Bartee Tie Co. v. Jackson

117 N.E. 1007, 281 Ill. 452
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1917
DocketNo. 11740
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 117 N.E. 1007 (Bartee Tie Co. v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartee Tie Co. v. Jackson, 117 N.E. 1007, 281 Ill. 452 (Ill. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant, the Bartee Tie Company, brought an action against appellee, William J. Jackson, receiver of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company, in the circuit court of Massac county, to recover damages for the loss of certain railroad cross-ties stored on land leased from said receiver by the appellant. The declaration contained three counts. To the first and third counts appellee filed a plea of the general issue, with a stipulation that all defenses available to him might be proved under that issue. The trial court sustained appellee’s demurrer to the second count, and appellant electing to stand by said count, judgment was entered against it on that count.. At the conclusion of all the evidence offered on the trial of the case on the first and third counts, appellee moved the court to direct a verdict for appellee on those two counts. This motion was allowed and judgment was entered against appellant. The Appellate Court for the Fourth District affirmed this judgment on appeal and granted a certificate of importance. The appeal to this court followed.

The cross-ties were stored by appellant at Joppa, Illinois, on a parcel of land belonging to said railroad company. Joppa is situated in Massac county, on the Ohio river, about twenty miles below and across the river from Paducah, Kentucky, and is the southern terminus of appellee’s branch railroad known as the Joppa branch, connecting with its main line about eighteen miles northwest of Joppa, at Joppa Junction. Along the Cumberland and Tennessee rivers the evidence shows a great deal of timber is owned and controlled by various tie companies, whose business is to furnish cross-ties to railroad companies in this country; that at certain seasons of the year this timber is cut up into ties, loaded on barges and towed by steamers owned by towing companies and hired by said tie companies down these two rivers into the Ohio river and to convenient points on said river where railroad connections exist. The evidence tends to show that the ties are stored at some place for future shipment or directly forwarded by rail to some further destination, as the tie companies owning said ties may decide. The evidence further tends to show that appellee’s railroad company was a competitor for this traffic, and that its Joppa branch was built partially, if not wholly, with a view to handling the traffic in these ties, and that said railroad company provided at Joppa special facilities not only for transporting these ties to other points in the country, but also for storage thereof by such of said tie companies as might desire to hold their ties for future delivery; that said railroad company has constructed and maintains at Joppa one or more incline tracks, which extend diagonally down the river bank from the main tracks of its Joppa branch to the water’s edge; that if the tie companies desire to ship their ties immediately to another destination, they are unloaded from the barges by the tie companies’ employees onto the cars of appellee’s company and these cars are taken to such points as specified by the shippers. At this point appellee’s company owns several hundred acres of land,—the declaration says about 300, but counsel for appellant now insist there is evidence showing about 600 acres. On this land there are several switch or spur-tracks used for hauling in and unloading property for the purpose of storing it upon said land until the owners desire to sell and ship. In 1914 appellant entered into a lease for about four acres of this land with appellee’s company from May 1, 1914, to May 5, 1915, unless sooner terminated. Appellant apparently had occupied this land for some time under a former lease. A spur-track was built from the main tracks to Joppa onto this four acres, and several other spur-tracks were also constructed and maintained for" other portions of said land owned by appellee’s company. The ties in dispute, destroyed by fire on April 6, 1915, were shipped down the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers by appellant, and it made arrangements with towing companies on said rivers for carrying these ties to - Joppa, although it appears that some barges loaded with these ties were towed from Paducah, on the Ohio river, to Joppa by boats owned by appellee’s company. This work by appellee’s company in towing from Paducah to Joppa was under a contract between the towing companies and appellee’s company, and, so far as said towing was concerned, appellant made all the arrangements with said towing companies. When these barges with ties reached Joppa the barges were moored at the foot of appellee’s inclined railroad. Here they were delivered by the towing companies to appellant, and the ties were counted and all towing charges for the transportation to Joppa paid to the towing companies. These ties were then transferred from said barges by the employees of appellant and loaded onto the cars of appellee’s company without any expense to the latter company. When they were so loaded the cars were switched, without charges to appellant, by appellee’s company to spur-traclc No. 3, extending onto the four acres in question. When these cars, with the ties loaded thereon, reached the desired location on said spur-traclc they were, turned over to appellant and the ties unloaded from the cars by employees of appellant and piled up in said yard, there to remain in the possession and control of appellant until it was ready to make disposition of them. Some of these ties were brought to Joppa and stored in said yard in the manner indicated during the latter part of 1913 and the remainder during 1914, no ties of appellant being either stored on or shipped from said parcel of ground leased by appellant after January 1, 1915. On April 6, 1915, appellant had about 156,000 of said cross-ties stored on said leased four acres. Early in the afternoon of that day one of appellee’s locomotives backed in on a spur-track closely adjacent to the spur-traclc extending onto appellant’s leased four acres. At that time considerable rubbish had been permitted to accumulate on the leased ground where said ties were stored, and considerable dry grass was also growing on and east of said leased premises, between said premises and spur-track No. 4. A strong wind was blowing on that day. Within a short time after appellee’s engine had backed in on spur-track No. 4 to get two cars of lumber and had pulled them out onto the main track of the Joppa branch the dry grass between spur-tracks Nos. 4 and 3, extending onto said leased ground, ignited, possibly or probably from a spark from said locomotive, and rapidly spread to the tie yard, was communicated to the grass and rubbish thereon and to the ties of appellant, and destroyed about 56,000 of said ties before the fire could be extinguished.

At the time of this fire appellant was occupying and using the premises on which said ties were stored under a written lease providing, among other things, for the leasing of said land on the payment of $20 per annum and certain other considerations, and that in consideration of the privilege given in said lease for the storage of cross-ties, etc., the appellant (.lessee) “hereby releases the lessors, their successors and assigns, from all liability, either at law or in equity, for or on account of any cause of action that may arise^by reason of any damage by fire to the lessee caused by the operation of the railroad of the lessors on, near or by the premises aforesaid, whether said damage occurs on the premises hereby leased or on premises adjacent thereto.” Under this provision of the lease, apparently relying largely on the reasoning of this court under a somewhat similar lease in Checkley v.

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Bluebook (online)
117 N.E. 1007, 281 Ill. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartee-tie-co-v-jackson-ill-1917.