Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Benson

Collard, Judge.

This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant in a justice’s court of Bosque county for sixty-nine dollars and ninety cents damages.

Plaintiff claimed that defendant negligently permitted gras ¡ and combustible material to accumulate on its right ^of way, which was ignited by sparks from its engine, and so burning his pasture grass and some posts. The justice- of the peace ren-" dered judgment for plaintiff, and the case was appealed to the district court (the county court having no civil. jurisdiction), where it was tried by the judge, who rendered judgment for the plaintiff for sixty-nine dollars and ninety cents and interest, from which this appeal is taken.

The judge filed his conclusions in the case, stating that the pasture was burned by sparks from defendant’s engine, and that the fire originated by reason of the negligence of defendant in permitting combustible material to remain on the right of way.

The appellant complains of the conclusions and the judgment because: First, the evidence does not show that defendant had any right of way; and second, the evidence did not show, that defendant negligently permitted grass or other combustible material to accumulate on its- right of way.

The only evidence we find in the record relating to the subject of these assignments of error, is that of the plaintiff. He says: The fire caught very near the cross ties on the road within a few feet of the road bed; it set the grass on fire near the cross ties; it caught fire between the cross ties on the road and the telegraph poles. I do not know how far from the road bed the defendant’s right of way extends. The fire caught ten or fifteen feet from the cross ties. It was agreed by the parties that plaintiff’s witnesses would prove that the fire caught from *409sparks emitted from the smoke stack of a locomotive drawing defendant’s passenger train on the eighteenth day of August, 1884, which set fire to and burned plaintiff’s grass and fence posts, and that the same locomotive in the same way set fire to Rutherford’s pasture near that of plaintiff on the same evening, and that plaintiff’s damage would be greater than the amount claimed. It was also agreed that defendant’s witnesses would testify that said engine was at that time provided with the best spark arrester yet known or discovered; that no spark arrester has yet been invented that will entirely arrest all sparks; but that the sparks escaping from the arrester on this particular locomotive were necessarily very minute and that the smoke stack and arrester were daily inspected by competent mechanics and found to be in good condition and repair. These facts were not controverted, nor were the facts proved by plaintiff that the fi^e in question was caused by the emission of sparks from the same locomotive. Also that the engineer on this engine was thoroughly competent.

When plaintiff established the fact by uncontradicted evidence that the fire was so caused, and that he was thereby injured, our Supreme Court have decided that in such case the onus is upon defendant to show by affirmative proof that there was no negligence on its part in causing the fire; in other words, that a presumption would arise in the absence óf evidence to the contrary that there was negligence on the part of the company. (International & Great Northern Railway Com-v. Timmerman, 61 Texas, 663.) This doctrine is fully supported by the cases cited in 2 Wood’s Railway Law, 1347, note 3. The evidence to defeat such prima facie case of negligence being peculiarly within the knowledge of defendant, the burden is upon it to produce'it. (Same authorities.)

Our Supreme Court having approved the doctrine laid down in the decisions of other States referred to in the note cited above, upon sound principle, we do not deem it necessary to enter into an elaborate discussion of the reasons of the law. This demand of the law as to burden of proof is, however, satisfied when the company shows by undisputed evidence that it was using at the time and upon the very engine in question, the best and most approved mechanical appliances known and in use to prevent the escape of fire from its engine and sparks from the smoke stack, and that the same were in good repair *410and condition, and were operated by a skillful engineer in a careful manner.

If then the plaintiff can recover after such proof it must be upon the ground that the defendant was negligent in other respects, as that notwithstanding the approved fire arrester it was-guilty of negligence in permitting the accumulation of combustible matter on its road or right of way as under the circumcumstances was dangerous, and would amount to negligence in the opinion of an unprejudiced jury, such as a man of ordinary prudence would not have committed in the management of his own affairs. While a railway company may absolve itself from liability on account of the presumed negligence arising from the mere fact that the fire caught from sparks emitted from its engine, by showing its engine and spark arrester were the best in use; still, if the fire caught on its own right of way in dry grass which it allowed to accumulate, it would be a question of fact for the jury to determine whether the failure to remove the inflammable matter was negligence. Such negligence might increase the danger to adjacent property even though the best machinery was adopted. (Kellogg v. Chicago & N. W. Ry., 26 Wis., 228, 229.)

The law will not imply negligence from this fact. The question should be left to the jury. (Kesee v. Chicago & N. W. Ry., 30 Iowa, 80, et seq; B. M. R. R. v. Westover, 4 Neb., 274.)

In this case the court below found that the company was negligent in permitting combustible matter to accumulate on its right of way. The fire caught near the track — about fifteen feet from it, in the grass and was communicated to plaintiff’s pasture and destroyed it. It was clear that the fire caught on defendant’s right of way. While the conclusion of the court below may not have been the same we would have arrived at from the evidence as disclosed in the record, there was evidence to sustain it, and we are unwilling to disturb his conclusion, it having been repeatedly decided that the Supreme Court will not interfere to grant a new trial when there was evidence to sustain a verdict unless there was manifest prejudice on the part of the jury. We are of opinion the judgment ought to be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Opinion adopted October 28, 1887.