This is an action for damages on account of the loss of a quantity of wool destroyed by fire in a freight station of a railroad admitted to have been under the control and management of the defendants as common carriers. The plaintiffs sought to recover upon two counts in their declaration: in the first of which it was alleged that the defendants received the wool at Middlebury, Vermont, as common carriers, with directions to convey the same to Boston, and that while in their care as such carriers the same was destroyed by fire; the second set forth that the defendants received the wool as warehousemen, and by reason of want of ordinary care upon their part the same was while in their custody destroyed by fire.
At the trial the cause was submitted to the jury upon general instructions as to the liabilities of common carriers and ware-housemen, which were not objected- to ; and the only questions presented for our consideration are, whether there was any evidence of any direction to the defendants to ship the wool, under the count by which it was sought to charge them as common carriers, and whether there was any evidence of negligence under the count by which it was sought to charge the defendants with liability as warehousemen; and upon both counts we are of opinion that there was evidence sufficient to entitle the plaintiffs to go to the jury.
The bill of exceptions shows that in order to prove that the defendants received the goods as common earners, the plaintiffs offered evidence that the wool was delivered at the station of the defendants at Middlebury by their agent to the defendants’ agent, packed in bags, all which were marked in stencil in large letters with the firm name of the plaintiffs and their place of business, “ Nichols, Parker & Dupee, Boston,” and that they were further marked with an initial indicating who had purchased the same for them; that the weights and numbers *334were upon all the sacks ; that previous shipments had been made by the same agent at the same place to his principals during the same season; and that the agent who delivered the wool piled it in one part of the building, pointed it out to defendants’ agent, and said, “ That pile of wool is for Boston.” It is true, as the defendants claim, that mere authority to ship to Boston is not sufficient, and there must be either by acts or words a direction so to do. Watts v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 106 Mass. 466. Such was the instruction given, and this evidence was sufficient to require the case to be submitted to the jury upon this point.
Upon the second count, there was evidence that the freight-house was filled with wool in sacks ; that paper stock in a ragged state was scattered loosely upon the floor ; that some kind of oil or kerosene was stored there, a portion of which had leaked out upon the floor ,, that much of the glass was broken out of the windows ; that a locomotive engine and train passed over the track, which was twenty-five or thirty feet from those windows, about fifteen minutes before the fire was discovered, and that the fire caught at the end nearest the broken windows, where the most inflammable materials were. We think this furnished evidence for the jury that the fire was caused by the sparks from the locomotive engine which had just passed; and further, that there was evidence for the jury of negligence on the part of the defendants in permitting the windows of the building to remain broken in the immediate vicinity of passing engines, while the contents of the building next the windows were of so inflammable a character.
Exceptions overruled.