3 Indian Terr. 85 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1899
We have examined the voluminous record in this case with close attention, as well as the briefs and arguments of counsel, and at the outset are constrained to say that there is very great doubt in our opinion as to the origin of that fire. It appears that this case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a mistrial, by failure of the jury to agree. It was tried again, and withdrawn by reason of the sickness of a juror, and on this the third trial a verdict was for plaintiff (the appellee here.) It also appears that several other suits have been instituted, growing out of that fire, against the railroad company, the appellant here. One of them (Fuller vs Railroad Co.) was appealed by the railroad company to the circuit court of appeals (18 C. C. A. 641, 72 Fed. 467,) and thence to the United States supreme court (18 Sup. Ct. 944,) where the case was affirmed against the railroad company by a divided court, four of the judges being in favor of the affirmance of the case, and four against (the-court being equally divided);
The appellant introduced, as appears from the record, about 30 more witnesses on the trial of the case at bar than were introduced by it on the trial of the Fuller Case, and much of this testimony related to the direction the wind was blowing at the time the fire occurred. This was one of the most material questions presented to the jury. The appellee had 6 witnesses that testified that the direction of the wind was from the southeast, and the appellant had 16 witnesses that the wind was from the south, and on that point 12 more than in the Fuller Case. The wind had to be from the southeast to carry the smoke from the engine to the barn, as the barn was 300 feet west of the main track, and the measurement showed that from the point where the engine was located by appellee’s witnesses to the southeast corner of his barn was 359 feet, and appellee’s witnesses say the wind was strong from the southeast. If such were the case, it would necessarily carry the fire from the barn in a northwesterly direction; and here develops a physical fact of very great significance. The fire from the barn extended and destroyed the property north of the barn, and not northwest from the barn. The residence of John D. Moore was 661 feet from the main track of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad, and was located 4,260 feet from the barn. Hence in a short time the fire had extended on a line due north, and parallel to the main track of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas road, which ran north, 10 deg. east, and had only varied in that distance of 4,260 feet the difference
The appellee alleges in his complaint that the sidetrack was defective, on which the engine was moving a train of freighted cars, and in doing so ‘ ‘negligently let in and upon said locomotive engine such a high and heavy pressure of steam, * * * whereby a large volume of smoke, intermixed with sparks of fire, was driven out of the smokestack of said locomotive engine, which large volume of smoke, intermixed with said sparks of fire, was then and there blown by the strong wind aforesaid in the direction of, and against and through the cracks and openings in the south east corner of, this plaintiff’s aforesaid barn or livery stable, and thereby the hay in the loft of this plaintiff’s said barn of livery stable,- was set on fire.” The' engineer of
Under the foregoing citations of authorities, which, in
The charge of the court in this case fairly and fully presents the law of the case; but in consideration of the doubtful preponderance of the evidence as set out in this opinion, and the errors of the court in admitting the testimony of Waller and Ferrell, and the suppression of the deposition of Lem Springston, which was exceedingly important evidence to assist the jury in arriving at the origin of the fire, and which might and probably would have had great weight with the jury in arriving at their verdict, we are of the opinion that this case should be reversed, and remanded for a new trial. Reversed.