70 Mo. 252 | Mo. | 1879
The petition in this case alleged that on or about the 13th day of August, 18-73, defendant,-by its agents and servants, so carelessly and negligently ran and managed a locomotive engine on its road, where it runs through plaintiff's farm, that fire escaped therefrom and was communicated to combustible matter on and in the vicinity of its railroad, and was carelessly and negligently permitted to burn, by defendant’s employees in charge of the track, and whose duty it was to put such fire out, and being permitted to burn said firm escaped into adjoining land of plaintiff and consumed and destroyed his meadows, fences, hay, straw and cattle sheds and hog pens. Defendant’s answer was a general denial, and also alleged that the injuries sued for were caused by tho negligence and want of care of plaintiff, and could end would have been avoided by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence on his part. This the replication denied.
There was atrial, which resulted in a judgment for plaintiff, from which defondant has appealed. The question of contributory negligence, on plaintiff’s part, may be dismissed with tho remark that there was no evidence to sustain it. Tho evidence as to the origin of tho fire was that of Folsom, and was in substance, that on tho morning of August 80th, 1873, he was working for defendant as a section hand at the east end of a section which extended through plaintiff’s premises, and that immediately after the passenger train going past passed, he saw fire spring up after it on the right of way adjoining plaintiff’s-premises, and after burning on the right of way for some hours,; the fire was driven by the wind on to plaintiff’s premises, and destroyed
The court did not err in refusing the second, third and fourth instructions asked by. defendant.-. They contained the same vice found in defendant’s fourth instruction in the other case-between these parties, to which we refer as containing our views on the subject.