49 So. 766 | Ala. | 1909
The appellee sued appellant to recover damages for setting fire to his premises, and thereby burning a large quantity of trees, wood, timber, and fencing. The complaint contained two counts. The wrong or negligence relied on in the first count is that the defendant negligently allowed fire to escape from
It was contended by the plaintiff that the fire was ignited by sparks emitted from a certain freight engine of the defendant, which passed the premises burned at about 12 o’clock on June 19, 1904; while it was contended by the defendant that, if the premises were burned, it was some time prior to 1904, more than a year prior to the bringing of this suit, and that the action was therefore barred by the statute of limitations, and, further, that damages had been recovered for the alleged injury in prior actions brought by the plaintiff against this defendant. The evidence of the plaintiff was, in substance, that on the day above specified the weather was dry;, that the Postal Telegraph Company and the Southern Railway Company had cut down and left dry leaves and brush upon the right of way of the defendant company; that the plaintiff was at his dwelling, which was about a mile from the premises burned; that there was no sign of fire prior to' the passing of the train of the defendant at about 12 o’clock, and that prior to said time no train had passed within three or four hours; that he saw the engine going south at about 12 o’clock;
One of the main and serious questions in this case is whether or not the evidence as shown by this record is sufficient to submit the question to the jury or to support a verdict against the defendant upon its liability in causing this fire, and we confess that it is one not free from doubt. The authorities are far from being harmonious as to the sufficiency of evidence to support an action like this. Probably the weight and number of authorities support the following propositions of law,, which are to control in this case. The right of a railroad company to run on its road engines and trains propelled by steam, an agent generated by fire, does not make the company liable for damages, the result of fires communicated by its engines, in the absence of negligence. The sole right of action in such cases is based upon negligence, and, if it appears that there has been
Does proof of the simple fact that fire escaped from a locomotive, and, kindling, destroyed the property of another, standing alone, malte out a prima facie case of negligence against the operator? This is a question as to which the authorities are in conflict, a great number holding that this alone raises the presumption of negligence, and a great number holding the contrary, but •our court is one among those which hold that it makes out a prima facie case. It has been held by the courts which decided that such evidence makes out a. prima facie case of negligence, that it is a matter in which the truth lies peculiarly within the knowledge of those operating the locomotive, and that it is much easier for those operating it to show that they used due care and were guilty of no, negligence than it is for the party whose property was destroyed to show that it was the
The presence of dry grass or stubble or other debris highly combustible upon the right of way of a railroad
There was no error in sustaining the objections to questions propounded to plaintiff on cross examination, or in excluding the evidence of answers which pertained to his testimony in previous actions by him against the defendant company. These were separate and distinct actions from the one on trial, and, it not appearing that the snbject-matter was the same, the defendant could not impeach or discredit the evidence of the plain
There was likewise no error in allowing the witness Robertson to answer as to who the appraisers were of whom he had spoken in answer to a cross-interrogatory propounded to him by the defendant’s counsel. This was brought out by the defendant on cross examination, and the plaintiff had a right to know who the men'were to whom reference was made, and the relation, if any, they bore to the defendant. The plaintiff during his cross-examination of the witness Robertson propounded to him the following questions: “Mr. Robertson, about the time of the fire and at the time you made this estimate of this damage, before you made the estimate of the damage, did you have instructions from the stock claim agent as to the manner in which you should estimate the damage?” “Did you have any instructions from him?” “What were these instructions?” The defendant objected to each of these questions as they were propounded, on the ground that they called for irrelevant, immaterial, and illegal testimony, and on the further ground that they were not in rebuttal. We are unable to see any objection to these questions upon the grounds assigned.
We find in the record no reversible error, and the judgment of the lower court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.