136 F. 374 | 8th Cir. | 1905
About the middle of the afternoon on March 18, 1902, a fire burned the buildings and stock of goods of the defendant in error, Frank P. Lucas. The buildings stood along the north line of the right of way of the Union Pacific Railroad Company through the town of Wa Keeney, a village of about 700 inhabitants. They extended about 170 feet, and at the west end of them was a stable, with an open window on the south side of it, beneath which was a pile of manure and straw which Lucas had thrown out upon the right of way of the railroad company. He sued the company for negligence in setting the fire, which he alleged consisted in negligently operating a defective engine which drew 18 freight cars through the village at the rate of 40 miles per hour, and in carelessly permitting grass and other combustible material to remain upon its right of way. The railroad company
There was an abundance of evidence that the fire was set by a spark which flew from the engine, that the engine set several fires on the day the property of the plaintiff was burned, and that an engine properly constructed and in good repair would not have thrown the sparks and set the fires which this engine did. The case was tried, and the court charged the jury on the theory that it was contributory negligence for the plaintiff to throw the straw and manure upon the right of way of the railroad company, and that, if his property would not have been burned had not this manure and straw been upon the right of way, he could not recover. The crucial issue of fact in the case became whether the fire was set in the pile of manure or in the dry grass and weeds some distance southwest of the stable on the right of way. Counsel for the defendant earnestly and persuasively contend that the court below erred because it did not grant their request to instruct the jury to return a verdict in favor of their client, and because after verdict it did not grant their motion to enter judgment for the defendant notwithstanding the verdict. But the evidence upon the question of fact which conditioned these requests is too conflicting and evenly balanced to warrant its withdrawal from the jury. There is evidence that all the dead grass and weeds upon the right of way had been burned off a few days before this accident, and there is evidence that there were bunches of weeds and grass upon the right of way upon the day of the fire. Several witnesses testify that the fire first caught in the pile of manure and straw by the side of the stable, and several testify as positively that it first caught in the dead grass and weeds upon the right of way southwest of the manure pile. There is substantial evidence upon each side of this issue, so that the court below could not have properly withdrawn the case from the jury on the ground that the evidence conclusively ■ established the fact that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed to the injury.
Another argument of counsel here is that because the plaintiff at the close of the trial withdrew its charge of negligence on account of the condition of the right of way and the court instructed the jury that there could be no recovery against the defendant for negligence in permitting combustible material thereon, there remained no evidence in the case that there was any combustible material upon the right of way, and hence there was no foundation for the finding of the jury that the fire was set elsewhere than in the pile of manure and straw. The fallacy in this argument is that the withdrawal of the claim for a recovery on account of negligence
The court charged the jury that, although they might find that the defendant was guilty of some act of negligence alleged in the petition of plaintiff, and although they might find that defendant was guilty of some of the acts of negligence alleged in the petition of the plaintiff, yet if they believed from all the evidence that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in placing the pile of manure upon the defendant’s right of way, and that the plaintiff’s loss would not have occurred had it not been for such pile of manure, then they should find that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in the case, and that he could not recover. This charge is criticised because the court used the words “some act of negligence” and “some of the acts of negligence” alleged in the petition, when it is insisted it should have declared that, although the defendant was guilty of all the acts of negligence alleged in the petition, yet the plaintiff could not recover if he was guilty of the contributory negligence. The criticism is too refined and technical. The plain‘meaning of the court in this instruction was that there could be no recovery if the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, whatever might have been the negligence of the defendant, and the jury could not, in our opinion, have understood the instruction in any other sense.
Exception was taken to the refusal of the court to give instructions requested by counsel for the defendant upon the question of contributory negligence. But the rule of law embodied in those instructions was carefully given by the court to the jury, and there was no error in its refusal to repeat them in the words of counsel’s requests.
The court refused to instruct the jury that the defendant was under no obligation to remove any manure., hay, or other inflammable material which the plaintiff might liave thrown out of his stable upon its right of way. But there was no error in the refusal to give this request, because the plaintiff withdrew his charge of negligence in the care of the right of way, and thus left this instruction without application to the case.
Upon the cross-examination of the plaintiff, after he had testified to the value of his buildings and of his stock of goods, the court refused to permit counsel for the defendant to prove by him the amount of insurance he carried upon his property, on the ground
It is assigned as error that the plaintiff was permitted to testify to the value of his stock of goods in a lump sum. But when this ruling was made evidence had been introduced that he was the active manager of the business which was conducted with these goods; that he knew their value; that they had been burned; that his last inventory, which had been carefully made, was destroyed by the same fire; and that he could not give the items of which the stock consisted in detail. In this state of the case there was no error in permitting him to state in a single amount his estimate of the value of the goods destroyed.
Another objection to his testimony is that he was permitted to state the value of the land and the buildings before the latter were burned and the value of the land after the buildings were destroyed, for the purpose of enabling the jury to estimate the damages which resulted from their destruction, although he was not shown to have been an expert in the values of real estate. The rule, however, which requires those who testify to the value of real estate to qualify themselves by proof of knowledge of market value derived from sales or purchases, does not apply to the owner of lands and buildings who has purchased and used them himself. His purchase, his ownership, and his use qualify him to give an estimate of their value. The plaintiff had testified that he had participated in the purchase of this property, that he had been engaged in business upon it for manj'- years, that he resided in the village in which it was situated, that there were few sales of real estate in that town, and that he knew the value of the property. Under these circumstances he was qualified to testify to the jury upon this question.
There was no error in the trial of this case, and the judgment below is affirmed.