83 F. 300 | 8th Cir. | 1897
This action was brought by Adolph T. Rosen against the Chicago Great Western Railway Company in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Minnesota to recover damages for the destruction by fire of the plaintiff’s building, situated upon land owned by him adjoining the defendant’s railroad, in the city of St. Paul. The evidence in the case showed that the plaintiff was the owner of lot No. 27, with the buildings thereon, in block No. 23 of South Park addition No. 10; that the defendant owned and was operating a line of railway running from St. Paul in a southerly direction, through South St. Paul and beyond; that the plaintiff’s lot was adjacent to, and on the easterly side of, the right of way of the defend-, ant’s road; that the building was a large frame building, 50 feet in width by 90 feet in length and 2% stories in height, with a brick addition thereto IV2 stories high; that the building and addition contained a large amount of machinery, tools, material, and appliances, which were owned by the plaintiff, and used by him for the purpose of carrying on a tannery and fur-dressing establishment, the building in question being located about 50 feet westerly from the main railway tracks of the defendant company, and that on the 11th of August, 1895, within a short time after one of the defendant’s trains had passed the plaintiff’s building, the building was discovered to be on fire, and was wholly destroyed. There was also evidence offered by the plaintiff tending to show that among the locomotive engines used by the defendant in operating its trains was a small motor engine, known as engine No. 13, which was used by the defendant in drawing suburban trains daily operated by it and at frequent intervals from the city of St. Paul to South St. Paul and beyond, upon the main tracks of its road; that
The fireman’s evidence was to the effect that on leaving a station he generally put in about 2 shovelfuls of coal, which would be sufficient to carry it to the next place, so that on the whole trip he would use about 20 or 25 shovelfuls of coal, there being 10 stops; that they always stopped at South Park station, and stopped there on this day; that he saw no sparks or cinders thrown from the smokestack at the time in question, nor was his attention called to anything of the kind; that he did his work as fireman in the ordinary manner on that trip, was on the left-hand side of the engine on both trips, did not notice any fire or sparks on the plaintiff’s factory when he went by it, and that there was nothing in the working of the engine in any way that attracted his attention as being out of the ordinary run. .
The conductor testified, in substance, that the motor cars are somewhat lighter than ordinary cars, with doors at the side; that there are
At the close of the testimony, the plaintiff requested the court to instruct the jury:
“(1) If the jury And from the testimony that, in order to do the work performed by engine No. 33 in the motor service, it was necessary to so operate said engine, or the ordinary operation of said engine was such, as to cause it to throw out a greater quantity of sparks than would have been thrown out in the ordinary and proper operation of a larger engine, or one of a different construction, doing the same work, and the throwing out of such a greater quantity of sparks would increase the danger from Are caused by the engine to adjacent property, the failure to make use of such larger engine, or of different construction, for the purpose of doing the work performed by 13, is an act of negligence on the part of the defendant company.”
“(2) When the lire is shown to have originated from sparks from the engine, it must bo presumed to have been caused by some negligence of the company or its employes, either in the character, construction, or management of llie engine, unless the contrary is shown to your satisfaction; and the burden of proof is on the defendant to show that it was not negligent in any particular that may have operated to cause the injury.”
The court refused to give either of the instructions requested, and its refusal to do so is now assigned for error.
By statnle in the stale of Minnesota, when it is established in cases of this kind that the fire complained of resulted from sparks or cinders thrown from the cars or engines of a railway company, the burden is cast upon the railway company to show that it was not negligent. The statute is in the following words:
“All railroad companies or corporations operating or running cars or steam engines over roads in tills state shall be liable to any party aggrieved for all damage caused by Are being scattered or thrown from said cars or engines, without*304 the owner or owners of the property so damaged being required to show defect in their engines or negligence on the part of their employés; but the fact of such fire being so scattered or thrown shall be construed by all courts having jurisdiction as prima facie evidence of such negligence or defect. * * Gen. St. 1894, § 2700.
