First National Bank v. Lake Erie & W. R. R.

65 Ill. App. 21, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1025
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 16, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 Ill. App. 21 (First National Bank v. Lake Erie & W. R. R.) 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
First National Bank v. Lake Erie & W. R. R., 65 Ill. App. 21, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1025 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought in the name of the bank, for the use of the insurance companies, against the defendant in error, for the burning of its elevator, ivhich ivas insured by said companies. Having paid the loss, they became subrogated to the rights of the bank, if any, against the railroad company to whose wrongful negligence the fire and loss are here charged.

Defendant’s road, running east and west through Hoopeston, is there crossed by the Chicago & Eastern Illinois. The elevator was located on a lot adjoiningits right of way on the south, from five to eight hundred feet west of the crossing, and the station wras in the southwest angle made by the crossing.

On the 31st of August, 1892, the elevator was destroyed by fire, claimed to have been communicated by sparks from the locomotive of a local freight train of defendant, going east.

The declaration contained three counts. By the first it charged, generally and simply, that while the locomotive under its control was passing upon the road along said property, sparks and brands escaped from it through the negligence of defendant, and set fire to the building. In the second, the negligence alleged was in the overloading of the engine. And in the third, it is the construction of the road bed with such high grades as to cause the engines in their operation to haul freight trains up them to emit sparks and brands, averring the location of the elevator on one of these grades.

The verdict, being upon the general issue, was for the defendant; upon which,' after refusing a new trial, the court rendered judgment, and the record is brought here by writ of error.

It is quite a voluminous record, containing the testimony of fifty witnesses—twenty-one on one side and twenty-nine on the other. A review of it in detail is probably not expected.

It appears that at a point some 2,000 feet -west of the elevator the track, by a considerable descent to the east, reaches a level which is maintained to a point about 250 feet west of it, where it rises for a distance of 300 feet by a grade of twenty-six to the mile, and thence on east at nearly fifty for a distance of 2,700, thence on a level about 1,000, and thence, by agrade of thirty-seven feet to the mile, 1,200 feet to the summit.

The train came up to the station about noon, where the brakes were set, the engine detached and the cars held until the way freight was unloaded, when the brakes were taken off and they were allowed to back down to a water tank about midway on the level between the west and east grades first mentioned—say 1,000 feet west of the elevator. After switching about the station an hour or so the engine was backed down to the train; and having there taken water and put on fresh coal, it started east and pulled the train about half way up the increased grade east of the station, where, from some cause not shown, it was stalled. It then backed down past the station, elevator and tank and up the ■west grade, whence, with the advantage of that decline, it again started east and passed through. It was on this last run east that the fire is claimed to have been set.

That it was communicated by this locomotive engine, the plaintiff, to be entitled to recover, was bound to establish by a preponderance of the evidence. Though such proof would not necessarily establish its right to recover, the want of it would be conclusive against it, whatever may have been the negligence on the part of the defendant. Upon that question the evidence was wholly circumstantial and clearly conflicting. How the jury found upon it we do not know. There was no special finding.

But assuming it was for the plaintiff, we are satisfied they could not have found it was because of negligence in the construction of the road bed or in overloading the engine. All the evidence of negligence in these particulars consisted, as to the first, in the statement of the levels and grades as above given, and as to the second, of the amount of the load, the rate of the engine and the fact that on the second run east it was stalled—the most of which was putin by the defendant. But it was fully shown that the road bed was properly constructed, that grades as long and steep as these are quite common and longer and steeper ones not infrequent on well built roads in that section of the country; that they are not regarded as improper or difficult, and that because of the natural surface at this place it is impracticable to build and maintain a railroad there without them; and also that this engine, in good order and properly handled, would easily haul over them a train considerably heavier. The testimony on both these points to the effect stated was abundant, clear, largely disinterested and wholly uncontradicted. Plaintiff therefore could not rightfully recover under the second or third count, even though the fire had been communicated from the engine and by negligence of the defendant in some other particular.

The first rests upon the mere allegation that the injury complained of was occasioned by fire communicated by the engine while passing along the railroad and under control of the defendant. It is not alleged, nor is it claimed upon the evidence, that it was set within the right of way through combustible material wrongfully left there by the defendant.' The statute, however, makes the fact alleged evidence of itself to charge the defendant with negligence. R. S., Ch. 114, p. 103 (Hurd’s Ed. of 1893, p. 1122.) But as no device is known by means of which, with whatever management, the escape of sparks or brands can be absolutely prevented, it is made only “ full prima facie evidence ” so to charge. The negligence referred to must therefore consist in the employment of improper means and appliances to prevent it as far as is reasonably practicable, or in the improper handling of such means, and the prima facie evidence may be rebutted and overcome by sufficient proof that there was no negligence in either of these respects. C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Quaintance, 58 Ill. 389; same v. Pennell, 94 Id., and cases cited on p. 454.

The engine was a Brooks Standard, of thirty-five tons weight, seventeen by twenty-four inch cylinder, front extension, straight stack, steel diaphram, and three by three netting. It had recently been rebuilt, was thoroughly inspected two or three days before, and again two or three after the fire, without any repair in the interval, and found in first class condition throughout. This equipment was as good as any in use, or known, for preventing the escape of fire. The engineer was competent, skillful and careful; of sober habits and sound judgment. He was examined fully as to his method in handling his machine on the run upon which it is claimed the injury was done; which was approved as reducing to the lowest the chances of such injury.

These were the facts as shown by a very clear preponderance of the evidence, and they established the defense indicated by the authorities cited. Appellant introducedconly two experts, each of whom was of opinion that the handling of the engine as stated was unskillful and improper. But it was in answer to hypothetical questions which assumed a run starting from a point one or two hundred feet from the foot of the grade, an assumption based on the engineer’s statement that the tank (from which he started on the first run) was about one hundred feet distant from it.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. App. 21, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-lake-erie-w-r-r-illappct-1896.