131 Mass. 469 | Mass. | 1881
The defendant introduced evidence that the engine, which the plaintiff contended communicated fire to his barn, “was furnished with the ordinary appliances of a cone
We are of opinion that it was competent for the plaintiff to show that the engine on the return trip emitted sparks which set fire to property in the same neighborhood. Such evidence tended to show that the spark-arrester, testified to by the defendant’s witnesses, was either faulty in construction or out of repair, and thus to rebut the presumption which the jury might draw from the defendant’s evidence, which it tended to contradict and control. Ross v. Boston & Worcester Railroad, 6 Allen, 87. Exceptions sustained.