276 F. 882 | 8th Cir. | 1921
This is an action by J. W. Agnew to recover of Interstate Compress Company, a corporation, damages which he alleges -were inflicted upon him by the gross negligence of the defendant in providing equipment for its compress platform and plant, and in maintaining in efficient condition such equipment to prevent fire, which, on November 16, 1916, destroyed a large part of its plant and 294 bales of the plaintiff’s cotton, -which was on the defendant’s compress platform. The parties stipulated to the effect that if the defendant’s gross negligence was the proximate cause of the loss of this cotton the plaintiff would he entitled to recover $17,485.66, and at the close of the trial the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for that amount and interest.
At the time of the fire the plaintiff’s cotton was held by the defendant as its bailee, on its compress platform, under contracts which pro
The chief complaints of this new trial are: (1) The admission of incompetent evidence; (2) the charge of the court that, if the jury should find that the defendant was guilty of gross negligence in providing the equipment of its compress platform and plant, they might return a verdict for the plaintiff; and (3) that it denied the request of the defendant that it direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor.
The origin of the fire was unknown. It was first discovered by the defendant’s night watchman about 6 o’clock in the afternoon. He immediately called his helpers, went to one of defendant’s hydrants on the main which led from the water system of the city of Altus the source of the water used by the defendant for protection, attached 100 feet of hose to this hydrant which reached to within about 10 feet of the fire, and turned the water on, but the stream was so weak that it did not reach the fire. If the stream had been such as a pressure of 60 pounds to the square inch ordinarily produced, he could then have •extinguished the fire. He immediately attached hose to and turned the water on to a second hydrant near the fire, but it produced nothing hut air. By this time the fire had so increased that he could not have extinguished it if a hydrant had produced a powerful stream.
A further complaint of counsel for the defendant is that the court refused to grant its request to instruct the jury to return a verdict 'in its favor on the ground that there was no substantial evidence in the case that it was guilty of gross negligence, either in providing or in maintaining its equipment to prevent loss of the cotton by fire.
At the close of the trial the court properly charged the jury that there was no other ground than (1) gross negligence in providing the equipment to prevent loss by fire, and (2) gross negligence in maintaining such equipment on which the jury could lawfully find for the plaintiff., Our examination of the record has convinced that there was no substantial evidence to sustain a verdict of gross negligence in providing the equipment, and. the only question remaining, presented by the refusal to instruct for the defendant, is Was there any substantial evidence of gross negligence of the defendant in maintaining the equipment in an efficient condition? The evidence on this issue is too voluminous for citation in detail, but the general effect of it may be stated. The plaintiff produced testimony to the effect that when the fire was discovered the two hydrants in the defendant's system first opened produced, one a weak and useless stream of water, and the other none at all, arid that when these had been tried it was too late for the watchman to put out the fire, that when the members of the city fire department and the officials and employees of the city arrived the city hydrant near the connection of the city system with the compress system would not produce an efficient stream, but that the reason for this was that several of the hydrants of the compress system were then open, that these officers caused the main connecting the compress system to the city system to be cut and capped and then the city hydrant, threw a stream 60 to 75 feet from the nozzle of the hose ; that shortly after the fire started the pressure on the city system at the city water plant was 60 pounds to the square inch, and this was ordinarily sufficient to throw an efficient stream from 65 to 75 feet from the nozzle of 100 feet of hose attached to a hydrant; that in their opinion there was no obstruction in the mains of the city; that the water derived from the lake carried sediment; that this sediment settled'in dead ends of mains in pipes and in hydrants, and if they were not flushed once in from one to four weeks it sometimes clogged a hydrant or main in the city system so that it required two or three minutes, and in some cases longer, after it was opened to clear the main, pipe, or hydrant and cause it to throw an efficient stream; and that in the opinion of some of the witnesses for the plaintiff the failure of the two hydrants of the compress company to produce forcible streams was because they had not been properly flushed and had become clogged with sediment. The plaintiff, however, produced no witnesses who testified that any of the compress company’s hydrants had ever been so clogged, or that the defendant or any of its employees
“To fix liability on tbe defendant gross negligence is necessary, which is more than the want of ordinary care, and it is, as defined by the law, the want of slight care or diligence, that is, such as persons of ordinary care usually exercise about their own affairs of slight importance.”
There was no exception to this portion of the charge and, conceding, as counsel for the plaintiff claims, that it was correct, without deciding or intimating any opinion on that question and testing the issue of substantial evidence thereby, a deliberate examination and consideration of the entire record in this case, the evidence of the labórate system of protection against fire which the defendant installed, of the mains, hydrants, water barrels, and of the connection of this system with the city water system; the evidence of the care exercised by the defendant in the maintenance of this system, of the filling of the water barrels, of the opening and use of the hydrants for that purpose, of the provision atid use of the watchman, the absence of any evidence by any witness that he had ever known before the fire of the clogging of any main or hydrant of the compress company with sediment so as to render it inefficient, and the positive testimony of the witnesses of the defendant who had been in charge of and using the defendant’s fire protection system that they had never experienced or known of such clogging before the fire, have left no doubt that there was no substantial evidence in this trial that the defendant either in providing or maintaining its system of protection of the compress platform and the cotton upon it against fire failed to exercise such slight care or diligence as persons of ordinary care usually exercise over their own affairs of slight importance, and the court below should have instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. Ret the judgment below be reversed, and let the case be remanded to the court below for a new trial.