84 Kan. 372 | Kan. | 1911
The opinion of the court was delivered by
M. Hilligoss recovered a judgment against the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company for a fire loss, and the defendant appeals.
Complaint is made that the plaintiff was permitted to give evidence of the value per ton of. unsevered timothy and clover destroyed by the fire. The defendant argues that while the independent value of a component part of the realty may be shown (Railway Co. v. Lycan, 57 Kan. 635), it must be valued as realty. The market value of a growing or standing crop at the time of its destruction is an element of damage (8 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 330; 13 Cyc. 153-155; 33 Cyc. 1389-1391), this being true of perennial as well as of annual crops (23 L. R. A., n. s., 310, note).
Complaint is also made that evidence was allowed of the cost of restoring a hedge to its former condition. This might under some circumstances be a matter to
An employee of the defendant testified that he had examined the spark arrester of the engine that set out the fire and found it in first-class condition. This testimony was stricken out, and the ruling is assigned as error. On cross-examination he said that no repairs were made upon the spark arrester when he examined it, because it did not need any. This covered substantially the same ground as the answer that had been stricken out, and any error in that connection was thereby cured.
Among the special questions submitted to the jury were a number asking in what the negligence of the defendant consisted, and whether the appliances in use were properly constructed, inspected and managed. To each of these the answer was returned: “Don’t know.” The defendant asked that these answers be required to be made more definite, and now complains of the refusal of its request. The answer “don’t know” is ordinarily interpreted as a finding against the party having the burden of proof as to the particular matter involved. (Morrow et al. v. Comm’rs of Saline Co., 21 Kan. 484; Railroad Co. v. Swarts, 58 Kan. 235; Croan v. Baden, 73 Kan. 364.) In Railway Co. v. Hale, 64 Kan. 751, it was said that this rule does not apply where a party has asked that the jury be required to return a more specific answer to a question upon which there is conflicting evidence. In that case, however, no consideration appears to have been given to the peculiar situation resulting from the statute (Laws 1885, ch. 155, § 1, Gen. Stat. 1909, § 7079) which makes proof that a fire was caused by the operation of a railroad prima facie evidence that it was the result of negligence. If in the present action no evidence whatever had been introduced on the subject of negligence beyond the bare fact that the fire was set out by the
An instruction was given to the effect that it is the duty of a railway company so to construct its engines that, if kept in good order and properly handled, no coals or cinders can escape from them so as to cause a fire. Any error in this regard was necessarily nonprejudicial, for, as already shown, the jury found that the defendant had not disproved its negligence in respect to the operation and inspection of the engine in question. The verdict therefore would still stand although it should be conceded that the engine was properly constructed.
The judgment is affirmed.