Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. New England Fire Ins.

133 F.2d 973, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3927
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 3, 1943
DocketNo. 12415
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 F.2d 973 (Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. New England Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. New England Fire Ins., 133 F.2d 973, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3927 (8th Cir. 1943).

Opinion

RIDDICK, Circuit Judge.

The appellant railway company leased a tract of land adjacent to the right <?f way of its railroad in Gentry, Arkansas, to Johnson and Steele, the members of a partnership doing business as the Spring-dale Canning Company, for use by the lessees as a site for a canning factory, all buildings erected for that purpose by lessees to have the approval of the chief engineer of the railway company and to be maintained during the term of the lease to the satisfaction of the railway company. Section 24 of the lease provided: “The Lessee agrees to indemnify the Railway Company and save it harmless from any and all claims and expenses that may arise or may be made for death, injury, loss or damage resulting to the Railway Company’s employees or property, or to other persons or their property, by reason or in consequence of the occupancy or use of said premises by the Lessee.”

Concurrently with the execution of the lease, the parties to it entered into an industry track agreement, providing for the construction and operation of a sidetrack to serve the canning plant to be erected upon the leased premises. In this contract the lessees agreed to pay the railway company a fixed annual charge for maintenance of a part of the spur track and the cost of certain repairs and replacements. The railway company agreed to bear the expense of maintaining the rest of the sidetrack and to operate it. All maintenance work was to be done by employees of the railway company and the title of the track was to remain in the railway company, which reserved the right to use it for any general railway purpose.

The agreement contained the following provision: “It is understood that the movement of railroad locomotives involves some risk of fire, and the Industry assumes all responsibility for and agrees to indemnify the Railway Company against loss or damage to property of the Industry or to property upon its premises, arising from fire caused by locomotives operated by the Railway Company on said sidetrack, or in its vicinity for the purpose of serving said Industry, except to the premises of the Railway Company and to rolling stock belonging to the Railway Company, or to others, and to shipments in the course of transportation.”

The track constructed under this agreement extended across the premises leased to the canning company,' the right-of-way for the track being excluded from the premises leased. The consideration for the lease was the payment of a small annual rental and the agreement to give the railway company preference in routing shipments of the canning company’s products. The consideration for the industrial track was the maintenance agreement, and the obligation of the canning company to give preference to the railway company in shipments and to operate its canning plant during the term of the industrial track contract.

The warehouse and canning plant erected by the canning company upon the leased premises were destroyed by fire. They were insured against such loss by the appellee, New England Fire Insurance Company, which paid to the canning company the amount of the loss covered by its policies, and joined with the partners in a suit against the railway company to recover for appellee the amount paid by it under its policies, and for the partners, the excess of the loss sustained over the amount of insurance paid. There was a judgment in favor of the appellee insurance company against the railway company, and in favor of the railway company against the individual plaintiffs.

The evidence shows that about one hour before the discovery of the fire in the canning plant, which at that time was not in operation b'ut contained in its warehouse the products of the previous season’s work, the railway company’s section crew had been engaged in renewing the cross-ties in the sidetrack constructed to serve the canning plant, and in burning cross-ties along the railroad line in the vicinity of the canning plant. The foreman of the railway’s section crew testified that while his crew was engaged in the work on the sidetrack, he burned the grass on part of the premises leased by the railway to the canning factory. Other members of the crew did not testify. The nearest point of the burned area was 49 feet from the northwest corner of the canning plant. The foreman stated that no cross-ties were burned nearer than 130 yards of the buildings. In his opinion it would have been im[975]*975possible for sparks from any of the fires set out by the section crew to hav-e ignited the canning plant. Witnesses for the plaintiff, on the other hand, testified that upon arrival at the fire, they found a pile of old cross-ties, removed from the sidetrack, burning near the canning plant buildings, that grass had been burned along the spur track adjacent to the buildings, that the ends of certain cross-ties in the spur track were on fire, and that the wind was blowing from the fires toward the canning plant. This testimony was contradicted by other witnesses for the railway company. The warehouse, canning factory, engine house, office building, and machinery of the canning factory were destroyed by fire and the stock of canned merchandise was damaged.

For reversal of the judgment against it, the railway company relies on Section 24 of the lease contract, contending that this section exempts the railway company from liability in the circumstances revealed by the proof in this case; and upon the contention that the evidence failed to show that the fire which destroyed the canning factory resulted from acts of appellant’s employees in connection with the operation of appellant’s railroad.

In preparing the record on appeal, appellant included only those paragraphs of the lease and industrial agreement which it thought material. Appellee printed and filed the complete contracts. We are asked by the appellant to strike appellee’s supplemental record. These contracts came into the record on a motion of the appellant in the court below to make the complaint more definite and certain by setting out the instruments in question. They were introduced in evidence. The complete agreements cannot be said to be unnecessary to the presentation of the case. The motion to strike is without merit and is denied.

Railroad companies in Arkansas, by statute, are liable for all loss or damage resulting from fire caused by the operation of the railroad, or by acts of any of their employees engaged in the course of their employment. Pope’s Digest of the Laws of Arkansas, § 11147. By the statute in question, liability is imposed upon the railroad company for damage resulting from fires so caused, without regard to the negligence of its servants or employees. The effect of the statute is to make railroad companies insurers against loss or damage by fire caused by the operation of their roads. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern R. Co. v. Clements, 82 Ark. 3, 99 S.W. 1106; Clark v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern R. Co., 132 Ark. 257, 201 S.W. 111; Kansas City Southern R. Co. v. Cecil, 171 Ark. 34, 283 S.W. 1; Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Barnes, 197 Ark. 199, 121 S.W.2d 896; Lowden et al. v. Shoffner Merc. Co., 8 Cir., 109 F.2d 956. Liability under the statute results where loss or damage is caused by a fire arising from any step in the operation of the railroad.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 F.2d 973, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-southern-ry-co-v-new-england-fire-ins-ca8-1943.