Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Perrow

101 Va. 345 | Va. | 1903

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought in the Circuit Court of Campbell county by William P. Perrow to recover of the Norfolk and Western Eailway Company damages for the destruction of his residence and its contents, alleged to have been caused by fire thrown from an engine of the defendant railway company. A verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for $3,750, which the court refused to set aside. This action of the Circuit Court we are asked to review and reverse.

The only error specifically mentioned in the petition is the refusal of the lower court to give instructions A and E asked for by the defendant. By instruction A the court was asked to tell the jury'that if they believed from the evidence that the plaintiff, through either accident or design caused to be partially erected upon the'right of way of the Norfolk and Western Eailway Company a frame building, which had a window in it on the railway side, that the wall of'the house which contained said window rested in part upon defendant’s right of way, and that the sash was left open, with a curtain of inflammable material therein, the jury must find a verdict for the defendant company, although they may believe from the evidence that the fire was caused by an engine of the defendant com*349pany, and that such engine was, at the time, in a defective condition.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether or not the wall of the house in question was, in part, upon the right of way of the defendant company, but if the jury had believed that it was by design or mistake placed, in part, over the line between the plaintiff and defendant, and that a window was open on the side next to the railway company with a curtain therein of inflammable material, and it were a sound proposition that these acts constituted negligence, the instruction would still be defective as a statement of law, for it assumes that such negligence contributed to the injury sustained by the plaintiff. The jury might have believed every fact mentioned in the instruction, and unless those acts contributed to the injury, the plaintiff would not have been deprived of the right to recover. The evidence was conflicting as to which side of the house was first ignited, with a strong preponderance in favor of the view that it began on the side of the house farthest from the right of way of the defendant; which was conceded to be upon the land of the plaintiff.

Instruction “E” is obnoxious to the same objection that has ' been suggested as to instruction “A.” By it the court was asked to tell the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the defendant, through accident or design, erected the house in question with the northern .side placed entirely, or almost entirely, on the right of way of the defendant company, with a window in said northern side left open, with an inflammable curtain therein, and that if the jury should be of opinion that such an act on the part of thé plaintiff constituted negligence, then they must find for the defendant company, without any regard to the question whether or not such negligence had anything to do with causing the injury complained of.

These instructions were clearly erroneous and properly refused, The effect would have been to require the jury to dis*350regard all of t-he evidence of the plaintiff as .to the origin of the fire and the cause of the damage sustained, if they believed that the northern wall of the plaintiff’s house was in whole or in part upon the right of way of the defendant company, with an open window therein, over which hung a curtain of inflammable material. If the wall of the plaintiff’s house had been wrongfully upon the right of way, that fact would not have justified the destruction of the property by any wilful.or negligent conduct of the defendant company. See Grand Trunk R. R. v. Richardson, 91 U. S. 454, 23 L. Ed. 356.

So far as appears from the petition, the only other assignment of error is a general statement in closing that the defendant relies upon the refusal, of the court to give a number of other instructions asked for by it. There were three other instructions asked for by the defendant company and refused, but the error in this action of the court is not pointed out. The general statement that the refusal of the court to give instructions is relied on as error is not in compliance with section 3464 of the Code, which requires that a petition for an appeal, writ of error, or supersedeas shall assign errors.

In Orr v. Pennington, 93 Va. 268, 24 S. E. 928, Judge Buchanan, sneaking for this court, said: A petition for an appeal is in the nature of a pleading. It ought to assign clearly and distinctly all the errors relied on for a reversal of the case, so that the opposite’ party may know what questions are to be raised in the appellate court, and not have new questions sprung upon him at or just before the hearing of the cause, when there may not be sufficient time or opportunity for meeting them.

In Atlantic & Danville Rwy. Co. v. Reiger, 95 Va. 418, 28 S. E. 590, the same Judge says: The action of the court in giving instructions copied into bill of exceptions ETo. 8 is assigned as error, but as no ground of objection is stated either in the petition or brief of the defendant- company, that assismment of error will not be considered. • Bee to the game .effect Hite’s Case, 96 Va. 495, 31 S. E. 895.

*351Without iuteudiug to depart from the settled rule that a petition must clearly and distinctly state the ground of each assignment of error to be relied on, it may not be improper in this case to say that we have maturely considered the three instructions in question and are of opinion that the rights of the defendant were not prejudiced by their rejection.

On April 10, 1901, about ten minutes after an extra freight train, drawn by three engines, had passed, the plaintiff’s house was discovered to be on fire. The evidence clearly shows that one of these three engines emitted much more fire than the other two, and much more than is usually emitted, and that this condition of things did not exist until about three weeks before the fire. The following extract from the opinion of the learned Judge of the Circuit Court gives an accurate summary of the salient features of the evidence:

“The plaintiff offers much testimony in support of his contention that the company fired his property with sparks emitted from an engine either defectively equipped, or negligently operated. He does not content himself with showing that the company’s engine communicated fire to his property, and allow his case to rest upon the presumption of negligence thereby raised. He submits evidence of a varied character to establish negligence in fact, on the part of his adversary. It is fully shown by the witnesses for the plaintiff that for several weeks prior to the fire this extra was noticeable for the abundance and variety of the sparks emitted by one of its engines. Witnesses who had been in the service of other railroads testify that they had never seen an engine throw fire like the engine on this extra—that it threw sparks more heavily than freight engines are wont to do. One witness describes the sparks as 'pouring out of the smoke staek.’ Another (Rosser) saw a cinder as big as his finger fall seventy-five yards from the train (the extra) and fire some roots; on another occasion it set fire at 100 yards from the track. Although this witness had served on *352other roads, he had never seen an engine throw fire like this one. Still another witness saw this extra emit sparks as big as his thumb. Another spoke of fire ‘just rolling out of it/ On the day of Perrow’s fire the witness Barracks saw a live coal left by the double-header near Perrow’s trestle an inch in diameter.
“This extra had acquired the local cognomen of ‘fire scatterer,’ and after it passed, land-owners watched to see that their premises had not been fired. On the day that Perrow’s house was burned, it left in its wake a number of fires from Perrow’s along the ascending grade towards Winfall, a station south of Rustburg. On this particular day it is shown that a high wind was blowing. It was a ‘gusty’ day and ‘pretty tolerable dry’; in fact, the weather had been dry for some time. As has been stated, this notable emission of sparks, with resulting fires along the Perrow grade, culminating in the fires on the day the house was destroyed, began about three weeks or a month prior to the Perrow fire. All of this testimony was offered to show that the defendant company, at the time of the fire, was operating a defective engine or engines, or else was negligently operating engines in approved condition. In either case it would be liable for resulting fires.
“To repel the case for the plaintiff the company showed by its witnesses that the engineers in charge of the extra were competent men, experienced in their vocation, that the engines were in good condition, equipped with approved preventive fire arrangements^ and their trains were operated with due or reasonable care' to prevent injury to the property of others.”

' This evidence clearly raised an issue of fact as to the condition and equipment of the engines, and the character of their operation. The two instructions given for the plaintiff, together with those given for the defendant company, fairly submitted the'case to the jury. The defendant company stands in this court' as upon á demurrer to the evidence, and it can*353not be said that the conclusion reached by the jury was clearly incorrect. Unless palpably erroneous the verdict cannot be disturbed.

For these x*easons the judgment complained of must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

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