Bush v. Taylor

207 S.W. 226, 136 Ark. 554, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 2, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 226 (Bush v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Taylor, 207 S.W. 226, 136 Ark. 554, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 374 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This is an action against appellants by the appellee. In December, 1915, B. F. Bush, as receiver of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, was operating trains over the railroad owned by the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company, “commonly called the Cotton Belt.” Appellee alleged that in operating such trains the agents and servants of appellant, Bush, communicated fire from one of the locomotives to appellee’s saw mill, shingle mill and planing mill, adjoining the railroad, and thereby totally destroyed appellee’s mill plant together with a large quantity of lumber, shingles and saw logs to his damage in the sum of $9,446, for which he prayed judgment.

The appellant, the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company, in its answer admitted the operation of trains over its line of road by Bush as receiver of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, but denied that the property of the appellee was destroyed by fire as alleged in the complaint. The appellant, B. F. Bush, likewise admitted that he, as receiver of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, was operating freight trains over the track of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company, but denied specifically the other allegations of the complaint. There was a jury trial and judgment rendered in favor of the appellee, from which is this appeal.

Over the objection of appellant, J. R. Hammonds testified that he was the assistant superintendent of the Cotton Belt Railroad; that he- kept records in his office showing the passage of trains through the different stations along the road. He had the record showing- passage of trains through Rector on December 1, 1915. He did not keep records himself. They were kept by the train dispatcher. They are the records that were taken out of the file of his office, where is filed a daily record of the movements of all trains. These records show that Cotton Belt engine No. 253 arrived there on December 1,1915, at 6:15 p. m. and Missouri Pacific No. 32 arrived at 7:20 and departed at 7:26 p. m. These were all the trains that went through Rector between 6:00 and 9:00 p. m. A freight train went south about 8:05 p. m. without stopping. The record of that train slipped the witness when he was checking the others. The record was little blurred and witness finally testified that it was the Iron Mountain instead of the Missouri Pacific train. Witness had been assistant superintendent for only two months and was not in the employ of the Cotton Belt on December 1, 1915. He assisted the chief dispatcher in getting the records out of the files in the office at Illmo, Missouri, and had never seen the records but that time, and knew nothing personally about their correctness. All railroads kept records similar to those adduced. It was not possible to operate any great number of trains without train sheets like those in evidence. Where there are three or four trains, such a record had to be kept.

The above testimony, taken in connection with other testimony, tended to sustain the verdict and to prove that appellee’s property was destroyed by fire caused by sparks from an engine of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company at that time being operated by B. P. Bush as receiver. But, in the absence Of the above testimony, the evidence was not sufficient. The appellant, B. P. Bush, therefore contends that the court erred in not excluding the above testimony, and this is the only issue for our determination.

Appellant relies upon the case of St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Gibson, 113 Ark. 417, to sustain his contention. That case was a suit against the railroad company for personal injuries and the company sought to prove the time when the train passed the station at Hope by the testimony of the station agent at Pulton, to the effect that the operator at Hope told the witness that the train cleared the block at Hope at 5:50 p. m. The court held that the testimony was hearsay and incompetent, saying: “It was just as necessary for the operator at Hope to keep a record of the arrival and departure óf trains from his block as it was for the operator at Fulton to keep such a record. The record kept by the operator at Hope was just as accessible and just as easy to obtain as that kept by the operator at Fulton. Hope was situated in the county where the case was tried, and there is no reason why the operator at Hope was not examined and used as a witness to prove the time the train left the block at Hope going north. He could have testified of his own personal knowledge as to that fact and could have used the record kept by him to have refreshed his memory in the event it was necessary to do so. The declaration made by him to the operator at Fulton as to the time the train in question left the block at Hope was made after Gribson had been killed, and so was made at a time when there might have been occasion for him to have made a false declaration.”

It will be observed that the opinion was bottomed upon the fact that the testimony of the operator at Hope and his r ecord kept at that station of the time when trains passed there, was primary and therefore the best evidence of what occurred there, rather than the testimony of a witness at another station of a record he had kept from information received through the declarations of operator at Hope as to what had occurred at the latter station. The opinion further shows that the evidence offered by the company in its own behalf was not only hearsay but it was in the nature of self-serving declarations.

Another case relied on by the appellant is that of St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Mitchell, 115 Ark. 339. In that case the appellant requested the trial court to grant a prayer to the effect that the record of the movements of its trains must be accepted as any other written evidence made at the time of the transaction; and unless the jury had reason to believe that such record had been changed or tampered with, they must find that it gave the correct movements of the trains. The court refused this prayer and in commenting upon that ruling we said: “There is nothing about these train records to import verity. Under some circumstances their recital might furnish evidence of a very satisfactory character, but the court can not say as a matter of law that these records were correctly kept. * * * Such evidence should be weighed by the jury like other evidence and given such weight as it appears entitled to have. ’ ’

In neither of the above cases was the exact issue here presented for determination before the court and the doctrine of those cases, therefore, is not applicable. The question we have here is whether or not the train sheets or records kept in the office of the Chief Train Dispatcher of the St. Louis, Southwestern Railway Company ^and made by the Chief Dispatcher or one of his assistants, showing the daily movements of all trains passing through the station at Rector, is competent evidence when offered against the company and when such records are not authenticated by the suppletory oath of the particular employee who made the entries to the effect that the person making the entries had personal knowledge of the facts recorded and that the entries were contemporaneous with the occurrence of those facts, and when it was not shown that the person making the entries was dead or beyond the jurisdiction of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 226, 136 Ark. 554, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-taylor-ark-1918.