79 Mich. 163 | Mich. | 1890
Plaintiffs were the owners of a plow factory situated in Benton Harbor; and on the morning of December 14, 1883, it was wholly consumed by fire. The defendant was operating a railroad, and its track passed within about 50 feet of the factory. The plaintiffs allege that the locomotive engine of defendant was out of repair, and not in good order and condition, and was improperly managed by defendant’s servants, and the sparks arising and coming from the smoke-stack, through the careless, negligent, improper, and unskillful management of the engine by defendant’s servants, were driven, blown, and lodged in and upon the buildings of plaintiffs, and said buildings took fire therefrom, and were, with their contents, burned and destroyed. The cause was submitted to the jury, under instuctions by the court as to the law, and they returned a verdict for the defendant. Several errors are assigned upon the latitude permitted by the court in the cross-examination of plaintiffs’ witnesses. It is not necessary to repeat the errors assigned. The rule is well established that a witness may be cross-examined upon all points material to the issue, whether the party has called them out upon direct examination or not; and there was no error in permitting the facts to be elicited upon the cross-examination of plaintiffs’ witnesses.
The court refused to permit the plaintiffs to show that an engine of defendant set fire at another time and place
Defendant was permitted to show that within a short distance from . plaintiffs' factory there was a stationary boiler with smoke-stack;’ that the fire used to make steam was fed by pine slabs; that the smoke-stack had no sparkarresters upon it; and that it was in use that morning, •at the time of the fire. And, to show that sparks were emitted from this smoke-stack which were alive, a witness was permitted to testify that some time after the fire, which destroyed the plaintiffs' factory, a spark from this smoke-stack fell upon the witness, and burned his clothes. We think this testimony admissible, as showing the sitxiation of the surroundings' of the factory, and its exposure»to risk from fire, to be considered by the jury with other circumstances in the case. The question as to whether the fire was communicated by the locomotive engine of defendant was not established by positive and direct testimony; but it was sought to be established by plaintiffs from inferences drawn from the facts and circumstances introduced in evidence tending to prove it. And it was for the purpose of placing all the facts and circumstances before the jury that the trial court permitted such facts and circumstances to be introduced,
There was no error in striking out the answer of the witness Congdon, as follows:- “I know there must have been wood in the engine, by the sparks.” It is not for a witness, but the jury, to draw inferences from facts.
William J. Hobbs was a witness produced -by the defendant; and he testified that he was the fireman upon Engine N.o. 1 on the morning of December 14, 1883. This cause was tried in the court below in January, A. D. 1887; and -he testified that he was then engineer upon defendant’s road. On his cross-examination he testified that he commenced firing in 1882. Before that, for two years, was braking and switching, and was promoted to be engineer in September, 1886. He had read no books on engineering to amount to anything, nor on construction of locomotives. He was then asked:
“What education have you received, then, with reference to your present position as engineer, aside from the fact that you stoked on an engine?”
To this question the defendant’s counsel 'objected on the ground that it was immaterial. The court sustained • the objection; and the plaintiffs’ counsel excepted, and have assigned error upon the ruling. The ruling was correct. '
The origin of the fire was problematical, and depended, not upon direct and positive proof, but upon inferences to be drawn from facts proved. It was competent in such case for defendant to introduce testimony having a tendency to prove that the fire was of incendiary origin; and the errors assigned upon the admission of such testimony are overruled.
Ten errors are assigned upon the refusal of the court to charge as requested by plaintiffs’ counsel, and to the charge as given. We have carefully examined the errors
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.