This action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover the sum of $1,600, the value of a barn and two bob-sleds alleged to have been destroyed by fire set from the defendant’s locomotive. The plaintiff’s barn was located on lot 4, in block 24, of the town of Osburn, Shoshone county, and was 45 feet from the center of the railroad track and 20 feet from the defendant’s right of way. On the morning of August 4, 1907, the defendant ran an excursion train over its road by this property, and soon after the train had passed the fire broke out on the roof of the barn on the side next to the railroad track, and the building and bob-sleds were destroyed before the fire could be controlled. A verdict was rendered by the jury in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $750. The defendant moved for a new trial and appealed from the judgment and order denying its motion.
On the trial of the case the plaintiff was allowed to prove that at other times shortly prior to this fire the defendant
Counsel for appellant assigns as error the action of the court in admitting this evidence, and contends that where the engine which alone could have caused the fire is identified, evidence that other engines of the defendant at other _times and places set fires or threw igniting sparks is wholly inadmissible, unless there is proof that the other engines were in the same condition and operated in the same way as the engine that is shown to have set the fire. In support of this proposition, counsel cite the following authorities: Lesser Cotton Co. v. St. Louis etc. Ry. Co.,
Appellant contends, however, that plaintiff failed to prove, as a matter of fact, that defendant’s locomotive set the fire complained of, and that before the presumption of negligent
Appellant urges that in the trial of the case it succeeded in completely and conclusively rebutting the presumption of both negligent construction and operation of its engine, and that it became at once the duty of the court to instruct the jury as a matter of law to return a verdict in its favor. It must be conceded, we think, that if, for the establishment of negligence or want of care on the part of the railroad company, the plaintiff sees fit to rest solely upon the presumption of law which arises from the setting of the fire, and the railroad company successfully rebuts that presumption by clear and satisfactory evidence showing that the engine that is alleged to have caused the fire was of proper and modern construction and equipped with approved devices and appliances for arresting sparks and preventing the escape of fire and was in good repair, and was operated and managed with prudence and ordinary care and diligence, the defendant is entitled to an instructed verdict in its favor. (Smith v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 3 N. D. 17,
Petition for rehearing denied.
