Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad v. Unaka Springs Lumber Co.

130 Tenn. 354
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 130 Tenn. 354 (Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad v. Unaka Springs Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad v. Unaka Springs Lumber Co., 130 Tenn. 354 (Tenn. 1914).

Opinion

MR. Justice Paw

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the Unaka Springs Lumber Company, a corporation, in the law court at Johnson City, to recover damages for the alleged negligent burning, by the Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railway Company, of a sawmill, some stacks of lumber, and other articles of personal property, situated at a place known as Hager’s Siding, in Unicoi county.

The railway company interposed two pleas to the declaration, viz.: (1) Not guilty; and (2) a special plea averring that, in consideration of the construction by the railway company of a side track, or spur track, from the main line .of the railway company to the sawmill of the lumber company, the latter had released the railway company from any and all liability for damages on account of the destruction of said property by fire.

There was a trial by jury, which resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $2,500, with interest from May 24, 1912 — the date on which the fire occurred. From the judgment of the circuit court overruling its motion for a new trial, the lumber company appealed to the court of civil appeals, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed, and, the writ of certiorari having been heretofore granted by a member of this court on petition of the lumber company, the cause is now before us upon assignments of' error and brief of the [358]*358lumber company, and reply brief on behalf of the railway company.

The sawmill and other property of the lumber company were destroyed by fire about two o’clock in the afternoon of May 24,1912. The mill was ‘ ‘ shut down, ’ ’ and no one was about the premises at the time, and the fire was not discovered until the property was partially consumed. The sawmill was about one hundred and twenty feet from the main track of the railway company and on the land of the lumber company. It is not clear from the record whether the stacks of lumber destroyed were or not on the railroad right of way. A spur track built by the railway company pursuant to a contract with the lumber company extended from the main line of the railroad out to the sawmill.

Without undertaking to dispose of the assignments of error in the order of assignment on the record, we will consider the controlling questions raised thereby in the order most convenient.

It is insisted that the judgment of the court of civil appeals affirming the judgment of the circuit court is erroneous, because the circuit court erred in refusing to direct the jury to return a verdict for the railway company. Under this assignment of error three propositions are advanced on behalf of the railway company, viz.: (1) That there is no evidence that fire was communicated to the property of the lumber company from an engine of the railway company, and no evidence of negligence.on the part of the railway com[359]*359pany; (2) that, by virtue of a written contract in existence at the time of the fire in question, the railway company was exempt from liability for damages to the property of the lumbér company occasioned by fire set out by the engines of the railway company; and (3) that the lumber company had no right to recover damages for the destruction of the property in question, because the legal title thereto was not in the lumber company, but was outstanding in a third party.

1. The response of the court of civil appeals to the contention of the railway company that there was no evidence of negligence on its part was as follows:

“We have carefully examined this record with respect to the presence or absence of evidence to show communication of fire by sparks from the company’s engine. While not very cogent, we are of opinion that there was introduced some material evidence from which the jury could infer that sparks, large enough to set the property on fire were emitted by the engines of the company, and that the fire in question thus had its origin. If an engine emitted sparks of this magnitude, and there is specific evidence to this effect, then the jury were warranted in drawing the conclusion from this alone that the engine communicating the fire was defectively constructed.”

We construe the foregoing excerpt from the opinion of the court of civil appeals as a finding that there was some evidence of defective equipment of the engines of the railway company in the matter of spark arresters, and that such' defective equipment was the [360]*360proximate cause of the fire that destroyed the property of the lumber company. We do not think the record justifies this finding.

It is true there was testimony» of three or four witnesses introduced by the lumber company showing that on occasions — in some instances days, in others weeks, and still others months — before the fire in question the witnesses saw sparks emitted from engines of the defendant railway company of sufficient size and wafted to a sufficient distance, in the neighborhood of the mill in question, to have set fire to said mill; but, while the railway company tacitly conceded that it had engines on its road which might emit sparks such as those described by the witnesses above mentioned, it was proven without controversy, and was conceded by plaintiff on the trial in the circuit court, that if the fire was set out by a railroad engine, it must have been set out by one of two engines particularly identified in the record. None of the witnesses above mentioned offered to testify that he had ever seen either of the two engines last mentioned emit any sparks.

The railway company proved by the witnesses Sta-ley, Webb, Sublett, and Harmon that the two engines identified as above stated were practically new, of the •most modern type of locomotive engines, and were equipped with spark arresters thoroughly up to the present state of the art, and in perfect repair at the time of the fire in question. Each of said witnesses testified from personal observation and knowledge of [361]*361the engines in question. Staley was master mechanic of the defendant railway company, and had been employed in that capacity since the year 1908, prior to which service he had 27 years’ experience in the mechanical department of the railway shops of the Norfolk & Western Railroad. Staley also shows that the type of spark arresters in use on said engines had been, recently before said witness testified, recommended by the “Master Mechanics’ Association, who represent the mechanical men all over this country,” as the best spark arrester manufactured.

Webb was an inspector and repairer of engines in the roundhouse and shops of the defendant railway company, and had been engaged in that capacity for more than four years before the fire in question, and prior to his services with the defendant railway company had had an experience of nineteen years as a locomotive boiler maker. He had inspected the two engines and spark arresters in question shortly before and shortly after the burning of the sawmill of plaintiff, and testified that said spark arresters were in perfect condition at the time- of each of said inspections.

Sublett and Harmon were the engineers in charge of each of said engines, respectively, and they testified with reference to the kind, character, and condition of the engines and spark arresters, and also with reference to the operation and running of their respective engines at the place where and the-time when the fire occurred.

[362]

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Bluebook (online)
130 Tenn. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolina-clinchfield-ohio-railroad-v-unaka-springs-lumber-co-tenn-1914.