85 W. Va. 609 | W. Va. | 1920
This action is brought by the Fairview Fruit Co., a corporation, against H. P. Brydon and Richard Brydon, partners, doing business as BE. P. Brydon & Bro., to recover damages for the destruction of its young growing apple trees by the alleged negligence of defendants in permitting sparks to escape from their “dinkey” engine, which was used in hauling-coal from their coal mine on plaintiff’s land across the surface thereof to the tipple, thereby setting fire to the dry grass and other combustible materials in its orchard and killing the apple trees, and for damages caused by wrongfully removing the surface of the land from off the top of the coal, and digging up and otherwise destroying other of plaintiff’s growing apple trees. Plaintiff recovered judgment for $1796.86, and defendants have brought the case here, assigning numerous errors. The first is in permitting certain hypothetical questions, concerning the value of the growing apple trees destroyed, to be propounded to
As the measure of its damages plaintiff proved the actual
The next assignment is the rejection of the testimony of Richard Brydon, one of the defendants, to the effect that Burke Randalls, president and the general manager of plaintiff company, had agreed with him as to the amount of recovery plaintiff should be entitled to recover, in the event defendants injured plaintiff’s soil and fruit trees by stripping the surface from off the vein of coal. It appears from the testimony of this witness, taken out of the presence of the jury and incorporated in the record, that Mr. Randalls agreed with him on the price of 40c per tree for all apple trees destroyed in that manner, and on $30.00 per acre for the soil. He says he had several conversations with Mr. Randalls in regard to the matter and that he assured him he had a controlling interest in the plaintiff company and that what he did in that respect would be agreeable to the other stockholders; that this contract was oral, but the understanding was that Mr. F. C. Reynolds, now deceased, but who was then attorney for both parties, would prepare the papers to be signed, but this was not done, the reason therefor not appearing. It is admitted that Mr. Randalls is the president and general manager of plaintiff. Counsel insists that this testimony was properly rejected. First, because it tended to prove an incompleted agreement, second, because it showed that the agreement, if made, related to the corpus of the realty and .plaintiff’s general manager had no power to make such an agreement, unless authorized by the board of directors to do so, and no such authority was shown, and third, because witness admitted some of the conversations were had in the presence of one Thomas Devine and H. P. Brydon, neither of whom was offered as a witness in reference thereto. Mr. Randalls had acquired title to the surface of the land, and made a conveyance thereof to the plaintiff company. A copy of the deed to plaintiff was exhibited in evidence, from which the following clause is here copied, “reserving and excepting from' this conveyance all coal, lead, iron and other minerals that may be underlying the said land, together with the right at any time to mine and remove from beneath said land in any manner as will be considered least injurious to the surface thereof, all such minerals
The rejected evidence should have been allowed to go to the jury. Although Mr. Randalls denied making any such agreement, the credibility of the witnesses was a jury question. The rejected testimony, if believed by the jury, would have materially reduced the amount of damages which plaintiff was entitled to recover. ,
As general manager, Mr. Randalls had implied authority to bind his company by such an agreement, for he was its general agent. Its deed for the surface showed that the title to the minerals, together with the necessary mining rights, belonged to another, and that the probability of injury to the surface in the removal of the coal by whatever means or method employed, was a matter in contemplation, and the deed provided that the mining was to be carried on in a manner least injurious to the surface, hence the general manager, by virtue of his implied authority, could agree with defendant as to the manner of mining which he thought would be least injurious to the surface. Such authority is within the scope of his duties as plaintiff’s general manager, and therefore its general agent. 1 Clark and Skyles on Agency, pp. 470-471; Fruit Dispatch Co. v. Ellis, 75 W. Va. 52; Producers Coal Co. v. Mifflin Coal Mining Co., 82 W. Va. 311; Brace v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., (Wash.) 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) p 1135, and cases cited in note.
It was not necessary that the agreement should have been in writing and signed in order to be binding. Notwithstanding the witness says it was to be reduced to writing, nevertheless he says they had agreed on all the matters to be put in writing, and he acted on that agreement in good faith. This is enough to show an agreement. It was not such an agreement as the law requires to be in writing in order to make it enforcible.
That defendant did not offer to prove the agreement by
Refusal to permit the jury to view the premises shows no abuse of judicial discretion, and hence, rtp cause for reversal.
