Mills v. Crawford

822 S.W.2d 548, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 99, 1992 WL 3499
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1992
DocketNo. 17494
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 822 S.W.2d 548 (Mills v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. Crawford, 822 S.W.2d 548, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 99, 1992 WL 3499 (Mo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

PARRISH, Judge.

Ralph Mills and Ielane Mills (plaintiffs) sued Jerry Crawford (defendant) for defendant’s alleged negligence in “burning brush, wood, grass, leaves and undergrowth on his property” and leaving “the fire unattended, thereby negligently allowing it to spread onto the property of plaintiffs.” Plaintiffs claimed damages for “approximately fifty acres of plaintiffs’ improved pasture land and hay fields [that] was [sic] burned and destroyed” and for “approximately one mile of plaintiffs’ fence [that] was burned and destroyed.” The case was tried before a jury. The jury rendered its verdict in favor of plaintiffs and assessed damages in the amount of $3,500. The trial court entered judgment in accordance with the verdict. Defendant appeals. This court reverses and remands.

Defendant presents three points on appeal. He contends the trial court erred in admitting evidence that fires had occurred on defendant’s property at times other than on January 11, 1990. He further contends that the trial court erred in failing to direct a verdict for defendant at the close of all the evidence and in not granting his Motion for New Trial for the reason that plaintiffs failed to submit sufficient evidence to make a submissible case. As his third point on appeal, defendant contends that the trial court erred in submitting plaintiffs’ verdict-directing instruction, Instruction No. 8, in that the instruction “failed to set forth all [549]*549the ultimate facts, issues, or elements necessary to sustain a verdict.”

Because this appeal includes a claim that plaintiffs failed to make a sub-missible case, a full review of the evidence is required. In its review of the evidence, this court accepts as true “all facts established by substantial evidence which tend to support plaintiffs’] right to recover.” Sprague v. Riley, 427 S.W.2d 263, 264 (Mo.App.1968). Reasonable inferences will be drawn from evidence favorable to plaintiffs’ theory of recovery. Id. To the extent that defendant’s evidence tends to defeat plaintiffs’ claim, it will be rejected. Id. Further, the judgment, having been based upon a jury verdict, is not to be overturned unless there is an absence of probative facts to support the verdict. Massey-Ferguson Credit Corp. v. Black, 764 S.W.2d 137, 145 (Mo.App.1989).

Defendant owns real estate in Oregon County that adjoins real estate owned by plaintiffs. On January 11, 1990, a fire burned approximately forty acres of pasture and timber on plaintiffs’ property. The fire originated on defendant’s property, north of plaintiffs’ property. It began at a location on defendant’s property north of a county road. The county road bisects defendant’s land. The fire burned to the county road. It crossed the road and burned across a strip of defendant’s land that lay between the road and plaintiffs’ property. The fire continued onto plaintiffs’ property. It burned the pasture and timber about which plaintiffs complained in their suit against defendant.

The weather on January 11 was dry and windy. Defendant was having some farm ponds cleaned by the use of a bulldozer operated by Rusty Mooney. “In the middle of the day or the late morning,” Mr. Mooney saw smoke “probably a hundred and fifty (150) yards or two hundred (200)” from where he was working. At the time he saw the smoke, Mr. Mooney was working on a farm pond located near the county road that bisects defendant’s property. He had cleaned one or two ponds earlier. After Mr. Mooney saw the smoke, defendant drove up in his pickup. Defendant told Mr. Mooney to try to put out the fire. The two of them went to the location of the fire. The fire was beginning to bum on the south side of the road that crossed defendant’s property by the time he and Mr. Mooney got there. Mr. Mooney testified:

We went down and it’d crossed the road. It looked like it was just startin’ on the south side. We took the dozer and went over there and started tryin’ to put it out. The wind was blowin’ and it was jumpin’ across where we’d made a deal and we couldn’t do nothin’ with it on the south side.

They were unable to extinguish the fire. Defendant told Mr. Mooney that “he was gonna go get some help.” Mr. Mooney continued to fight the fire. He worked several hours attempting to cut a fire path with the bulldozer.

Other persons arrived at the fire and helped fight it. Tommy Loyd lived “about a mile and a half on the same road” from plaintiffs’ property. On January 11 he was returning to his home when he saw smoke in the direction where his house was located. He met his son en route and was told that the fire was located on defendant’s property. Mr. Loyd went to the site of the fire. When he arrived the fire was on the north side of the road. He saw defendant standing alongside a bulldozer. The bulldozer operator was seated on the machine. Mr. Loyd asked about the fire. Defendant told him, “That road will stop it.” Mr. Loyd then drove down the road along the area that was burning. He saw two small places where the fire had jumped the road. He again met his son on the-roadway and told the son to go home and get some broom rakes. He returned to where defendant was. Along the way back he observed four places where the fire had jumped the road. Mr. Loyd reported the fact to defendant that he had seen four places where the fire had crossed the road and that he had sent his son to get broom rakes. Defendant told the bulldozer operator to cross the road and try to stop the fire.

Shortly thereafter, the bulldozer operator returned and told defendant he could [550]*550not get around the fire. Defendant replied, “I’m goin’ after something to fight it with.” Defendant went to his house to get rakes. As defendant arrived at his house, Andy Blankenship was arriving.

Mr. Blankenship owned property that he described as “lay[ing] next to [defendant].” They shared a common boundary line along “[t]hree-quarters of a mile.” He had observed smoke as he was returning to his home from the town of Alton. Mr. Blankenship went to his house, got a sandwich to eat on his way to the fire, and drove to defendant’s house. Mr. Blankenship got out of his vehicle and asked defendant “if he needed any help there.” He testified:

Q. Did he tell you he did?
A. He said the fire had jumped the road on ’em over there.
Q. He said what?
A. It had jumped the road on ’em over there and got away from ’em.
Q. So what did you then do?
A. I got in my truck and went on around to where the fire was.
Q. Did he follow you or did he go in front of you or what?
A. He was gettin’ rakes or tools or som-ethin’ there and I went on and he come on over there after that.

Mr. Loyd saw defendant at the fire later that day. Defendant was fighting the fire.

Defendant testified that on the day the fire occurred, he “was cleaning out ponds with a bulldozer.” He testified that he and Rusty Mooney had finished one pond and had gone to another. The pond they had finished was “probably a quarter of a mile” from the one that was “by the side of the road.” He testified:

Q. Tell the jury the direction you took.

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Bluebook (online)
822 S.W.2d 548, 1992 Mo. App. LEXIS 99, 1992 WL 3499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-crawford-moctapp-1992.