Jefferis v. P. W. B. R.R. Co.

8 Del. 447
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 447 (Jefferis v. P. W. B. R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferis v. P. W. B. R.R. Co., 8 Del. 447 (Del. Ct. App. 1867).

Opinion

THIS was an action on the case by James V. Jefferis against the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company, to recover damages for the burning and destruction of a barn and twenty tons of hay in it belonging to the plaintiff, near the line of the railroad of the *Page 449 company in Brandywine hundred, and alleged to have been set on fire by flying coals or sparks emitted by a passing locomotive engine and train of cars of the company over the road just before the same was discovered to be on fire, by reason of the negligence and default of the defendant. It occurred about 2 o'clock P.M. on the 20th of March 1865, on a clear day with the wind blowing fresh at the time from the direction of the railroad toward the barn. There were two freight trains passing over the road in opposite directions about the time, and as there was a bridge just below the place on the road, the one had to stop for the other to pass beyond it, and which stop was near the barn, the nearest-corner of which was only about thirty feet from the line of the railroad. It was built of stone, was about forty feet square, and although the walls of it were good, it was old, and the roof of it which was shingle was much decayed and quite open with seams and cracks, and contained at the time about twenty tons of timothy hay stowed in the loft of it. The fire originated upon the roof of it, about two feet from the eaves of the gable nearest the railroad, and when first discovered had made but very little progress, and might readily have been extinguished without doing any further injury to it, had there been a ladder, or any other means at hand of ascending to it with a bucket of water. The keeper of the railroad bridge before mentioned, and his assistant were the first to perceive it, and at once gave the alarm and hastened to it for the purpose of putting it out. No one saw the fire communicated to it, or could state the actual cause or origin of it, but the witness who first discovered the fire burning on the roof, stated that the space then covered by it was not larger than her two hands, and when she reached the barn there was no fire inside of it, and that but a few minutes before she first saw the roof on fire, she heard a railroad train pass over the road and by the barn. It was also proved that sparks, and small coals were frequently emitted from the smokestacks of the engines of the company and had been seen flying high above their tops into the air, when passing over *Page 450 the road, not only on that day, but as a matter of frequent and common occurrence, and that such coals or sparks had several times set fire to fences, grass, hay, wheat and other property along the road, and not less than three times, to the roof of the railroad bridge before mentioned. It was also proved by a patentee of one, that no spark-catcher had yet been invented which had proved effectual for the purpose, but that the company had tried many, and had provided its engines at the time with one of the best which had then been produced, and had exercised all practicable care and prudence to prevent the escape of either coals or sparks from their locomotives. The defendant also put in evidence the record of a writ of ad quod damnum and the proceedings thereon, sued out by the company in the year 1838, at the time of the location and original construction of the railroad on its present line through that section of the country, against the guardian of the plaintiff who was then a minor, to condemn and obtain the right of way for it across the farm on which the barn then stood, on the payment of the damages therefor to be assessed by the jury under the writ, and from the return of which it appeared that the jury had assessed the whole of the damages for the right of way across the farm, at the sum of $1800, and from which it also further appeared that included in that amount, the sum of $883, was specially assessed and allowed by the jury in consequence of the peculiar danger to which the barn in question would be exposed by reason of the location and construction of the road in such close proximity to it, and which aggregate amount of damages was paid soon afterward by the company to his guardian, and had been duly accounted for by him as such, to the plaintiff on his attaining his majority. The loss to the plaintiff by the destruction of the barn and its contents, was proved to be about $3000. The claim for damages was $4500.

T. F. Bayard, for the plaintiff. Sic utere tuo ut atienumlœdas non was the legal maxim which should apply in the *Page 451 present case, as well as in all other cases. Employing the dangerous elements of fire and steam, as the company does in the daily transaction of its vast business, imposed upon it the duty and obligation of exercising the utmost care and vigilance and extreme prudence in the conduct and management of them, so as to avoid doing as far as may be possible, any injury to the property of others. It was, therefore, not sufficient for such a company and such a party to prove in a case like this, that it had always endeavored to provide its engines with the best and most approved inventions to prevent the escape of fire or sparks from them, and to prevent the destruction of valuable property, both real and personal, of those who have the misfortune to own such property near the line of their road; and who have, and can have, no possible means of protecting such property from such destruction. But it was also bound to show that they were kept in the best order and condition at all times. It had been ruled in a leading case in England on the subject, that the fact of property being set on fire by sparks emitted from a passing engine on one of the railroads in that country, was prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of the company, which made it incumbent upon it to show that some precaution had been adopted by it reasonably calculated to prevent such accidents. Piggot v. The EasternCounties Railway Company, 54 E. C. L. R. 228. As to the assessment of the damages under the writ of ad quod damnum to the plaintiff through his guardian in 1838, for the right of way through his farm and within thirty feet of the barn in question, with the special allowance by the jury of $883. under it, for the purpose of removing it to a more secure position on the premises, he had only to say that, as the proceeding was under a provision of the charter of the company for procuring the right of way for the construction of the road in such a case, in which it could not be obtained by agreement with the owner of the premises because of infancy of the plaintiff, it was a condition or qualification which they had no authority to prescribe or impose *Page 452 under the writ upon any one, much less upon a minor, and it was, therefore, an absolute nullity in law; and it had been so decided by this court in the case of Vandegrift v. Del. R. R. Co. 2Houst. 287. But independent of that objection, the evidence in the case warranted him in saying that it was not true in point of fact, but that the special allowance indicated by the jury in their return was intended by them to meet the expense of removing a wooden building then adjoining the barn, and still nearer to the line of the projected railroad of the company, and which was in fact removed in a short time thereafter.

Gordon, for the defendant. If it had even been proved that the barn was burnt by a spark from an engine of the company, it would not be responsible to the plaintiff in damages for the loss of it, if it was the result of accident merely, and not the result of negligence on the part of the company or its servants.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferis-v-p-w-b-rr-co-delsuperct-1867.