direct evidence as to the location of the fire is as follows: Engineer Knapp testifies: “The fire, as I understand it, occurred somewhere east .of the side track. * * * The grade from Flandreau towards the stub track, before we strike it, is slightly down. It is inclined for about half a mile, and then it is about level.” Fireman Roberts says: “I remember the 10th day of October, ’85, and know the place where the fire started. I was running on the road after this time, and frequently saw the place where it started. * * * We went past the up grade to where the fir.e was started, and along there is down grade for half or three-quarters of a mile.” McKenzie, the section foreman, testifies: “I know where the fire started. It started about half a mile east of the double track. * * * Where the fire started it was about level.” The stub or double track referred to was located by other witnesses as east of the grade, and put there to allow heavy trains going east to divide, a part of the train being taken up the grade and left on this side track while the locomotive went back and brought up the balance of the train. This