5 Colo. App. 238 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court.
A barn which was jointly occupied and owned by Nyberg and the McGinley Brothers with its contents was destroyed by fire in the early part of 1892. Nyberg and the McGinley Bros, brought suit against The Pueblo Light, Heat and Power Company to recover the value of the property destroyed. The two suits were consolidated and tried together and the plaintiffs had judgment for $132.50 and $212 respectively, from Avhich the company appealed. To get judgment, the plaintiffs of necessity must have successfully maintained several propositions. It was incumbent upon them to prove affirmatively that the fire was set out by sparks from the defendant’s chimney, and that it resulted either from a failure to use proper appliances about the chimney to protect the adjacent property, or that there was some negligent user of what the defendant employed for the purpose.
At the outset we concede that, while the case involves very little money, it has caused the court a great deal of trouble. In our desire to do the plaintiffs exact justice and infringe no settled principle of law, we have read the testimony with very great care and have given it very unusual consideration. As a result of this very attentive scrutiny,
The imperative rule which is almost universally followed in the appellate courts of this state is in our opinion in no wise infringed by the reversal of this judgment on the grounds we assign for it. Questions o.f fact, which have been determined on conflicting testimony by either courts or juries, are accepted as settled, and the conclusions are almost uniformly taken as the basis of the opinion. To us the present case lies very clearly outside the binding force or in fact the possible operation of this well established practice. There is no evidence pro or con on the question of the origin of the fire. The record is equally barren of testimony which affirmatively establishes its cause. The whole case rests, so far as regards this proposition, on the presumption which follows the proof which the plaintiff made concerning the falling of the sparks, and the danger occasioned thereby to adjacent property.
The plaintiffs entirely failed to bring their ease within the scope of this well settled law. When they established the fact that sparks were constantly coming from the chimney and falling about the grounds, and did not show with equal clearness they ever set fire to anything, they failed to prove what was absolutely necessary to raise the presumption that the fire which burned the structure was set out through the company’s negligence in the use of its works. The case does not come anywhere near the one cited by the appellees’ counsel, and decided by the supreme court in 15 Colo. 136 (Mouat Lumber Co. v. Wilmore). In that case there was proof which tended to show a constant breaking out of fires directly communicated by sparks from the mill chimney to
There is a further defect in the plaintiffs’ proof which would call for quite an extended discussion of the law, if the controversy had not already been settled by the argument on the first proposition. This defect comes from the failure to establish that the use of chimneys of this height in such a locality, without spark arresters, was negligence, when no artificial draft was used to stimulate the fire. There is a case in the 80 of Michigan on which the appellees rely (Hoyt v. Jeffers, 30 Mich. 181), which furnishes some support to their contention that it was the duty of the Power Company to use arresters on their chimneys. In trying their case, however, counsel failed to make the proof which would bring the action within the scope of the decision. He neither showed that such things were usual in the vicinity, nor did he prove enough concerning the surroundings and the situation of the power house and buildings in the locality nor about the fuel which was used and the emission of dangerous sparks which set fire to combustible material, to warrant the inference that the use of these chimneys without arresters was necessarily dangerous to the adjacent property. Of course, it is always true a man has a right to use his property as he will, having due regard to the safety of his neighbors. To charge him with negligence and a consequent responsibility for his user, it must appear the user was dangerous, and that it was within his power by the use of reasonable means to prevent injury to his neighbors. It is quite possible the case may change in this particular on a subsequent trial, and we therefore
For the reasons expressed, the judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the case remanded.
Reversed.