Under this statute, the presumption of negligence, however, is a disputable onej and may be rebutted by showing that the defendant did use due care, and was not negligent. The defendant was operating its road under lawful authority upon its own land, and could not be made liable for the destruction of the plaintiff’s building upon an adjacent lot unless it was negligent in its management or the condition of its engine. The action is based upon the negligence of the defendant, and it cannot be made liable to adjacent property owners for unavoidable or usual consequences of the proper operation of its road. We think the first request was properly refused. The gist of the action is negligence. The evidence shows that this engine was used in the suburban service, pulling a light train, consisting of two coaches; that there was no perceptible grade at the place where the fire occurred; and that the engine was sufficient for the service in which it was used; and the mere fact that, in the ordinary and proper operation of this engine, it would throw out a greater quantity of sparks than would have been thrown out in the ordinary and proper operation of a larger engine doing the same work, and thereby increase the danger from fire to adjacent property, would not of itself amount to negligence. Negligence is a breach of duty, unintentionally and proximately producing an injury to another possessing equal rights. It is the omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided by circumstances which ordinarily regulate the conduct of men in the transaction of their affairs, would do, or the failure to observe for the protection of the interests of another that degree of care, precaution, and vigilance which the circumstances justly demand. A railway company must exercise reasonable care in the use of its property and in the operation of its trains to avoid injury to others; hence the rule requiring “it to avail itself of the best mechanical contrivances and inventions in known practical use which are effective in preventing the burning of private property by the escape of sparks and coals from its engines”; but to say that the use, instead of an ordinary road engine, of a smaller engine, which emitted more and hotter sparks .than the ordinary road engine, but which was in every way suitable for'the service in which it was employed, and was equipped with suitable appliances, and was carefully operated, was negligence, would be going far beyond the rule applicable to this class of cases. Daly v. Railway Co., 43 Minn. 319, 45 N. W. 611; Frace v. Railroad Co., 143 N. Y. 182, 38 N. E. 102. The two Minnesota cases, Karsen v. Railroad Co., 29 Minn. 12, 11 N. W. 122, and Burud v. Railway Co., 62 Minn. 243, 64 N. W. 562, and Piggot v. Railway Co., 3 C. B. 229, do not change or announce any different rule. The Minnesota cases turn upon the question whether or not there was evidence to support the verdict of the jury, and the court finds that there was. The case of Piggot v. Railway Co. was a different case in its facts from the case at bar. The evidence in that
The second request was fully covered bv the instructions of the court. The court instructed the jury as follows:
“If you should determine that the evidence satisfies you that the plaintiff has proved the communication of the 'fire to file building from sparks or cinders from this motor engine, then the burden of proof is shifted upon the defendant, and he must; overcome the prima facie case, — that presumption. He must show that Hiere was no defect in the engine: that there was no negligence in the manner of its operation by defendant’s employes; and that they were skillful men. In other words, lie must prove that there was no negligence, within the definition of the term as I have described it to you. And I told you that negligence was the failure to do something which an ordinarily prudent man under the circuías lances would do, or doing something which an ordinarily prudent man under the circumstances would not do. This is the definition of negligence; and it is necessary for the .defendant company to show that it used all reasonable and proper care, caution, diligence, and skill in the construction of the motor engine, and that at the time of the fire it was skillfully operated. That is all the railroad company would be required to do, — to use all clue and reasonable care and caution in providing appliances for the prevention of the emission of sparks and cinders 'from the locomotive, and skill in the management of it by its operators at the time.”
“Of course, when a railroad company equips its engines with appliances for Hie prevention of the emission of sparks and cinders, it must have the apparatus complete as far as the appliances used for the prevention of the escape of sparks and cinders from Ms smokestack are concerned. It cannot comply with ibe law by merely having the form of the appliance in common use, but it must have the details complete. Everything must be properly constructed, and the anplianeos must be perfect in form. It must exercise reasonable care and skill in using these expedients for the prevention of fire, and use such expedients as are in common use for the prevention of fire being emitted from its smokestack.”
We think these instructions were as favorable to the plaintiff as he could properly ask. There being no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.