Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. McArthur

173 S.W. 770, 163 Ky. 291, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 216
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 3, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 770 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. McArthur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. McArthur, 173 S.W. 770, 163 Ky. 291, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 216 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Madison Circuit Court entered on the verdict of a jury awardingappellee $4,750 in damages against the appellants, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company and Louisville & [293]*293Atlantic Railroad Company, for the destruction by fire, March 24, 1913, of its machinery, appliances and other property, constituting- a plant for the manufacture of brick, alleged to have been caused by sparks escaping from a locomotive of the appellants.

Appellants sought a new trial in the court below and now ask a reversal of the judgment upon the following grounds: (1) That the trial court erred in refusing to give a peremptory instruction at the conclusion of appellee’s evidence, and again after the introduction of all the evidence, directing a verdict for them; (2) that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (3) that the court erred in instructing- the jury; (1) that the amount of damages awarded by the verdict is grossly excessive.

It is alleged in the petition that the appellant, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, owns the stock, is in control of and operates the railroad and ears of the appellant, Louisville & Atlantic Railroad Company, and these averments are not denied by the joint answer filed by the appellants.

The facts connected with and surrounding the burning of appellee’s brick plant are, in brief, as follows: The property is situated at Searcy, a station on appellants’ railroad in Madison County, at a distance of about fifty feet from the railroad and just east of the top of a long grade which extends from Richmond on the west to this point. There is some dispute as to where the highest point of the grade is located, some of the witnesses saying it is thirty feet and some as much as fifty or sixty feet west of the brick plant.. At any rate, it is safe to say that the top of this long grade is just west of the plant. Some of the evidence tended to show that, in pulling the grade, it was the custom for steam to be shut off from the locomotives just before reaching a point in direct line with the brick plant. Other evidence tended to show that it was not the custom to Shut off the steam until the locomotives got well over the top of the grade. It is not material, however, whether the top of the grade is thirty or sixty feet west of the brick plant, for in pulling a train of the usual number of cars to and over the top of the grade it is altogether reasonable to assume that the application of steam would be necessary until the locomotive gets several times its length over and beyond the top of the grade, and, consequently, beyond the brick plant, in order to pull a suffi[294]*294cient number of tbe cars in tbe rear to where the train would run down grade on the other side without need of the steam’s propelling power. In other words, the bulk of the train load must also pass the divide before the steam of the locomotive can be shut off. This being so, if the locomotive be one from which sparks and cinders can escape, they would necessarily be thrown out by it until it got on a line with or beyond the brick plant.

It is patent from the evidence that the fire by which appellee’s brick plant was destroyed started in the roof of the building or shed covering it, there being at the time an unusually high wind blowing from the railroad toward the plant, and the fire was first discovered twenty minutes after appellants’ engine No.'10, attached to a freight train, passed going eastward. Mrs. Brotherton discovered the fire from the front porch of her residence, which was situated on the opposite side of the railroad from the brick plant and at a distance of 150 yards therefrom. She had seen the freight train pass twenty minutes earlier and observed that the locomotive was loudly puffing and emitting a great quantity of smoke in reach» ing and crossing the top of the grade. Upon discovering the fire she immediately gave the alarm, and Robert Brotherton and others went to the fire, but it rapidly gained such headway that nothing could he done to extinguish it or save the plant.

It conclusively appears that no one was at the time of the discovery of the fire in or about the building; that there had been no fire in or around it for five or six months, probably longer, and that the weather was extremely dry. According to the further testimony of the witness, Mrs. Brotherton, engine No. 10, with which she claimed to be familiar from so often seeing it pass her residence, disappeared from the railroad immediately after that fire and was not again brought into use on the railroad for a month or more, and that when it returned it was newly painted.

T. S. Brotherton also testified that he was in the employ of appellee as watchman for the brick plant and was so engaged at the time of the fire; that it was his custom to inspect the plant three times a day; that the property was in good condition on the day of the fire, with the exception of one or two leaks in the roof, against which the machinery in the building was fully protected; that the wind on the day of the fire was blow[295]*295ing from the railroad track toward the brick plant and was as hard as he ever felt or heard it. He also testified that appellants’ locomotives threw out at night large quantities of sparks and cinders in the vicinity of the brick plant just before and just after the fire, and that on one occasion a cinder fell on his hand and burned it; that locomotive No. 10 threw out sparks and cinders in passing the brick plant at night about the time it was burned; that locomotive No. 10 was not in use by appellants for a considerable time after the brick plant was burned, and when he saw it after such interval of non-use it was newly painted. It appears from appellants’ evidence that this locomotive was in the Eichmond shops for some kind of repairs March 8-14-16, 1913, but a few days before the fire, and it was not ih use on the road from the date of the fire until April 19,1913. These facts give some corroboration to appellee’s evidence that its condition was so defective as to permit the escape of sparks at the time the brick plant was burned.

E. J. Brotherton testified that he saw locomotive No. 10 as it passed the brick plant just before the fire, and that it was then puffing and laboring greatly in reaching the top of the grade; that this locomotive and others belonging to appellants were accustomed to throw out large quantities of smoke and cinders in passing the brick plant, and that cinders and sparks could plainly be seen at night. In addition to the three Brothertons mentioned, appellee introduced as a witness James Detheridge, who testified, in substance, that he had often, near the time of the fire, and both before and after its occurrence, seen locomotives in passing the brick plant at night emit quantities of sparks and cinders.

On the other hand, appellants introduced nine witnesses, four of whom knew nothing about the origin of the fire, or whether appellants’ locomotive, in passing the brick plant twenty minutes before it started, did or did not emit sparks. Two of the four witnesses referred to, Douglass and Daugherty, only testified as to the value of the property destroyed. The third witness, Hills, gave testimony as to the kind of spark arresters used by appellants upon their locomotives, and that they were of the most modern and approved quality.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 770, 163 Ky. 291, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-mcarthur-kyctapp-1915.