97 S.E. 162 | N.C. | 1918
The action was brought to recover damages for the negligent burning of timber and other property on plaintiff's land. There was evidence tending to show that the fire was set out on the land by the defendant and came from the latter's engine. The court charged that if the fire was caused by the defendant's engine emitting sparks or coals, which fell upon the plaintiff's land and caused the fire, the burden would be shifted to the defendant to show that the fire was not due to any defective condition of its engine, nor to any negligence in its management or operation. There were other instructions, to which no exceptions were taken. Certain questions of evidence are raised which will be noticed in the opinion.
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on the issue as to negligence, and assessed her damages at $2,800. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and defendant appealed.
After stating the case: There was ample evidence to show that the fire was caused by the defendant's engine, and the charge of the court, as to the burden of proof, is fully sustained by numerous cases heretofore decided in this Court. We will cite only a few of them: Knott v. R. R.,
The testimony of W. M. Stokes, to which defendant excepted, was competent in all respects. What he said to C. V. Liverman, defendant's witness, was corroborative of his own testimony as to the fire. Whitehurstv. R. R., supra; Matthews v. Insurance Co.,
It may be well to remind the profession of Rule No. 27, which was adopted some time ago (
The statement of the witness, W. M. Stokes, that he had seen the same engine casting sparks a number of times before the fire started, was competent. Knott v. R. R.,
The question in regard to the sale of land by the grandmother, if relevant and otherwise competent, was too uncertain and indefinite; and as to the question relating to the defendant's survey of the land, it was not *72
necessary to notify the plaintiff, and it was immaterial whether she was notified or not. The exclusion of the question asked the witness, L. E. Stokes, when he was recalled, is not well taken, and, besides, is harmless. The question was a mere repetition of the defendant's cross-examination of the witness when on the stand the first time, and the question of damages was then exhaustively investigated. It does not appear that his answer would have been favorable to the defendant, nor does it appear what his answer would have been, so that the Court can see that the ruling was prejudicial. In Jenkins v. Long,
We have already considered the exceptions to the charge and found them to be groundless, and upon a review of the whole record we can find no error therein.
No error.