Fero v. . the Buffalo and State Line Railroad Company

22 N.Y. 209
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 22 N.Y. 209 (Fero v. . the Buffalo and State Line Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fero v. . the Buffalo and State Line Railroad Company, 22 N.Y. 209 (N.Y. 1860).

Opinion

Bacon, J.

The two questions which are presented by this case, arise upon the exceptions taken to the charge of the judge upon the trial and his refusals to charge as requested by the defendants’ counse: and these questions pertain, firstly, \ to the degree of negligence imputed to and chargeable upon Mhe defendants; and, secondly, whether there was negligence on the part of the plaintiff, which concurred in producing the Y result. The jury have found upon both points submitted to them in favor of the plaintiff, and the inquiry now is whether there was any error of law in the manner in which these questions were left to the jury.

The substantial facts of the case, without entering into much detail, showed very clearly that the fire by which the premises of the original plaintiff were consumed, was communicated by sparks from the defendants’ locomotive standing still upon the side track of the defendants at a point nearly opposite the house of the plaintiff, and distant only about thirty feet from it, and with a strong wind blowing directly from the engine toward the house. During the time the engine thus stood *211 upon, the track, coals and sparks were emitted in large quantities, and were driven by the wind in the direction of the house, and no watch appears to have been kept over them, nor in fact any attention whatever on the part of any one in the defendants’ employment paid to the matter. The nearness of the plaintiff’s property to the engine, the constant emission of combustible matter, and the direction and force of the wind, were all circumstances calculated to admonish those having charge of the locomotive, of the imminent danger of remaining in that position without exercising a prudent circumspection of the surroundings.

On the subject of the care which under the circumstances, the defendants were called upon to exercise, the judge instructed the jury that less care is required of a railroad company while runing their trains in the country, where there is no property near their track exposed to fire, than in a village (as was the case in this instance) where buildings constructed of wood are situated so near to their road as to be exposed to fire from the locomotive, and at a time when the wind is blowing in a direction from the engine toward the buildings. Under such circumstances they are bound to use the utmost care; and if for the want of such care, fire is communicated to suchl buildings, and they are consumed, the defendants are liable for the damages sustained thereby, unless the negligence of the owners of the buildings in guarding and protecting their property concurred in producing the result. To this charge the defendants’ counsel excepted, and asked the court to charge that if the engine was in good order, and of proper construction, and used with ordinary care, the plaintiff could not recover. This instruction was refused by the judge, and the defendants’ counsel excepted.

Taken as a whole, I think this charge, and refusal to charge as requested, were right. Some of the English cases have gone the length of holding that the very fact that buildings in proximity to a railroad have been fired by sparks from a locomotive, is sufficient to warrant a jury in inferring and presuming negligence without further proof. But I think we have *212 not carried the rule in this country to that extent, and certainly not in this State. The reason given is that the use of I fire to create the motive power of a railroad engine is not only j| lawful, but necessary, and sparks may escape notwithstanding the safeguards which science and skill have employed to limit their range. (Sheldon v. Hudson River Railroad Company, 4 Kern., 218.) There must be therefore some proof of negligence to create a liability arising from the exercise of a conceded right in an improper or unreasonable manner. It is quite obvious too, that what under certain circumstances would not be even prima facie proof of want of care, would under a different state of facts be the highest evidence of negligence; and I think the discrimination made by the judge in this case is one founded in good sense and obvious justice : although not sustained by any direct authority, the principle on which it proceeds may be gathered from several cases decided in this court.

The case of Rood v. New York and Erie Railroad Company (18 Barb., 80), brings into view the rule upon which a railroad company may be exempted from liability for a casualty similar to the one in this case. There the woods of the plaintiff were claimed to have been fired by sparks from the defendants’ locomotive. The train was running at the usual rate of speed in the open country, and it was shown that the' engine was of the most approved construction: the spark arresters of the best pattern; and that a suitable police had been provided upon the road for the purpose of following trains and looking after fires. These circumstances were held sufficient to discharge the defendants from liability for the damages which were supposed to have been occasioned by flying sparks from the engine.

But a much higher degree of care, both in respect to the rate of speed and the watchfulness to prevent casualties, should manifestly be required when trains are passing through, or remaining stationary in the streets of a city, or densely populated village; and I think it is not stretching the rule unduly in such a case to say that, under such circumstances, the railroad company is bound to use the utmost care to guard against the *213 dangers wMch obviously attend such a condition. The substance of the charge, without criticising its terms with too great nicety, is that the care must be proportioned to the danger of accidents, and that where there is great danger, there must be a corresponding degree of care.

This is the rule declared in the case of Kelsey v. Barney (2 Kern., 425), and applied to the case of a collision of boats. The principle is there stated to apply to all persons traveling upon highways or navigating public waters, and in speaking of the qualifications and extent of the rule, Judge Johnson says, in his opinion, that under some circumstances a very high degree of vigilance is demanded even under the requirement of ordinary care. “ Where, ” he says, “ the consequences of negligence will probably be serious injury to others, and where the means of avoiding the infliction of the injury are completely within the party’s power, ordinary care requires the utmost degree of human vigilance and foresight.”

The same principle is substantially held in the case of Johnson v. Hudson River Railroad Company (20 N. Y., 65). The cars of the defendant were driven in the night-time in one of the streets of the city of New York without any lights upon them, and the plaintiff’s testator was run over while upon or crossing the track, and killed. In giving the case to the jury, the judge charged, among other things, that, considering the nature of the defendants’ business and the hazard attending the running of cars in the streets of the city, and particularly on a dark night, “ they were bound to exercise the utmost care and diligence; and for the purpose of avoiding accidents, endangering property and life, were bound to use all the means and measures of precaution that

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.Y. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fero-v-the-buffalo-and-state-line-railroad-company-ny-1860.