It is insisted tbat plaintiff has failed to prove the origin of the fire. Defendants employed Brady Bros, by contract, at a fixed price per ton, to mine the coal, and they operated a steam shovel for the purpose of removing the surface. Counsel insist that it does not appear from the evidence -whether the sparks causing the fire were generated by the stationary engine, so used, or by the “dinkey” engine used by defendants’ employees and agents in hauling the coal, that the fires were as likely to have originated from the one as the other, and in case they were caused by the former defendants were not liable, and that the evidence left the matter of origin of the fire merely to the speculation of the jury. It is unquestionably true that where the evidence respecting the negligent act causing an injury is uncertain as to whether it originated from one or the other of two sources, for one of which only the defendants are responsible, plaintiff cannot recover. The evidence must prove the negligent act with reasonable certainty before a verdict will be allowed to stand. But the evidence does make it reasonably certain in this case. The fires are shown to have occurred in July and August 1917, and in April 1918, and it is also shown that the “dinkey” engine, at least part of the time, was not provided with a spark arrester, that sometimes, especially when pulling up grade, it threw out sparks in great volume, that on one or two occasions fire, in the orchard, was observed to start within ten or fifteen minutes after the engine had passed by the place, and o-n*another occasion, when it was very dry and the wind was blowing from the “dinkey” engine toward the orchard, the fire was discovered just after it passed. Moreover it is shown defendants maintained a signal whereby warning was given to the men working in the mine, in order for them to assist in extinguishing fires. On the other hand, there is no evidence tending to prove that the stationary engine emitted sparks in dangerous quantity, or that any one of the numerous fires, which burned over parts of plaintiff’s .orchard,' actually originated from the stationary engine, although on the occasion of one fire at least it does appear the two engines were equally distant from the point where the fire started but in opposite
The court refused to permit Richard Brydon to testify as to what instructions he gave to the men in his employ about the operation of the “dinkey” engine. The record shows that, if he had been permitted to answer he would have stated, “that the employees were instructed to operate the engine in a careful manner, having due regard to accidents by fire, and that he personally saw that said instructions were faithfully executed and that the engine was operated in a careful and proper manner so as to avoid fire to the property of others.” The question and answer were properly rejected. The instructions to his employees were not proper evidence unless the employees were shown to have been careful in carrying out the instructions. The mere giving of instructions to their servants did not relieve defendants from liability. They had a right, of course, to show that their servants, operating the engine, were competent and were careful at the time, and that a reasonably safe spark arrester was used on it, but this they did not attempt to do, only in the manner indicated by the question. It does appear that if witness Brydon had been permitted to answer, he would have said he person ally, saw that the engine was operated in “a careful and proper manner so as to avoid fire to the property of others,” but that part of his answer was not responsive to the question, and was a mere conclusion of law and evidence of a fact. What was a careful and proper manner to operate the engine was the question in issue and was to be determined from the facts by the jury. The operator of the engine at any of the times the fires ocurred was not examined as a witness, nor is his absence accounted for. It further appears that the only ground for witness Brydon’s statement that the engine was provided with a spark arrester, is that he ordered one and paid the bill for it when rendered; he does not say that he saw that it was placed in the engine.
Three instructions were given by plaintiff of which defendants complain. Number one, although inartistically drawn, in effect, as we interpret it, tells the jury that the origin of the fires “may be established by circumstantial evidence which justifies a reasonable and well grounded inference that the same were started by sparks from the locomotive of the defendants and rebuts the probability of said fires having originated from any other source.” This is the usual manner of proving the origin of such fires, for it is hardly ever the case that an eye witness can be produced who saw the sparks pass from the smoke stack of a locomotive engine and set fire to inflammable material. It makes a prima facie case of negligence, to show that the engine emitted dangerous sparks, that a fire was observed to be burning within reach of the flying sparks a short time after the engine passed and that there was no other probable source of the origin of the fire. Aglionby v. Norfolk and Western Ry. Co., 80 W. Va. 687; McLaughlin v. Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co., 75 W. Va. 287.
The next two instructions are so plainly correct statements of the law applicable to the case, that we deem it unnecessary to encumber the record with a discussion of them.
Defendants’ instruction number one was properly refused, not because it does not correctly state the law as to how the prima facie negligence may be rebutted, but because there is no evidence to show that defendants’ engine, at the time the fire escaped from it, was being operated in a careful and prudent manner. In fact there is no evidence to show what character of servants were then in charge of it.
Plaintiff’s second count being based upon the injury done, not on account of negligence, but on account of a trespass upon its land and the destruction of its trees in the process of mining, about which there seems to be no controversy, except as to the value of the trees, it had a right to a verdict in any event.
Their number 2 was properly rejected, because the principle therein stated was fully covered by their number 7, which was given as modified. Their number 3 was mandatory in respect to the damages claimed by plaintiff for the destruction of its trees by fire, and in view of the evidence, was properly rejected.
On account of the error committed in refusing to admit the testimony of witness Richard Brydon, we reverse the judgment and remand the ease for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.