3 Kan. App. 260 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought before a justice of the peace in Cherokee county, to recover damages for the loss of certain property claimed to have been destroyed by a fire occasioned by the negligence of defendant railway company. A judgment was rendered in justice’s court against the company, and it appealed to the district court of said Cherokee county. The case was tried in the district court upon the original bill of particulars, with a jury, and a verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Brown, against said railway company. The company excepted, and brings the case here for review.
The first error complained of is in overruling the motion to require the plaintiff to make his bill of particulars more definite and certain. The motion asked that the plaintiff be required to set out the number of the train which set out the fire, the number of the engine, which way it was running, who was the owner of the land upon which the damage -was done, the condition of the grain destroyed, and the number of acres
The company also contends that the verdict and special findings of the jury are not sustained by and are contrary to the evidence. Lashly and Titus testified that they were plowing in a field on the south side of the railroad track, some distance from the pasture where the fire was afterward discovered ; that they saw a train pass, and, 5 or 10 minutes afterward, saw the fire burning in the pasture of the plaintiff, Brown, north of the railroad track. Lashly testified that he had run an engine, and that from the way the engine sounded, as it was. passing Brown’s place, the engineer was shutting off steam and then throwing it on again, backward and forth, and that that has the effect to throw out cinders, because when the exhaust comes it gives it more draft. This is circumstantial evidence, tending to show £hat the engine set out the fire, and that the immediate cause was the management of the engine by the engineer. The jury evidently found in favor of this theory, and the trial court approved their finding. Were we to 'weigh all the evidence we might possibly find differently; but it
One of the assignments of error urged by counsel for the'company in their brief is that the court erred in its instruction to the jury, and in refusing to submit certain interrogatories to them. It nowhere appears in the record that any objection was taken to any of the instructions given, or to the failure of the court to instruct the jury upon any point, or to the refusal of the court to submit special interrogatories to the jury. Failing to object to -the action of the court, the company must be considered as having waived its right to object thereto.
We' now come to a more serious question in this case. During the trial the plaintiff below was permitted to introduce testimony concerning statements made by a man by.the name of Baker concerning an offer to settle Brown’s claim for damages for $115. Louder and Brown testified that Baker had settled claims for losses with other persons which were occasioned by the same fire, and that he offered Brown $115 to settle his claim. There is no testimony tending to show that Baker was the agent of the company other than that he stated to Louder, and also to Brown, that he was a claim agent, and the fact that he went to others beside Brown to settle losses. There is no testimony tending to show that the company ratified the acts of, or settlements made by, Baker, or paid the other losses. Certainly neither the declarations nor acts of a person can be given in evidence to prove that he is the agent of another. (Leu v. Mayer, 52 Kan. 419.)
One of the material issues in this case was as to whether the fire was set out by the company in the
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.