Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. Brady

17 Kan. 380
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 Kan. 380 (Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. Brady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. Brady, 17 Kan. 380 (kan 1877).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

[381]*381i veraict -when conñicUnjj testimony. [380]*380This was an action brought by John Brady and David F. Easton against the Kansas Pacific Railway Company for alleged negligence in permitting fire to escape from one of the company’s locomotive engines, whereby damage was done to certain property belonging to the plaintiffs. The evidence shows that fire did so escape, and in consequence thereof a hay-stack and a fence around it, both belonging to the plaintiffs, were consumed. The evidence also shows that said engine from which said fire escaped was one of the best of engines, that it was skillfully [381]*381constructed, in good condition, and was provided with the best of appliances and all proper appliances for the prevention of the escape of fire. The best and safest kind of fuel was used, and the engine was managed by a competent and skillful engineer. The fireman also seems to have been competent and skillful, and to have done his duty. But it is claimed that on this particular occasion the engineer was careless and negligent, and regardless of his duty. Whether this is so or not, or rather whether there is sufficient evidence ™ case to show prima facie that the engineer was negligent, is the first question presented in cage_ evidence tending to show that the engineer was negligent is as. follows: At the time said fire occurred, the weather was dry and windy. A very strong wind was blowing from the south. The plaintiffs’ hay-stack was situated about one and one-half or two miles north of the railway. The intervening space was an open prairie, covered with dry grass. The engine from.which the fire escaped was one of the best, and the best of fuel was furnished with which to operate it. Other engines passed that same place under similar circumstances without producing fires; yet this particular engine produced three or four different fires, and perhaps a greater number, and the engineer who had it in charge did not even know that it produced a single fire. Taking this whole evidence together, and we think it is sufficient to make out a prima fade case of negligence ■against the engineer. That the engineer should allow his engine to produce so many fires, amidst surrounding eircum-stances calling for the greatest vigilance on his part to prevent the escape of fife, when a single spark escaping might produce a fire that would spread all over the country and do incalculable damage, and he at the same time not knowing of a single^fire being produced, would seem to indicate very strongly that he was not exercising the greatest vigilance in the performance of his duties. We have given only one side of the evidence with reference to the negligence of the engineer. The evidence tending to show that he was not negli[382]*382gent we have not given, for it was all parol testimony, such as properly goes to the jury for their consideration, and this court does not weigh conflicting parol testimony for the purpose of reversing judgments. This court reverses judgments for insufficiency in the evidence only where the evidence most favorable to the findings made in the court below fails to prove prima fade some material fact necessary to be found in the case in order to uphold such findings, or where such prima fade proof has been rebutted and overcome by that kind of evidence which of itself is conclusive, and whose weight and value belongs to the court to- consider, such as written instruments, documents, and record evidence. The rule would seem to be, that where the verdict of a jury is not sustained by sufficient evidence to make out a prima fade case in favor of such verdict, the judgment founded thereon should in all cases be reversed, provided of .course that the question is properly presented to the supreme court. But where the verdict is sustained by evidence sufficient to make out a prima fade case, and all the evidence against the verdict is merely in parol, the judgment founded upon such verdict should not be reversed unless some ground for reversal is found other than merely that the preponderance of the evidence is against the verdict. The case of the A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Stanford, 12 Kas. 369, is a good illustration of these propositions. In that case the evidence most favorable to the verdict made out a prima fade case in favor of all the material findings of the verdict, but the preponderance of the evidence was clearly against some of the findings, and the judgment in that case was sustained. (See also, K. P. Rly. Co. v. Montelle, 10 Kas. 126, 127; K. P. Rly. Co. v. Kunhel, ante, pp. 146, 168.)

2 contributory negligence. The only other question in this case is, whether the plaintiffs below were guilty of contributory negligence. Or rather, the only other question is, whether there was any evidence te:Qdingto show that the plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence; for if there was'any such evidence, then the court below erred in refusing to submit the [383]*383question of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiffs to the jury. The evidence claimed as tending to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiffs is substantially as follows: The plaintiffs stacked their hay within a mile-and-a-half or two miles of the railroad, on an open prairie which extended all the way from the hay-stack to the railroad, and which was covered with dry grass. The plaintiffs put a fence around the stack, which was also burned. Every season nearly all the country in that vicinity is burned over. The plaintiffs knew that their property was in danger from fire, and that it ought to be protected. They therefore plowed partially around it, but did not plow all around it, and the fire was communicated to the hay-stack over the ground which was not plowed. The plaintiff Easton testifies among other things as follows:

“The hay and fence were burned on the afternoon of the 6th of November 1874, about 3 or 4 o’clock. Witness (Easton) sent his servants to plow around it, but whether they plowed all around it he does not know. There were grass and weeds around the stack. There ought to have been furrows plowed, and a rod between them burnt out, to prevent the fire from communicating. The wind was blowing very hard the day of the fire,” etc.

William Everett testifies among other things as follows:

“It is a common thing for the entire country to be burned over the entire season. Not entirely so this. The growth was not so luxuriant, owing to the drouth. Generally the whole country is burned over every season. I went to the other stacks, [at the time of the fire;] did not go to the plaintiffs’; supposed it was protected.”

John A. Storm testifies among other things as follows:

“He (witness) visited the place where the stack of hay of the plaintiffs was burned. It was plowed partly around, but not all the way, and the fire communicated to the stack over that part of the ground not plowed. Where it had been plowed, which was part on the south side and on the east, the fire had not burned.”

There is nothing in the record that shows when the plaintiff Easton sent his servants to plow around said hay-stack. [384]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Kan. 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-pacific-railway-co-v-brady-kan-1877.