Brennan Lumber Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.

79 N.W. 1032, 77 Minn. 360, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 713
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 2, 1899
DocketNos. 11,609—(57)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 N.W. 1032 (Brennan Lumber Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brennan Lumber Co. v. Great Northern Railway Co., 79 N.W. 1032, 77 Minn. 360, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 713 (Mich. 1899).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This action was brought by the Brennan Lumber Company, plaintiff, about August 15, 1896, to recover of the defendant the sum of $130,000 damages which it alleges it sustained on account of a fire running over plaintiff’s land, and thereby burning and injuring pine timber and trees on said land,, and destroying plaintiff’s lumber camp thereon situate. It is also alleged that the fire originated September 17, 1891, on the line of defendant’s railroad, by its train setting fire to dry grass, brush, and other inflammable material allowed by defendant to accumulate upon its right of way, and that the fire extended over intervening lands to the lands of the plaintiff, where it damaged said timber and trees. The different tracts of land are specifically designated in the complaint, and are within a territory about twelvé miles north and south and about nine miles east and west, and all northerly and northwesterly of the Great Northern Railway. The allegations of the complaint were denied by the answer. When the testimony was closed, the defendant moved for a verdict to be directed in its favor upon certain grounds stated in the motion. This motion was denied. The jury then returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $67,554.46. Upon a settled case the defendant moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and, if that was not granted, then that it be granted a new trial. Motion denied, and it appeals to this court from said order. *

The evidence is quite voluminous, nearly all upon two points: (1) As to the origin of the fire that caused the damage, and (2) as to the amount of damages.

[362]*362From the view which we take of the case, we do not deem it necessary to discuss and pass upon the question of damages, as the pivotal question is that upon the evidence, — did it warrant the jury in finding a verdict in favor of the plaintiff? In order to do this, it must reasonably have tended to show that the fire which caused the damage for which plaintiff sues originated through the negligence of the defendant.

The timber and trees destroyed were pine, and that is the character of the trees in the surrounding territory. A 'better understanding of the geography of that region or territory can be had by taking the village of Hinckley as a basis therefor. The village is situate upon section 24, township 41, range 21, in the county of Kanabec. The defendant railroad runs in a southwesterly direction from Hinckley through this county, and in said village it is intersected by the St. Paul & Duluth Railroad, running north and south. Hinckley is situate on one of the extreme easterly sections of the governmental townships, nearly equidistant between the north and south lines thereof. About one-third of the land upon which this timber and the trees in controversy stood is in this governmental township, and in the northerly and northwesterly part thereof, and the nearest line of this main body of the land is between four and five miles from where it is claimed the fire started. The balance of the lands are in the following townships, viz.: Township 41, range 22, adjoining township 41, range 21, on the west, and adjoining the latter on the north is township 42, range 21, and west of this is township 42, range 22, and on the east township 42, range 20. Only about 500 acres of this land is in this last-described township, and is situate about three or four miles northeast of Hinckley. The most southeasterly land in township 41, range 21, is a separate 40-acre tract in section 20, about one and a half miles from the main body of land, and about four miles west of Hinckley, and nearly three miles northeasterly of the point where the plaintiff claims that the fire started which caused the damage. Township 41, range 22, directly west of township 41, range 21, contains only about 200 acres of .this land, which is in section 2, and is about six or seven miles northwest from the defendant’s road where the fire is claimed to have originated. The tract of this land near[363]*363est to Hinckley is about three miles northwest therefrom in section 15, township 41, range 21. This consists of only 120 acres, distant from the main body about two miles.

In order to enable the plaintiff to recover in this action, it became necessary for it to trace the fire from the point where it alleges it started to its land where the damages occurred. To this end the plaintiff called as a witness Neis Mortinson, who lived in Hinckley in September, 1891, and was working for defendant under a section foreman by the name of Gorman. He testified as follows:

"I was working about four milés west qf Hinckley. I saw fire come up there that day. As the freight came along, and went east, smoke came up right after it went. This was between bridges 83 and 84. There is a cut from 83 up. The train was going east. It is close to bridge 83, and crossing close, to that bridge, nearer 83 than 84. The freight came along that afternoon. We saw smoke coming out. We went down on a hand car, and tried to stop that fire. There was a fire in a little crossing, I should 'judge about half a mile, or something like that, east of bridge 83; and the wind was pretty hard that day, and we could not stop it; it ran away; got outside the fence. I saw it immediately after the train passed. Saw no fire along -the track anywheres before. I was working on the section all day, and was about a mile and a half from the point where the fire started; The track was spread. Don’t remember exactly the other men who were there. One fellow’s name is New-burgh; I remember that; and the other, I think, his name is Gorman, and his son. We all went down together on the hand car. * * * After the fire got away, we could not do anything. Mr. Gorman put me on to watch the track and the bridges. [Witness refers to map.] That was the same crossing. At this time there was no fire on the south side of the track on that section. I had been at work on tliB section two days before this. I went on the bridge to watch there that night. I saw no fire, only the same fire that got out, except on the next section there was a fire on the south of the section. I observed this particular fire during the night, burning. It burned the north side. The wind was from the south, drove the fire north. I was on the section the next day, and observed the fire burning. It wTas burning north; and the next night I observed it burning in the same direction. I don’t know if that fire reached Hinckley or not; I can’t tell. I can’t exactly say how long I observed the fire going in a northeasterly direction. I remember seeing this fire for quite a few days after. It was going north, as far as I know, after it got out. The fire spread out, so I can’t just exactly tell. After it got in there, it goes on both sides, — kind of spread out. In the two days I was .working there before I saw this [364]*364fire start up I see no fire on the south side on that section. The section is between six and seven miles, and runs west about half a mile or three-quarters from the point where this fire started.”
On cross-examination he testified as follows: “There is a creek down to Pokegama. There is a creek goes right through 83, — a small creek; and there is one up to Pokegama west of it. The place where the fire started was close to the creek on that section. East of the creek- — I am clear that it started east of the creek, on Gorman’s section — there is another creek we used to call ‘Mission Creek.’ That is east of 83. Don’t remember how far it is. Cannot exactly tell; it is a good while ago. The creek there on Gorman’s section, called ‘East Pokegama Creek,’ that must be the creek.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 N.W. 1032, 77 Minn. 360, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brennan-lumber-co-v-great-northern-railway-co-minn-1899.