131 A. 661 | Pa. | 1925
Plaintiff sued to recover damages for destruction of their planing mill by fire alleged to have been caused by sparks emitted from one of defendant's locomotives. The jury found for plaintiffs and motions for a new trial and for judgment non obstante veredicto were refused and judgment entered on the verdict, from which order defendant appealed. The fire is alleged to have come from sparks thrown out by defendant's engine 03783 which passed plaintiffs' property five to ten minutes before the flames were discovered. The fire was first noticed in the engine room and while workmen were securing water from a near-by cistern to extinguish that blaze, they saw the roof of the building on fire at two different places.
The mill was in operation at the time, and it was shown there was located in the engine room a four-cylinder internal combustion engine constructed to be operated by either gasoline or kerosene. Plaintiffs' theory of the fire was that sparks from defendant's locomotive 03783 were carried to the roof of the building and after burning through the roof the sparks found their way into the engine room and there started the fire which was subsequently discovered by plaintiffs' employees. The theory of defendant, on the contrary, is that the fire was started in the engine room by sparks from the engine's exhaust and from there was communicated to the roof of the building. In support of these two opposing theories a considerable amount of testimony was offered, and submitted to the jurors who adopted plaintiffs' version.
Error is assigned to various parts of the charge, one being to the refusal to affirm a point submitted by defendant requesting the court to charge that "The evidence *88
introduced by plaintiffs to show that other fires occurred on or near defendant's right-of-way shortly before and after the fire complained of by the plaintiffs, so far as such evidence is unconnected with the throwing of sparks by defendant's locomotive 03783, is incompetent to prove that the fire that occurred on plaintiffs' premises on April 11, 1923, was caused by defendant's locomotive 03783 or that such fire was negligently set, and such evidence should be disregarded by the jury." The trial judge refused to affirm the point, with the remark, "We cannot agree with that proposition as it is written." This point should have been affirmed because of plaintiffs' allegation that the fire was caused by a locomotive bearing the particular number named; in similar cases we have repeatedly held that evidence of the throwing out of sparks by other locomotives generally is inadmissible: Kalbach v. Phila. and Reading Ry.,
We take this occasion to caution counsel for plaintiff on the retrial of this case to confine the evidence to such as affects the specific engine alleged to be responsible for the fire. It appears the locomotive in question was the one in general use for passenger service on this branch road, and that it made five round trips daily between Chambersburg and Waynesboro. It was occasionally not in use, however, and at such times was replaced by *89
another engine. A local freight also made a daily round trip over the road and an occasional extra work train passed over it, each drawn by a different engine from that used by the passenger train. The witnesses produced by plaintiffs to testify to fires at other points along the road caused by sparks were not in all cases able to state that the engine here in question was the one which passed shortly before or at the time the fires referred to in the request for charge were discovered, or that 03783 was the engine which emitted sparks of unusual size. While it has been held sufficient to identify the engine as one which regularly operated a particular train (Shelley v. Phila. and Reading Ry.,
In that part of the charge included in the thirteenth assignment, we think the trial judge inadvertently fell *90 into error by the use of language which must have led the jury to believe the burden was on defendant to prove the spark-arrester was properly constructed and in proper order. The court charged that "The contention of the defendant is that the fire was caused by that engine in the engine room. That is their hope of escape. They tell you nothing about the condition of the engine. It is inferentially shown that there was a spark-arrester which it is the duty of every railroad engine to have on it. They do not show you anything about the operation of that spark-arrester; they do not show you anything about the construction; they do not even show you there was one there. It is admitted there was one there, so inferred from the evidence and so argued. If that is so and nothing else is shown, then the verdict would be for the plaintiffs for the amount, as we have said, for the amount they have lost."
The court here overlooked the fact that the burden of proof was on plaintiffs to show not only that the sparks from the locomotive in question caused the fire, but also there was either negligence in the construction or management of the engine: Henderson v. Railroad Co.,
The judgment is reversed and a new trial granted. *91