Farrell v. Minneapolis & Rainy River Railway Co.

141 N.W. 491, 121 Minn. 357, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 775
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 16, 1913
DocketNos. 17,895—(65)
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 141 N.W. 491 (Farrell v. Minneapolis & Rainy River 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
Farrell v. Minneapolis & Rainy River Railway Co., 141 N.W. 491, 121 Minn. 357, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 775 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Bunn, J.

This action was to recover damages to standing timber of plaintiff caused by fire alleged to have been started by a locomotive of defendant. The complaint also alleged that defendant negligently allowed inflammable materials to accumulate on its right of way and negligently failed to control or extinguish fires on such right of way, and permitted them to escape and spread to plaintiff’s land. The answer was in substance a general denial, and alleged that a general forest fire was the cause of the destruction of plaintiff’s trees.

The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1,800. Defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. The motion for judgment was denied, and the motion for a new trial denied on condition that plaintiff consent to a reduction of the verdict to $1,300. Plaintiff consented to this reduction. Defendant appealed from the order.

It is claimed generally by defendant that the trial court should have ordered judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or at least have granted a new trial. Defendant offered no testimony at the trial, and the case stands on the evidence introduced by plaintiff.

The land of plaintiff over which the fire spread which destroyed his timber was 160 acres located half a mile north from defendant’s right of way at a point where, the evidence showed a fire started. This fire was first noticed on the right of way some ten minutes [359]*359after one of defendant’s trains had passed the point, and it rapidly spread over the dry swamp between the right of way and plaintiff’s land. Before it reached this land it was joined by another fire which had been burning on and near the right of way some distance to the west. After the two fires joined, they passed to plaintiff’s land and destroyed his timber.

1. As to the first fire, we hold, as did the trial court, that the evidence was sufficient to justify the conclusion that it was set by the locomotive that had just passed. The locality was uninhabited, the fire was discovered in the dry grass on and adjacent to the right of way almost immediately after the train passed, and other causes were fairly negatived. The suggestion that the whole country was ablaze with forest fires, and that this fire came as a part of a general conflagration does not find support in the evidence, which does not show any other fire in the vicinity at the time except the one to the west before mentioned.

2. As to the last-named fire, the one burning some distance west, which joined the first fire, the trial court held that the evidence was not sufficient to warrant submitting to the jury the question whether it was started by one of defendant’s locomotives. The defendant’s principal claim on this appeal is that it is not liable in this case because it was not responsible for this fire. The doctrine of Cook v. Minneapolis, 98 Wis. 624, 74 N. W. 561, 40 L.R.A. 457, 67 Am. St. 830, is invoked. In that case two fires, one caused by the negligence of defendant, the other having no responsible origin, met and after joining passed to the property of the plaintiff and destroyed it. It was held that though either fire, without the other, would have destroyed the property, plaintiff could not recover. The Cook case has been followed in subsequent Wisconsin cases, and its doctrine has met approval elsewhere. The trial court followed the rule of the Cook case in the case at bar, but permitted a recovery because of evidence tending to show that the second fire was allowed to spread so as to join the first fire, through negligence of defendant.

We do not here express approval or disapproval of the doctrino of the Wisconsin court as announced in the Cook case and followed in subsequent decisions, because we are of the opinion that the [360]*360recovery can fairly be sustained on the theory of the trial court. There may also be a distinction predicated upon the fact that our statute imposes an absolute liability for damages caused by a fire started by a locomotive, but it is not necessary to make even this distinction.

It needs no argument to prove that defendant would be liable if it caused both fires, and it seems equally certain that if it started one of the fires, and by negligence failed to extinguish the other and allowed it to escape from its control and join the fire that it started, it is liable for the damages caused by the two fires after they have joined.

Does the evidence justify a finding of negligence in failing to put out the fire burning on its right of way or preventing its spread? The evidence was that this fire at the point called Summit had been burning on and near the right of way for several days. Plaintiff, with assistance, had dug a trench and successfully prevented its reaching his land from the west, but it burned on and along the right of way in the debris and combustible material until it reached the swamp south of plaintiff’s land, where it joined the fire started by the locomotive. Defendant’s superintendent was over the line nearly every day, and while he did not remember seeing this fire, he did not deny it, and the evidence is quite persuasive that he must have observed it on and along the right of way and approaching the point where it was a menace to plaintiff’s timber land. It was admitted that trainmen had instructions to report all fires met with, and that two logging- trains passed over the line each day. On the day before plaintiff’s property was destroyed, plaintiff followed the fire line along the right of way east from the point called Summit or Summit Ilill and toward the swamp south of his land. He testified that there was fire on and along the right of way up to a point some distance west of the swamp; that near the Summit Hill there was a large tree across the track and fire burning on both sides, that a logging train of defendant came from the east and stopped while the tree was cut out; that defendant’s superintendent was on the train, and promised plaintiff, in answer to his request, help in fighting the fire. Plaintiff then went on toward the east and dis[361]*361covered the fire on the right of way which we have held the evidence justified the conclusion that the engine of the logging train had started. It is practically uncontradicted that the Summit fire had been burning to the west for several days, on and near the right of way, that it was extremely dry, and that the right of way and adjacent lands were covered with grass and bushes. Though plaintiff, with such assistance as he could obtain, was using every effort to prevent the spread of this fire, defendant seems to have done nothing to that end. If it owed the legal duty to use ordinary care to put out or keep under control fires on its right of way, known to exist and to be dangerous if allowed to spread, that there was a breach of this duty resulting in damages to plaintiff, the evidence fairly tends to show.

3. Was there a legal duty resting on defendant to use reasonable care to prevent the spread of this fire? We think there was. This is not holding that a railroad company must make its right of way a barrier to prevent the spread of fires for the starting of which it is not responsible, nor does a decision that such a duty rested on defendant establish any new doctrine.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.W. 491, 121 Minn. 357, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrell-v-minneapolis-rainy-river-railway-co-minn-1913.