Chicago, Peoria & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Willard

111 Ill. App. 225, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 230
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 8, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 Ill. App. 225 (Chicago, Peoria & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Willard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Peoria & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Willard, 111 Ill. App. 225, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 230 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit brought by Samuel Willard against the Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis Bail way, of Illinois, to recover damages to the lands and cattle of plaintiff by fire escaping from defendant’s locomotives, communicating to dry grass and weeds, negligently allowed to accumulate on its right of way and thence to the lands of plhintiff. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $2,050, from which defendant appeals.

The facts in the case are substantially as follows ; Plaintiff is the owner of lands in Tazewell County, used by him for grazing and agricultural purposes, through which lands defendant has a right of way upon which it operates its railway. On July 16 or 17, 1901, the section gang of the defendant had cut grass and weeds on the right of way; the weather had been, and was for some time thereafter during that month, very dry and hot and the grass and weeds were permitted to lay as cut and in piles. On July 20. plaintiff discovered a fire on defendant’s right of way, about eight o’clock in the morning, shortly after a passenger train had passed south. Plaintiff immediately went to Manito, about a mile distant, on foot, and notified a section foreman of defendant that the fire was in progress and requested him to look after it. Coombs, the section foreman, with a gang of men extinguished the blaze and returned to Manito. On plaintiff’s return from Manito, he discovered the grass and weeds still burning and that the fire had communicated to his land. The land in that locality was drainage land consisting of peat soil, inflammable to a depth of from six inches to three feet and when once ignited it is impossible to extinguish the fire except by digging the soil out. There is evidence tending to show that from about noon until five or six o’clock in the evening, plaintiff and his men were engaged in plowing around stacks of grain and fields of growing grain, to prevent their destruction by the fire and in otherwise attempting to stay its progress. In the pasture field consisting of about 240 acres, eight acres of which were injured by the fire of JuD 20, plaintiff had about 140 head of cattle grazing. In the evening plaintiff had the cattle gathered in the milk pen and next morning when he went to feed them found from sixty to eighty-three head had been injured by having their hoofs and legs to the knees, singed and burned. On July 27, following, a fire from one of defendant’s locomotives fired the accumulation of cut grass and weeds at another point on its right of way and communicated to plaintiff’s land of the same peaty formation and burned over an area of about thirty acres to a depth of from six inches to three feet. It was for the damages suffered by plaintiff by these two fires that he brought suit and recovered a verdict.

It is insisted by appellant that appellee is precluded from recovering damages in this case, because he did not extinguish the fires, as, it asserts, he easily could have done in their incipiency, and because he did not exercise reasonable care in securing his cattle from injury by the fire of July 20.

The evidence tends to show that when plaintiff first discovered the fire of July 20, it wp,s beyond his ability to cope with single-handed; that he was about equally distant from his home where he might have procured help and the station Manito, where he could notify defendant’s section gang, with the reasonable expectation that they would extinguish it, if possible; that while they smothered the blaze, they did not extinguish the fire so as to prevent its further spread; that on his return from Manito, plaintiff confronted the same situation as at first, and immediately with the assistance of his hired hands sought to protect his property and put out the fire. Because his time and labor was expended in saving the stacks of grain and growing crops on his lands, and in an effort to stay the progress of the fire in the land, rather than in herding his cattle, does not convict him of a want of reasonable care in neglecting to do the latter. He was obliged to exercise only such degree of care, in an effort to preserve his property, as a reasonable man would exercise under like surrounding conditions and circumstances. Whether he exercised such care in this particular case, was a question for the jury and has been settled by them adversely to appellant. That the fire when once communicated to the peat soil, could not be extinguished, is conceded by both parties in this case. How appellee can be held for negligence in failing to do an impossibility, we do not understand. Two gangs of defendant’s section hands had failed to do, what appellant now insists, appellee should have done.

It is urged that the court allowed improper evidence to go to the jury on behalf of the plaintiff against the objection of defendant. Plaintiff was permitted to introduce in evidence as “ Exhibit B,” an “ account sales,” rendered by a commission firm in Chicago to plaintiff, of cattle, including a portion of those injured by the fire, as evidence upon the question of the market value of the cattle so injured. The measure of damages in this case, so far as it related to - the injured cattle, was the difference in the value of the cattle before or at the time they were injured and their value after such injury. The “ account sales,” was not competent evidence for any purpose, being merely an ex parte statement.

It presumed to establish the market value of the cattle on the day of their sale, August 20, one month after their injury, which was irrelevant to the inquiry in hand. The damage to the cattle was, however, fixed by the uncontradicted, competent evidence of several witnesses and there is nothing in the record to suggest that appellant was prejudiced by the error in admitting the incompetent evidence. It is further contended by appellant that there is no proof in the record to show that the injury sustained by the cattle was the result of fire communicated from defendant’s right of way. This contention hardly bears discussion. Suffice it to say that there, is evidence showing that the cattle were on appellee’s land grazing; that the superficial peat-soil on eight acres of land was burned to a depth of from six inches to three feet; that the heat from such burning peat is intense and when in combustion cannot be quenched; that there is no evidence tending to show that the cattle were exposed to fire elsewhere.

It is urged by appellant that a recovery cannot be sustained in this case for injury to appellee’s cattle, because such injury was not to have been reasonably foreseen or expected as the result of the setting of the fire, and that therefore the negligence of appellant in that regard cannot be said to be the proximate cause of the injury. In other words, appellant contends that negligence averred and proved cannot be said to be the proximate cause of a resulting injury, if that particular injury is not to be reasonably anticipated.

This is restricting the liability of a party for negligence within too narrow limits. In Tent v. Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw R. R. Co., 59 Ill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 Ill. App. 225, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-peoria-st-louis-railway-co-v-willard-illappct-1903.