52 Neb. 86 | Neb. | 1897
Plaintiff sued the defendant to recover damages for the destruction by fire of plaintiff’s fence posts and trees. After the testimony was all in, the jury, under the directions of the trial judge, returned a verdict for the defendant, upon which judgment was duly entered, and to reverse which the case was brought here by petition in error.
Plaintiff, by permission of the court, filed an amended petition to conform to the evidence adduced by her, alleging substantially that the defendant negligently, in operating and running the engine over its line of road through plaintiff’s premises, “permitted said engine to cast out sparks and coals of fire therefrom, and threw the same over and upon, the premises of plaintiff, and then and thereby set fire to the grass on her land and burned up and destroyed 280 ash trees and 57 fence posts.” The verdict was directed upon the theory that the evidence failed
It is insisted that plaintiff alleged one state of facts, and proved an entirely different set of facts. In other words, that negligence was alleged in the operation and management of the engine, and not that it was defectively constructed, and that there was not a scintilla of evidence in the case to establish the negligence charged in the petition. The inference of negligence in the operation
Reversed and remanded.