165 N.Y. 347 | NY | 1901
This action was brought to recover the value of a warehouse and its contents, which on May 2, 1895, were destroyed by fire caused by sparks emitted by a locomotive of the defendant. The plaintiff’s building stood about twenty feet from the defendant’s track. Within a very few minutes after the passage of the train a fire was observed on the roof of the warehouse, and at the same time another fire was discovered burning on the bank adjacent to the track of the defendant, further south. There had been no fire in or about the warehouse on that day and when the fire was first observed it had not burned through the roof to the interior of the building. Evidence was given showing that the defendant’s engines frequently emitted large quantities of sparks setting fire to grass and fences at a distance of sixty or seventy feet. It was proved that on the twenty-third of March, previous to the fire, the same locomotive which caused the fire in the
It is conceded, both by the learned Appellate Division and by the counsel for the respondent, that the evidence was sufficient to justify the jury in finding that the fire in plaintiff’s warehouse was caused by sparks from the defendant’s locomotive. This, however, was not sufficient to authorize a recovery against the defendant, and the latter “ could not be made liable for the destruction of the house upon the adjoining lot, except upon proof of negligence in the management or condition of its engines. The action in such a case is based upon negligence, and a railroad company cannot be made liable for the unavoidable or usual consequences of the proper operation of its road to adjacent property.” (Flinn v. N. Y. C.& H. R. R. R. Co., 142 N. Y. 11.) But while it was necessary for the plaintiff to affirmatively establish negligence on the part of the defendant, either in the condition or in the operation of its engine, for which the mere occurrence of the fire was not sufficient, it was not necessary that he should prove either the specific defect in the engine or the particular act of
The judgment of the trial court and the Appellate Division should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
Parker, Ch. J., Bartlett, Martin and Vann, JJ., concur; Gray and Wernerb, JJ., not sitting.
Judgment reversed, etc.