The plaintiff, Logan, was in ■charge of a farm belonging to his brother, in which he had an interest in the growing crops and stock thereon. In July, 1900, an engine operated on defendant’s railroad, which passed 'through said farm, by escaping sparks set out a fire near some hay which had been severed from the land and which was partly in ricks. There was also some standing hay. The plaintiff with the aid of another man succeeded in saving some of the hay, but while so doing, he became surrounded by the flames, and in seeking to escape, fell and was severely burned. The court sustained a demurrer to plaintiff’s case as thus made and directed a verdict for the defendant, upon which judgment was rendered, from which plaintiff appealed. There was
The plaintiff bases his right to recover upon the ground, that, after he had discovered the fire, it became his duty, a duty which he owed the defendant at common law, to extinguish the fire if he could, so as to save the defendant from loss, for which it would be responsible to him for the destruction of his property. His contention amounts to this, that, being in the performance of a duty, which the law imposed, and while performing that duty in the exercise of ordinary care, in order to save the defendant, the wrongdoer, from loss threatened from the consequences of its wrongful act in setting out the fire, he is entitled to compensation for the injuries received.
In. Douglass v. Stephen,
The rule of law in this State is, that-unless the damages complained of were properly attributable to the wrongful act, there can be no recovery. In other words, the wrongful act must be' the proximate cause of the injury. Sira v. Railway,
■. Applying these authorities to the facts of this case, it seems to us "clear that the setting out of the fire by the defendant was' not. the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. This injury was not such, as under ordinary circumstances, would reasonably be expected' from the act charged; such for instance, if he had been asleep in the nighttime in his house, and his house had been set afire by sparks from the defendant’s engine, and he had been thereby' injured. In the latter instance, there would be no intervening agency, and'the injury suffered would be reasonably expected under the circumstances. For the foregoing reasons, the action of the circuit court is affirmed.
