4 So. 2d 884 | Miss. | 1941
Turfitt, plaintiff below and appellee here, averred in his declaration that Robinson, defendant below and appellant here, through his employees and servants, while clearing farm lands of Robinson, set a fire on said lands, and "wantonly, negligently and carelessly allowed the fire so set . . ." to spread to the adjoining lands of Turfitt, thereby causing the damage for which the action was brought, and for which a verdict and judgment were rendered against Robinson. Section 3422, Code of 1930.
Robinson, by his plea, placed upon Turfitt the burden of proving (1) that the servants of Robinson did, in fact, start the fire, and negligently permitted it to spread to the premises of Turfitt, causing the damage, and (2) that they were acting within the scope of their employment and about the master's business at the time.
Robinson earnestly insisted in the lower court and so insists here that Turfitt did not meet that burden and that the evidence was not sufficient to go to the jury on these questions. These are close questions on this record under the pronouncements of this Court in McCain v. Wade,
Our attention has not been called to any Mississippi case in point. In Bonnett v. Brown,
Pulsifer v. Berry et al.,
"The gist of the action was negligence. It was a simple question of fact, for the jury to determine, whether, under the particular circumstances and conditions shown to exist in the case, the defendants had omitted any precautions which ordinarily careful and prudent men in the same relation would not have omitted, or performed any acts which ordinarily prudent men would not have performed. Even if a general usage could ever be deemed a safe criterion of a question of ordinary care, such a limited usage as that received in this case would not be material evidence.
"It is impossible, in the first place, that there should be any uniform practice or fixed standard of care with respect to a duty so peculiarly dependent upon varying circumstances and conditions as that of guarding fire to prevent its spreading. The number and magnitude of the fires, the condition of the soil, the state of the weather, the direction and force of the wind, and the relative situation and exposure of the plaintiff's property would all be factors to be considered in the solution of the question in every case. . . . But not even a general custom can be deemed a relevant fact in an action for negligence respecting any noncontractual duty which is not performed under fixed conditions."
The evidence of custom in this case could only produce confusion and could not have failed to affect the verdict of the jury upon questions to which this evidence had no relevancy.
Reversed and remanded.
Smith, C.J., is of the opinion that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed. *166