126 S.W. 692 | Tex. App. | 1910
The appeal is from a judgment in favor of appellees, plaintiffs below, against appellant for the sum of $1425, as the damages suffered by the former as the result, as alleged, of the destruction by fire negligently set by the latter, of a stock of general merchandise and of a building in which same were situated.
The only question made by the assignments is one as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and judgment.
Appellees were merchants and owned a wooden building ten or twelve years old, having a gable-shaped roof covered with shingles, and fronting southeast towards appellant's line of railway in the town of Pritchett. The building was on the slant of a hill, and the front part of it was elevated to a height of about three feet above the ground. It was within sixty-five or seventy feet of the center of the track of appellant's line of railway. The postoffice was kept in the building, and appellees had in it a stock of general merchandise. Between 12 and 1 o'clock on Sunday night, May 31, 1908, the roof of the building near the comb thereof and near cleats or teeboards left thereon in shingling it, was discovered to be burning, and before the fire could be controlled it destroyed the building, its contents, and several other buildings near to it. From a point south on its line of railway to a point north thereon about opposite said building, appellant's line of railway was "up grade." About one-half or three-quarters of an hour before the building was discovered to be on fire, one of appellant's trains going north passed along the track in front of said building. The locomotive pulling the train was moving slowly and exhausting steam. At the time when the building was discovered to be afire, the wind was blowing gently from the southeast, that is, from across the railroad track and towards said building. The building had a front and a back door. The front door was closed when citizens of the town, in response to an alarm given, reached the scene of the fire. Whether the back door was then open or closed was not shown by the testimony. There were two keys to the doors of the building. The postmaster, L. L. Johnson, carried one of them. The other at times was carried by one or the other of the appellees, and at other times by their clerk, Alex Maberry, or by appellee McIntosh's son, Delbert. Appellee McIntosh during several days before the fire occurred had been sick and had not been in or about the building. Appellee Carlisle and his clerk, Maberry, had not been in it since the Saturday night before it burned on Sunday night. Delbert McIntosh was in the building at an hour not shown by the testimony on the Sunday afternoon before the fire occurred, and so far as the testimony shows to the contrary he was the person last in it before it was destroyed. Carlisle testified that there was a stove in the storeroom, but that there was not on the Saturday night before the fire, and had not been for some time previous thereto, any fire in it. Delbert Mcintosh did not state whether there was any fire in the stove when he was in the building on said Sunday afternoon or not. Johnson, the postmaster, did not testify on the trial, and it was not shown when he was last in the building. It was shown that shotgun cartridges formed a part of the stock of goods. Appellant's witness West testified *572 that at the time the fire occurred he lived in a house situated about seventy-five yards from the building in question and nearly opposite to and across the railroad from it; that he was aroused from sleep on the night the fire occurred by a noise he at the time thought was made by a "horse kicking a stable," but which he afterwards concluded was made by the explosion of shells; that he looked from a window in the room where he was sleeping, and saw what he at the time supposed to be cinders left by a locomotive burning on the railroad track, but which he soon afterwards discovered to be fire burning "back up under plaintiffs' store." The witness testified that he at once gave an alarm and went to the burning building, and thought he was the first person to get to the fire. He further testified that when he first saw the fire under the house there was no fire on the roof of the building. West's testimony was corroborated by that of his daughter, who also testified that she saw fire up under the building.
There was no evidence showing that locomotive engines in generating steam emitted sparks of fire, nor, if they did, that sparks emitted by them were ever carried by the wind a distance of sixty. five or seventy feet. Therefore, unless it should be said that it was a matter of such common knowledge as to dispense with proof thereof, that such engines did emit such sparks and that same were sometimes carried such a distance, appellant's contention that the evidence was not sufficient to support the verdict and judgment must be sustained. In Sheldon v. Hudson River R. R. Co.,
The conclusion reached by us is not in conflict with Gulf, C. S. F. Ry. Co. v. Blakeney-Stevens-Jackson Co.,
Because the evidence was insufficient to support it, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.