186 S.W.2d 780 | Ark. | 1945
Appellant, Hileard Hayes, while working as a track laborer for appellee Railroad Company suffered severe burns, which resulted in serious and permanent injury to him. He brought suit in the lower court for damages, alleging that his injury was caused by the negligence of appellee. Appellee answered with a general denial. At the conclusion of testimony offered by appellant the court sustained a motion by appellee for peremptory instruction in its favor. From judgment entered on the verdict rendered in accordance with the court's direction appellant prosecutes this appeal.
Appellant was the only witness as to the accident in which he sustained the injury complained of by him. He testified that he was employed by appellee in October, *372 1942, and that his duties were to "tar rails and put on angle bars, and finish them with creosote"; that while he was working for appellee on the 20th day of December, 1942, he was injured. "Q. Tell the jury what you were doing on this occasion and how you were injured. A. It was dry and a train come along and set the right-of-way on fire. We had been putting out fires along the right-of-way . . . and there was a telegraph pole on fire and I went over to put it out and caught fire. My pants was saturated with this creosote and when they caught fire, it blew up, and a strong wind made it worse. I started running and my clothes was burned off of me and burned on up to my face . . . Q. Why did you try to put out this fire? A. I thought I was protecting the company. Q. Had you ever done work like that before? A. No, sir. . . . Q. You didn't have to go out and fight fires. A. We had been doing it. Q. Nobody told you to do it. A. Nobody told me, but I had put out fires before."
Appellant contends that the fire set out by appellee created an emergency that authorized appellant to take steps apparently necessary to him in order to put out the fire and that it was for the jury to say whether appellee's negligence was the proximate cause of appellant's injury and whether appellant was barred from recovery by his contributory negligence. It is unnecessary for us to determine whether appellant, as a matter of law, was guilty of contributory negligence in going near flames with his clothing saturated with a highly inflammable liquid, because, under the proof in this case, it was not shown that any negligence of the appellee caused appellant's injury. Assuming, without deciding, that it was shown that the fire was negligently set by appellee, it cannot be said that appellant's injury was a natural and probable consequence of the fire being set or that it ought to have been foreseen by appellee. If appellant had not gotten too close to the blaze, his pants would not have caught on fire, and, if they had not been soaked with inflammable liquid, even if they had caught fire, such fire could ordinarily have been extinguished with little, if any, injury to appellant. Even if it should be held that appellant's *373 attempt to extinguish the fire was a natural and probable consequence of appellee's setting fire to the grass on the right-of-way, still it cannot be said that appellant's act in getting too close to the fire while wearing extraordinarily inflammable clothing was a natural and probable consequence of appellee's negligence, if any, in causing the grass to become ignited.
In Am.Jur., vol. 38, p. 735, it is said: "The chain of causation between the defendant's negligence and the plaintiff's injury is broken when an independent act of the plaintiff, not within the reasonable contemplation of the defendant, intervenes to bring about the injury."
Judge GARDNER, speaking for the Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, in the case of Fort Smith Gas Co. v. Cloud,
The rule is thus stated in Sherman and Redfield on Negligence, vol. 1, p. 100: "When the natural and continuous sequence of causal connection between the negligent conduct and the injury is interrupted by a new and independent cause, which itself produces the injury, that intervening cause operates to relieve the original wrongdoer of liability. The original negligent conduct, while a cause of the injury, is merely a remote and not a proximate cause thereof."
Judge HART, in the case of Pittsburg Reduction Company v. Horton,
In the case of Arkansas Valley Trust Company v. McIlroy,
In the case of Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. v. Benham,
We held in the case of Hook, Administrator, v. Reynolds,
Appellant urges that the holding of this court in the case of Booth Flynn v. Price,
It is also argued by appellant that by the provisions of Act of the General Assembly of Arkansas of April 2, 1907 (11147 of Pope's Digest), an absolute liability was imposed upon appellee for all damage resulting from a fire set by one of its locomotives. That Act has no application to bodily injuries. Its operation is limited by its language to "destruction of, or injury to, any property, real or personal."
The judgment of the lower court was correct and it is affirmed. *377