Linn v. Barker

Spear, J.,

In April, 1905, there were two saw mills on the east side of the Penobscot in the town of Milford owned by thé Bodwell Water Power Company, one of which was rented to George W. Barker & Son, the defendants. From underneath these mills a small narrow guage railway track led out and down the east bank of the river for several hundred feet. Its object was to remove waste and it was equipped with several cars for that purpose operated by hand. For *342300 or 400 feet at the south end of this railway ran a stone wall.which was from four to six feet high on the west side, next the river, and by the steepness of the bank and perhaps some filling, was about even with the surface on the other side. This place was called the dump and the practice for more than thirty years had been to dump waste beside the track along this wall and burn it.

Immediately east of this dump and extending nearly a mile up and down the river, were large lumber yards or piling grounds, where in April, 1905, millions of feet of dry lumber were stuck in piles, some of them nearly thirty feet high. Between the dump and the lumber was a board fence about 200 feet long and fifty feet east of-the dump.

Milford Village was located near these piling grounds, the main street running about 500 feet from the river. Shortly after three o’clock in the.afternoon of April 28, 1905, a small blaze was discovered under the west end of the pile of boards in the west tier of piles next the west track and about 150 feet northerly from the dump. Mr. Barker, one of the defendants, had been burning waste from both mills, and had a fire then in the dump which was started about one o’clock. The fire which was discovered in a board pile spread to adjoining piles, burned a vast quantity of lumber and destroyed nearly all the little village.

Thé plaintiffs’ residence was among those burned and they have brought this action to recover therefor. From the above statement of facts taken substantially from the plaintiifs’ brief they seek to establish two propositions, (1) that the fire in the board pile caught from the dump ; (2) that the defendants’ negligence was responsible.

The jury found a verdict for the defendants and the plaintiffs filed the usual motion to set it aside.

We should have but little difficulty in determining that the fire was communicated from the dump to the board pile from which spread the conflagration that consumed the village. But the second proposition, the affirmative of which the plaintiffs are required to establish, presents a more troublesome question. The plain tiffs, upon motion, are compelled to present, not only a strong preponderance of evidence of the defendants’ negligence, but must assume the *343negative of showing that there was no other reasonable inference from all the evidence upon which the jury could act. The burden in this case is a heavy one and we are unable to say that the plaintiffs have sustained it. The determination of this question depends upon all the circumstances in the case, natural and artificial, as they existed and transpired on the 28th day of April, 1905. In view of the whole situation, then, were the jury warranted, if they believed the testimony and saw fit to draw the inference, in finding the following facts in favor of the deféndants:

(1) Was the use of the dump, as it existed on the 28th day of April, an exercise of due care? It should be noted that all these matters are to be considered from the jury’s point of view.

The evidence shows that a dump with these two mills was considered a necessity. This particular dump, in substántially the same condition as it was April 28, had been used for consuming the waste from these mills for thirty years. During this long period no fire had escaped, and the relation of the board piles to the dump, all these years, had been practically the same as on the day of the fire. From this evidence the dump could not be considered per se a nuisance. We are able to discover nothing in the physical condition of the dump to render its use such an act of . negligence, as to require a reversal of the verdict upon this point.

(2) Was the fire sufficiently guarded? It appears that Mr. Barker, one of the defendants, watched the fire from the time it was set until it was discovered in the board pile, with the exception of a period of ten minutes when he was called away. The verdict finds the affirmative of this proposition and must stand.

(3) Were the defendants provided with sufficient men and fire apparatus in view of the duty devolving upon them to anticipate the possibility of fire? No question can be raised as to the adequacy of the number of men. The sufficiency of the hose becomes immaterial in this particular case as the evidence shows a complete want of pressure at the hydrant to which the hose were intended, in case of fire, to be attached. The want of pressure would have rendered any amount of hose useless. The defendants were not responsible for this failure.

*344(4) Were the weather conditions such, under all the circumstances that the exercise of due care forbid the use of the dump ? In this inquiry appear the two vital questions in this case. (1) In view of the drought was it negligence to set the fire; (2) In view of the velocity of the wind at one o’clock p. m., did due care permit it?

(1) With respect to the arid conditions, the testimony shows that seven days before the fire there was a rain fall from eleven o’clock in the morning which continued into the night, and that, previous to this, during the month, there had been snow falls and showers. These facts taken in connection with the time of year, do not disclose such paramount evidence of drought as to warrant a disturbance of the verdict.

(2) The velocity of the wind at one o’clock, at and in the near vicinity of the dump, is the crucial test of due care or negligence in setting the fire. None of the other conditions were materially different from those upon a thousand days when this dump had been used. The only evidence upon this point is the record of the observation automatically registered at the weather bureau at Orono, five miles away, upon the top of a two story building. By this record the wind was blowing on the top of this building at the rate of 13 miles per hour. Abstractly we have but little idea of the breeze this velocity produces. But if we put it in the concrete form of the wind pressure, produced by driving a team or automobile at the speed of thirteen miles per hour, we can readily recall that it is but a gentle breeze. But the evidence is far from proving that the velocity of the wind at the dump was the same as that where the observation was taken. In fact the natural inference is that in a place, situated as these lumber yards and the dump were, the breeze would be impeded and the force of it much less than in an unobstructed place well up in the air. The testimony of the witnesses as to the velocity of the wind between three and four o’clock, after the fire had gotten under some headway, and may have created a draft of its own, was entitled to but little consideration as bearing upon the condition of the wind at one o’clock, *345when the alleged negligent act of the defendants was performed. The court cannot say that the verdict upon this point is so clearly wrong as to require reversal.

We have examined this case with great care. What we deem to be the salient points we have briefly alluded to and find no profitable end to be subserved in a further analysis. Under our system of jurisprudence the verdicts of juries are. entitled to their legal weight. Due regard for this rule entitles the present verdict to stand.

Motion overruled.