89 N.Y.S. 890 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1904
On and prior to the 15th day of April, 190'S, the defendant set fire to certain stumps in two places upon his premises, one place northerly from the creek where the fallow had been burned the year before, the ground
The defendant worked from day to day upon his land, getting it ready for. his crop, and observed the fire, and prior to the thirtieth day of April it had extended about twenty rods westerly from the plowed land toward the Best lot, but none of the fire was then within about fifty rods of the line between him and the Best lot. April thirtieth a westerly wind arose, increased in velocity, and became a gale toward night, carried the fire from stump to stump across the defendant’s land, and from the stumps on his land into the dry and combustible material upon the Best lot, and from stump to stump on the Best lot, and ignited a small pile of wood in the railroad right of way easterly of the Best lot, and was burning at different times and at different places all over the Best lot. When the defendant saw the fire spreading by the gale, he did everything that he could do to arrest its progress, and he and the railroad employees worked hard to keep the fire from running from the small pile of wood upon the railroad right of way into the plaintiff’s wood. The fence between the wood piles was afire several times, and was put out, and by digging ditches and throwing sand, all felt that no
After the wind had died down materially, and all felt that the plaintiff's wood was safe, it again raised to a gale, and the fire from the stumps on the Best lot, or from the burning pile of wood upon the right of way, or from the burning stumps upon the defendant’s land, caused the plaintiff’s wood to burn. The court instructed the jury that if the plaintiff’s wood was burned by fire communicated from the woodpile on the right of way, there could be no recovery, and left them to determine how it occurred. This verdict, therefore, establishes that it did not communicate from the right of way, but communicated from fire blown from the burning stumps on the Best lot, or the burning stumps on the defendant’s land.
' It is perfectly lawful and proper to use fire in clearing land, and the defendant had the absolute right to bum the stumps upon his land, and was only required to exercise ordinary reasonable care to see that thereby he did not injure some one else. When the fires were set it was not such a dry time that the jury could say that the defendant was negligent in setting them. If negligent at all, it was in allowing them to remain after April fifteenth, and after it was apparent that it was a settled dry time. It will be observed that when set the fires were confined to the plowed land and the land in process of being plowed. A full and fair consideration of the evidence does not seem to show such negligence upon the part of the defendant as to make him liable for the injury done the plaintiff. McGibbon v. Baxter, 51 Hun, 587.
Hndonbtedly the plaintiff's loss arises from the unusual gale of wind, and from the dry and combustible matter allowed to remain upon the Best lot, for neither of which was the defendant at all responsible. The owner of the Best lot and the plaintiff were as much chargeable with knowledge of the dry material upon the Best lot as the defendant, and he was not prevented from burning the land because his neigh
That it is not a question of boundary lines or farms, but of the proximate and direct cause, is shown by the Ryan case, 35 N. Y. 210, where the fire carelessly escaping from the locomotive burned the defendant’s sheds upon its lands, and the sparks from the sheds burned the plaintiff’s house, and it was held that the plaintiff’s loss came from the burning of the shed and not from careless management or defects in the engine.
In the Frace case, 143 N. Y. 182, the plaintiff’s bam and hotel were burned, and the court charged the jury that to recover for the burning of both it must appear that each was destroyed by reason of the fire communicating directly from the engine without the assistance of other agencies, or arising from any other cause.
■ It will not do if the fire set by the defendant was carried! by the gale from stump to stump upon his land and thus communicated to the stumps on the Best lot, and from stump to-stump on the Best lot was communicated to the plaintiff’s-wood. But, as I view the authorities, a recovery can only be-sustained by showing that the sparks from the defendant’s-land were carried through the air without any intervening-cause, and lighted upon and caused the plaintiff’s wood to-burn. The charge in this respect was probably misleading.. If the fire and the wind were sufficient to carry the spark® directly from defendant’s land over on to'the plaintiff’s woodpile, it is very doubtful, considering the distance, the manner-in which the fire was carried by the gale across the defendant’s land and the Best lot, if the plaintiff’s loss would be the-proximate result of the fire and one of the results which an ordinary prudent man could or ought to have foreseen a® liable to happen. These questions can be more fully considered upon another trial. It is sufficient to set aside the-verdict as not fairly sustained by the evidence and to order a new trial, with costs to abide the event.
Ordered accordingly.