Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Middlecoff

37 N.E. 660, 150 Ill. 27
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 660 (Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Middlecoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Middlecoff, 37 N.E. 660, 150 Ill. 27 (Ill. 1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action on the case, brought by Jonathan Middlecoff and four others, copartners, etc., for their own use and for the use of certain insurance companies, against the Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company, to recover damages for the destruction by a fire caused by sparks emitted from one of the defendant’s locomotive engines, of a certain canning factory and the appurtenances and machinery therein. At the trial the jury found the defendant guilty and assessed the plaintiffs’ damages at $8900, and for that sum and costs the plaintiff had judgment. That judgment, on appeal to the Appellate Court, was affirmed, and this appeal is from the judgment of affirmance.

The facts being settled adversely to the defendant by the judgment of the Appellate Court, we must assume that the evidence warranted the jury in finding that the building and property in question were destroyed by a fire caused as alleged; that the sparks or coals from which the fire originated escaped from the engine through the defendant’s negligence, either in the construction, equipment, repair or management of its engine, and that the plaintiffs were not guilty of any negligence contributing to the loss. The facts therefore need not be considered or stated, except so far as may be necessary to a proper understanding of the rulings of the trial court in the admission and exclusion of evidence and in the instructions to the jury of which complaint is made. Eor the proper elucidation of the questions thus raised, the facts may be briefly stated as follows:

The canning factory in question was situated on the northerly side of Holmes street in the city of Paxton, and was built in the summer of 1888, by the Paxton Canning Company, a corporation, in which the plaintiffs were stockholders and the owners of a majority of the stock. Holmes street is one of the public streets of Paxton, running from the south-east to the north-west, and having a width of about eighty-five feet. The main track of the defendant’s railroad runs along the center of the street, and shortly after the erection of the canning factory, a side track was built by the defendant at the instance of the canning company and for its accommodation, diverging from the main-track at a point a few hundred feet easterly of the canning factory, and running thence westerly near the northerly line of the street and terminating a few feet west of the factory. In the construction of this side-track, the canning company did the grading and furnished the ties, but does not seem to have made any claim of ownership of the side-track. At the point where the canning factory stood, the northerly rail of the side-track was eight and one-half feet from the southerly wall of the factory building, and the space between the side-track and main-track was twenty-three feet and four inches. No other tracks were on the street, but the space between the two tracks had not been leveled up or fitted for travel with wagons.

The business of the canning company not having been financially successful, and the corporation having a large indebtedness, all of which had been guaranteed by the stockholders in proportion to the amount of stock held by them respectively, the company, in the early part of 1891, sold and conveyed the factory with its appurtenances to the plaintiffs at an agreed price, and during the canning season of the year 1891, the business of the factory was carried on by them.

The evidence tends to show that, during the summer of 1891, weeds and grass had been permitted to grow on the street in the space between the two tracks, and also on the side-track, and that on October 28, 1891, the day of the fire, dry weeds, grass and other combustible material was permitted to be and remain, both in the space between the two tracks and on the side-track. A few minutes before two o’clock in the afternoon of the day last mentioned, an engine on the defendant’s railroad drawing a passenger train left the station at Paxton going west. The canning factory was within the city of Paxton and near its westerly boundary, and about 2700 feet westerly from the passenger station. The train that day was about two hours late, and was running at about twenty-five miles per hour as it passed the canning factory, and was rapidly increasing its speed. Some ten or fifteen minutes after the train had passed, as the testimony of several of the witnesses tends to show, smoke was seen to arise from the dry grass and weeds on the side-track in front of the factory, and the fire thus set soon after was carried to the factory and destroyed a large part of the property.

The first point made is, that there is a material variance between the plaintiff’s declaration and the proofs, in this, that while the declaration alleges that the buildings and property destroyed were situated on block 46 in Mix’s addition to Paxton, the evidence shows that the buildings extended some four feet over into the street. To this objection there are two sufficient answers. The declaration contains several counts, and while the first count alleges that the buildings, stood on block 46, the other counts contain-no such allegation. If then there is a variance between the description of the property in the first count and the proof, such variance does not apply to the other counts, and the recovery may be sustained under those counts. In the next place, at the beginning of the trial it was admitted by both parties, among other things, “that plaintiffs’ property known as the canning establishment fronts upon Holmes street, and is situated on block 46 of Mix’s addition to Paxton. ” After such admission, the defendant can not insist that the property was situated otherwise than as thus admitted.

It follows from the same reasons that the court properly refused to instruct the jury, at the instance of the defendant, that if any part of the buildings destroyed were in Holmes street, then as to such part, the plaintiffs- could not recover; or did not err in instructing the jury, at the instance of the plaintiffs, that if they believed from the evidence that some of the buildings destroyed extended into the street, that fact could not of itself prevent the plaintiffs from recovering for the property so on the street, provided they believed from the evidence that the fact of their so extending into the street did not of itself contribute to the setting or spreading of the fire.

It is next insisted that the court erred in admitting in evidence an ordinance of the city of Paxton limiting the speed of passenger trains within the city to ten miles an hour. One-count of the declaration set out this ordinance and alleged that by means thereof the sparks were thrown from the engine which set fire to the plaintiffs’ property. We are able to see no good reason why this ordinance should not have been admitted, especially in view of the evidence tending to show that a high rate of speed was more likely to result in the emission of sparks or coals from the engine.

The plaintiffs’ counsel also offered in evidence the ordinance of the city of Paxton granting to a railway company, of which the defendant is the successor, the right to lay its track in Holmes street, and imposing upon it certain burdens in relation to keeping the street in repair, etc. This ordinance was objected to on the ground that it was not set up or pleaded by the plaintiffs in their declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 660, 150 Ill. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-erie-western-railroad-v-middlecoff-ill-1894.