Ranck v. Robeson Township

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

Appellee sued to recover a loss by fire alleged to have been caused by the negligent operation of a steam road-roller. The verdict determined that the steam roller was negligently operated.

The single complaint is that the court declined to direct a verdict for defendant, or subsequently to enter judgment non obstante veredicto.

The following are the material facts. Between one and two o’clock in the afternoon of April 20, 1916, a fire of wood and coal was made in a steam roller, which, emitting dense clouds of black smoke, then proceeded on a public highway about half a mile to a point in front of the premises of appellee. The roller was there backed to the side of the highway to hook on to a road scraper belonging to appellant then standing on appellee’s land off the highway in an angle formed on one side by appellant’s property line and on the other by the side of a shed described in the evidence as a wagon shed, garage and corncrib. This shed projected eastward and abutted on the highway. The roller was on the north side of-the shed and about eight feet away; “it was there awhile”; and as one witness said, it stood “kind of slanting toward the shed.” After being attached to the road scraper, the roller, while emitting smoke, drew the scraper out of the angle on an ascending grade on to the highway and around the shed on the east and partly around it on the south side, continuing on an ascending grade on a highway leading westward. Within a short time, described by appellee as “about fifteen minutes,” after so passing *293partly around the shed, “the roof was all afire and coming out of the side of the shed.” The roller had no spark arrester, or other guard against the emission of sparks or fire. The wind was from the east, blowing from the roller to the shed, and it was a “pretty windy day.”

There was evidence that appellee had burnt some brush aborit 200 feet to the north of the shed in the morning but the fire in question did not come from that source.

Under the authorities, on such evidence, the learned court could not direct a verdict; apparently the only explanation of the origin of the fire was the operation of this steam roller around the shed. No complaint is made of the charge of the court.

In Kriebel v. Worcester Township, 253 Pa. 452, the Supreme Court said: “The evidence establishes as a fact that steam rollers are not usually provided with spark arresters and it is not denied that such engines emit sparks though not to such an extent as railroad locomotives and the latter are ordinarily supplied with such safety contrivances. Although the absence of a spark arrester is not in itself evidence of negligence, it may be a factor in determining whether or not negligence qg the part of the owner of the engine existed under given circumstances. The township supervisors, as well as their agents, were bound to know and guard against ordinary dangers incident to the use of a machine of this nature......”

See also Mosteller v. Somerset Township, 67 Pa. Superior Ct. 403.

We have carefully considered the authorities cited by the learned counsel for appellant, but are unable to sustain the assignments of error. The judgment is affirmed.