delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action to recover compensation for the destruction by fire of the plaintiff’s saw-mill and a quantity of lumber, situated and lying in the State of Iowa, and on the banks of tbe river Mississippi. That the property was destroyed by fire was uncontroverted. From tbe bill of exceptions, it appears that tbe “plaintiff alleged tbe fire was negligently communicated from tbe defendants’ steamboat ‘ Jennie Brown ’ to an elevator built of pine lumber, and one hundred and twenty feet high, owned by tbe defendants, and standing on tbe bank of tbe river, and from the elevator to tbe plaintiff’s saw-mill and lumber piles, while an unusually strong wind was blowing from tbe elevator towards tbe mill and lumber. On tbe trial, it was admitted that tbe defendants owned the steamboat and elevator; that tbe mill was five hundred and thirty-eight feet from the elevator, and that tbe nearest of plaintiff’s piles of lumber was three hundred and eighty-eight feet distant from it. It was also admitted that there was conflict between tbe -parties plaintiff and defendant respecting tbe ownership of the land where tbe mill stood and tbe dumber was piled, both-claiming under a common source of title. Tbe plaintiff bad built tbe mill, and he was in tbe occupation of it, believing be bad a right to be there.”
Such baling been tbe admissions, tbe court refused to allow
It has been further argued in support of this assignment of error that the proffered proof of title should have been admitted, because it tended to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. But we cannot understand how it could have had any such tendency. Whether the mill stood on the defendants’ land, or on other land equally distant from the steamer and elevator, and in the same direction, its exposure to the fire was exactly the same.
A second exception taken in the court below, and here insisted upon, is that the court refused to permit the defendants to prove by witnesses who were experts, experienced in the business of fire insurance, and accustomed by their profession to estimating and calculating the hazard and exposures to fire from one building to another, and to fixing rates of insurance, that, owing to the distance between the elevator arid the mill, and the distance between the elevator and the lumber piles, the elevator would not be considered as an exposure to the mill or lumber, and would not be considered in fixing a rate thereon, or in measuring the hazard of mill or lumber.
This exception is quite unsustainable. The subject of proposed inquiry was a matter of common observation, upon which the lay or uneducated mind is capable of forming a judgment.
The next exception is to the refusal of the court to instruct the jury as requested, that “ if they believed the sparks from the ‘ Jennie Brown ’ set fire to the elevator through the negligence of the defendants, and the distance of the elevator from the nearest lumber pile was three hundred and eighty-eight feet, and from the mill five hundred-and twenty-eight feet, then' the proximate cause of the burning of the mill and lumber waB the burning of the elevator, and the injury was too remote from the negligence to afford a ground for a recovery.” This proposition the court declined to affirm, and in lieu thereof
The true rule is, that what is the proximate cause of an injury is ordinarily a question for the jury. It is not a question of science or of legal k owledge. It is to be determined as a fact, in view of the circum. anees of fact attending it. The primary cause may be the proximate cause of a disaster, though it may operate through successive instruments, as an article at the end of a chain may be moved by a force applied to the other end, that force being the proximate cause of the movement, or as in the oft-cited case of the squib thrown in the market-place»
If we are not mistaken in these opinions, the Circuit Court was correct in refusing to affirm the defendants’ proposition, and in submitting to the jury to find whether the burning of the mill and lumber was a result naturally and reasonably to be expected from the burning of the elevator, under the circumstances, and whether it was the result of the continued influence or effect of the sparks from the boat, without the aid or concurrence of other causes not reasonably to have been expected. The jury found, in substance, that the burning of the mill and lumber was caused by the negligent burning of the' elevator, and that it was the unavoidable consequence of that burning. This, in effect, was. finding that there was no intervening and independent cause between the negligent conduct of the defendants and the injury to the plaintiff. The judgment must, therefore, be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed«
