132 Ala. 520 | Ala. | 1902
— 1. The principle is well established in this court as a rule of evidence, that in an action against a railroad company to recover damages resulting from fire alleged to have been caused by the negligent escape of sparks from a locomotive running on defendant’s road, the burden is on the plaintiff, in the first instance, to show that the fire was caused by
2. The cotton destroyed was situated in a pen on the right hand or north side of the railroad running towards Birmingham from Montgomery, at which point, it appears the track ran east and west. The pen was about 50 feet 6 inches from the center of the track. A freight train had, only a few minutes before, passed up; when the cotton was discovered to be on fire. The train, as the evidence tended to show, was a short one, consisting of about fifteen cars attached to the engine, the grade was ascending at the point, the train was moving rapidly, and the engine was emitting an unusual quantity of sparks, larger than engines generally emit; that the day was clear and rather windy, the wind blowing in the direction of the cotton, — from a southeastern direction and in a northwesterly direction, and there was no fire in any of the houses or structures near the cotton. Here, the witness testifying to these facts for plaintiff, was asked: “Had it been raining the day before the accident, or had it been dry weather?” to which question, he replied, that the weather had been clear for several days. The defendant objected to the question on the ground that it was irrelevant, Incompetent
3. The witness, Bledsoe, testified that he was within 6 or 8 feet of the track when the engine passed] that there were a good many sparks coming out when the train passed, and a heap- of them fell on the platform of the store near-by, and were about the usual size. He was asked, “Was it a light train ór a heavy train?” He answered that it was a light train, and in answer to another question, he did not count the cars, but there seemed to be 14 or 15 of them. The defendant objected to the question on the grounds that it called for incompetent and irrelevant evidence, and because the-character of the. train had nothing to- do with the condition of the engine. While the latter objection, — the one relied on to show the incompetency of the evidence, — may in point of fact have been true, whether the train was a light one or a heavy one, in the number of cars of which it consisted, yet if it was a heavy train, consisting of a great number of cars, it is common knowledge that it would have required a greater expenditure of effort, so to speak, on the part of the engine, and a greater exhaust of steam by it, especially when moving rapidly, up grade, than would-have been the case, if the train were a short one, requiring less power to move it, a condition when fewer and smaller sparks would likely be emitted, than if the engine were drawing a heavy train'. The
4. Beckett, as an expert witness for defendant, testified as to the construction of engines and appliances for preventing the escape of sparks — stating that there had been some changes in material in them, during the past twenty year’s, and they had been trying to better them but had not succeeded; said that what he called standard netting was the same as it was the first time he saw a spark arrester, about 20 years ago; that sometimes the netting ha,d to be cleaned, and a man would pound it with a piece of iron. He was asked on the cross by plaintiff in this connection, “Is not that iron liable to increase the size of the spaces?” He answered, “Not unless it is punched; they merely take a piece of iron and jar it out of the netting, and this would not affect the netting unless they punched a hole through it.” There was no proof that the netting had been punched, and if there was error in allowing the question, it Avas error without injury, since the question as asked was not ansAvered, and the answer given, was entirely without prejudice to defendant.
5. Woods, the engineer aaNo handled the train at the time of the accident, testified for defendant that the more force that was use d, the greater the number of sparks, and that he was running 25 or 30 miles an hour, AA'lien he na,L«ed Bozeman — the place the fire occurred. He Avas asked by plaintiff in this connection, — “Now is it not a fact that your train was running behind time, and that you were running faster to malee up that time?” The defendant objected on the ground that the evidence called for was incompetent, irrelevant and inadmissible. In Perdue v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 100 Ala.. 539, the court stated, that as a matter of law, it cannot be said that any rate of speed of a railroad train, away from those places where the statute regulates it, is negligence per se, and that, whether or not rapid running, at points not regulated by statute, would be negligence, would depend upon the conditions under which it
6. Thornton, a Avitness for plaintiff, had testified that the engine Avhen it passed emitted sparks as large as the end of his little finger, and Billingslea, that the sparks were as large as a coav pea. Gross, a Avitness for the plaintiff, an experienced engineer, testified that he had heard all the testimony in the case about the fire, and how the engine was equipped. He was asked: “If the netting to that engine Avas such as has been testified to here, and it was in good repair and condition, Avould it throAV out, sparks as large as the end of your little finger?” The defendant objected on the ground that there was no testimony that the sparks Avere as large as the little finger of Avitness. Thornton and Billings-lea Avere alloAved to be recalled, each of whom exhibited his little finger to the Avitness. The witness did not answer the question. But, he Avas asked another question, "Do you know Avhat size sparks Avould emit?” He answered that no engine in proper condition should have thrown sparks as large as a cow-pea, and as large as
7. The court gave several charges requested by defendant, and refused several. The vices of those refused, without reviewing them separately,, will appear. We have examined them, and conclude they were properly refused.
A motion was made for a new trial, based on rulings assigned as errors and which we have been considering; It was overruled and we find no occasion for disturbing the verdict and judgment.
Affirmed.