68 Md. 377 | Md. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The law as applicable to this case, was, we think, fairly put to the jury, and whatever grounds the defendants may have to complain of the damages awarded by the jury, they have no ground it seems to us to complain of the instructions granted by the Court.
The defendants were contractors for the grading of a section of the Philadelphia extension of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and in grading the road they used what is commonly known as a steam shovel plough, in other words, a shovel plough with a steam engine attached. Sparks from the engine, set fire to dead grass and rubbish along the side of the road, and spread thence to the woodland of the plaintiffs adjoining the road-bed, destroying about one hundred and fifty acres of growing timber.
We quite agree that in actions of this kind, the proximate cause is alone to be considered, and by proximate cause, as used in this connection, we mean that the damage must be the direct and natural consequence of the defendants’ negligence, without any intervening force or power operating as a cause of the injury. But we cannot agree that the plaintiff failed to offer any evidence legally sufficient to justify the jury in finding such negligence. On the contrary, the witness Brown, who was on the engine at the time the fire happened, and who shortly afterwards saw the grate which was attached to the smoke-stack for the purpose of preventing the escape of sparks, says, “it was full of big holes,” and “was, in fact, worn out.” He did not see, it is true, the grate either before, or on the day of the fire, and it may be said that his evidence is not, therefore, conclusive as to its condition at the time of the fire. But it was, to say the least, evidence, and proper to go to the jury; and besides, it was open to the defendants to rebut any presumption arising from such evidence by prov
This question was fully considered in the case of Annapolis & Elkridge R. R. Co. vs. Gantt, 39 Md., 115. In that case sparks from the engine of the defendant company set fire to dead grass and bushes on the side of the roadbed, and spread thence to the land of the plaintiff adjoining, and it was argued in that case as in this, that the injury was too remoté, and the decisions in Ryan vs. New York Central R. R. Co., 35 N. Y., 210, and Penna. R. R. Co. vs. Kerr, 62 Penna., 353, now cited by the appellants, were relied on in support of this contention. But the Court said, “The fact that the fire began upon the side of the railroad and spread to the plaintiff’s land, cannot, in any just sense, be said to render the injury suffered by him of a nature merely remote and incidental within the meaning of the rule. The fire consumed his property in its natural and direct course, without any ‘intervening force or power to' stand as the cause of the misfortune,’ and the injury suffered was, therefore, its proximate effect.” And the principle thus laid down was recognized and approved in Phila., Wilm. & Balto. R. R. Co. vs. Constable, et al., 39 Md., 149, and Balto. & Ohio R. R. Co. vs. Shipley, 39 Md., 251, and is fully sustained by the general current of decisions both in this country and in England. Piggott vs. Eastern Counties Railway Co., 54 Eng. Com. Law, 229; Smith vs. London & S. W. R. R. Co., L. R., 5 C. P., 98; Perley vs. Eastern R. R. Co., 98 Mass., 414; Fent vs. Toledo, &c., R. R. Co., 59 Ill., 349.
Then, as to the last point, the alleged variance between the cause of action as set out in the declaration and the evidence offered at the trial to support it, we have but a word to say. The plaintiff charges that his property was destroyed by sparks of fire from a certain “steam shovel plough” or “steam engine” operated by the defendants, and the proof shows that the fire was caused by sparks from a steam engine used by the defendants in working a shovel plough. This does not seem to us to be a substantial variance between the allegation and the proof. Whatever strictness in this aspect may have been required in some of the earlier cases, it is quite well settled now that one is
Judgment affirmed.
delivered the following separate opinion:
I agree to the affirmance of this judgment, but must say a word as to the question of variance. The point raised by the defendants’ third prayer is, that the declaration counts on the injury as done by the stationary engine which operated the shovel plough, whereas the proof shows that the fire was caused by sparks emitted from the locomotive engine, used in hauling over a dump track the dump cars into which the dirt excavated by the plough was loaded. The proof, as I read it, clearly shows that the fire was caused by sparks from this locomotive, and it was so conceded at the trial as is manifest from the plaintiff’s second and third prayers. But I regard the language of the declaration as broad enough to cover damage caused by such éngine.
(Filed 13th June, 1888.)