Eisenkramer v. Eck

258 S.W. 368, 162 Ark. 501, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 368 (Eisenkramer v. Eck) 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
Eisenkramer v. Eck, 258 S.W. 368, 162 Ark. 501, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 198 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Wood, J.

Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Eck were the owners of a certain lot in the city of Pine Bluff, Arkansas,, on which was situated a barn containing property of the value of $168.40. This barn, with its contents, was destroyed by fire on August 11, 1922. The barn was insured in the Fire Association Insurance Company (hereafter called company), and it paid to Mr. and Mrs. Eck the sum of $152.82 for the loss they sustained.

These actions were instituted by Mr. and Mrs. Eck and by Mrs. Kate Eelc and by the company against William Eisenkramer. It is alleged in the complaint that Eisenkramer owned a home adjoining the property of Mr. and Mrs. Eck, and that he allowed a large amount of rubbish to accumulate in his back yard, on the property line next to the barn of plaintiffs; that they requested the defendant, several times, to remove the rubbish and weeds, informing him that same was liable to catch fire and burn plaintiff’s barn; that the defendant was notified by the city authorities to remove the rubbish, weeds and trash from his premises; that, on the day of the fire, the plaintiffs were absent in the city of Monticello, which fact the defendant knew; that on that day the defendant caused the weeds and rubbish 'in his back yard to be set on fire, and the sparks therefrom ignited the barn of the plaintiffs and totally destroyed the same, with its contents; that the destruction of .the plaintiff’s property was thus caused through the negligence of the defendant; that the contents of the barn were worth $168.40, for which sum the plaintiffs prayed judgment.

The company, in its complaint, alleged that' it had issued a policy to F. W. and Kate Eck, and had paid the sum of $152.88 to them for their loss on account of the fire; that the company was subrogated to the rights of the Ecks in the damages caused, by the burning of their barn through the negligence of the defendant. It prayed judgment in the sum of $152.88.

The defendant, in its answer, denied all the material allegations of the complaints.

The testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs tended -to sustain the allegations of their complaints. Mrs. Eck testified that she was the owner of the barn mentioned in the complaint, and that it was destroyed by fire on the 11th of- August, 1922, while she was in Monticello. The barn was close to defendant’s fence, and some of the fence had burned. The barn was burned from the side next to the fence. She did not know how the barn caught on fire. The contents of the barn destroyed were worth $168.40. They were insured with the company, and the company settled with her for the destruction of the contents of the barn on the 19th of August, 1922, and she subrogated her rights to the company by agreement, which was introduced in evidence.

Mrs. W. M. Hardister testified that she lived in a house owned by Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Eck, and that there was a barn in the rear of the house, which was destroyed by fire from trash burning in the defendant’s lot. She discovered the flames in the roof of the barn, and turned in the fire alarm. There was a fire in the defendant’s yard at the time, and same had been burning there all morning. The barn burned about 1:30 p. m. There was a colored man in defendant’s back yard, who was standing there, with his back to the barn, looking north, away from the barn. He made no effort to put out the flames. He had been in-the back yard all the morning. It was shown that a reasonable market value of the contents of the barn destroyed was- $168.40. An insurance agent estimated the loss of the barn at $189.85. The company paid to Mrs. Eck the sum of $152.88. The policy was introduced in evidence, and the subrog’ation agreement between Mrs. Eck and the company, which showed that the company had paid her the sum of $152.88, as she testified. There was no insurance on the contents of the barn.

The defendant testified that he made a contract with an old negro man, named Smith, to clean his yard, for $2.50, and told him to pile the weeds and trash up and haul it away. He didn’t exercise any authority over the negro as to the manner in which lie should clean the yard, except that he was to clean it and haul the trash away; that it was not necessary for him to burn the trash. His contract was to haul the trash away, and beyond that the negro was to use his own judgment in cleaning the yard. The witness didn’t authorize the negro to burn the trash, and didn’t exercise any supervision over him. His yard was not in a bad condition. There was' a small pile of trash, and some grass and weeds that had grown up. Witness was sure that he told the negro to haul the trash away. The negro had never worked for him before. He had paid the negro fifty cents on the job.

In rebuttal, Henry Smith testified, on behalf of the plaintiffs, that he was employed to clean defendant’s garden, in the back of his house, in August, about the lime the barn next door was burned. Defendant hired witness to clean the yard, and clean it good. Defendant did not tell witness to haul the trash away, but just told him to clean it up. Witness didn’t have a horse and wagon. He had been cleaning yards for nineteen years. Ho did the job as he thought it ought to be done. Defendant did not tell witness to burn the trash. Witness did not burn the barn. The fire was there when witness got there — papers and stuff burning in the yard. Witness was in the garden, and not in the yard, at the time of the fire, and didn’t set the trash on fire. Defendant had nothing to do with it, except he told witness to clean the yard good. Witness didn’t know what caught the barn on fire. Didn’t know it was on fire until a lady across the street hollered. The trash witness took out of the yard didn’t catch on fire, and he didn’t set the trash on fire. There was a fire further over from where witness was, and the barn must have caught from that fire, but witness didn’t know how it caught. There was some fire in papers and trash, and children playing around in the yard.

Mrs. Hardister testified that she didn’t see a fire in the defendant’s yard before the negro got there, but there was -a fire there after he got there. She heard defendant say to his wife that she ought to have gone out and made the negro put the fire out. The pile of trash near defendant’s fence was burning, and the negro kept piling trash on the same.

Mrs. Eck also testified, in rebuttal, that she heard defendant say that the negro ought to have put the fire out, and that there was a pretty good wind blowing that day — not a hard wind.

There was testimony to the effect that there was rubbish in the back yard of defendant at the time the fire occurred, which was dangerous if a fire started, but that the same condition existed in other yards.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 368, 162 Ark. 501, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenkramer-v-eck-ark-1924.