Riggins v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

208 Mo. App. 26
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 208 Mo. App. 26 (Riggins v. Missouri Pacific Railroad) 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
Riggins v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 208 Mo. App. 26 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BRADLEY, J.

— Plaintiffs, husband and wife, sued to recover for the loss of their house and contents alleged to have been set on fire by sparks from a locomotive engine of defendant. The cause was tried to a jury and plaintiffs recovered. Unsuccessful in motion for new trial, defendant appealed.

The evidence is wholly circumstantial. Plaintiffs’ house, a four room frame, stood on the east side and about 260 feet from defendant’s track. There was a low or valley like place between the track and the house. The house stood on a hillside, but the railroad track was somewhat higher than the foundation of the house. The smokestack of defendant’s locomotive on the track di[29]*29rectly opposite the house would, according to plaintiff’s evidence, he a few feet higher than the top of the house. The house on the side next to the track was covered with shingles, and these were somewhat old and dry. The other side of the roof was rubberoid. There were two flues to tbe house, one tbe kitchen stove flue which was on tbe east side of tbe bouse, another flue was on tbe west side next to tbe track. Tbe bouse burned between five and six o’clock in tbe afternoon of April 21, 1920. There bad been no fire that day in the' stove in tbe room next to tbe track. A fire bad been in tbe cook stove at tbe noon hour — a big fire, Mrs. Riggins testified — but bad gone out. Tbe wind was blowing rather bard from tbe west to tbe east, or from the track towards tbe bouse. No one was in or about tbe bouse at the time tbe fire started, except two small children who were in bed. Mrs. Riggins was in a meadow north of tbe bouse, some 400 yards away when the train passed. Immediately after tbe train passed she noticed that tbe house was on fire at tbe end toward tbe railroad track and opposite from the kitchen flue. She ran to tbe bouse and got out the children. She stated tbe outside of tbe house, presumably roof is meant, burned first.

Defendant’s evidence shows that on tbe day plaintiff’s bouse was burned that its train passed over tbe track west of plaintiff’s house just prior to tbe fire on tbe way from Neelyville to Doniphan; that for some mile or more before reaching plaintiff’s bouse and on beyond tbe bouse toward Doniphan its track is down grade, and that when its train passed down this grade it was coasting, that the steam was not working, and that no sparks were escaping. That tbe engine was equipped with a spark arrester in good condition and that with tbe engine so equipped, and on tbe down grade, and not working the steam, no sparks could have been emitted or escaped. Defendant’s evidence tended to show also that the wind was from the south or southwest. Tbe trees and vegetation to the north of tbe bouse were scorched and burned more than anywhere [30]*30else about the burned house. A small wooden smoke house with shingle roof stood about 40 feet east of the house and was not burned. Defendant’s brakeman was in the baggage car, and as the train passed plaintiffs’ place he stepped to the door and says that he saw smoke coming out from the house as the train passed. He saw Mrs. Riggins in the meadow, waved at her and threw out a paper for her. The fireman testified that as they passed he saw smoke coming from the house. All the train crew testified that the train was coasting as it passed the house, and was not working the steam. Plaintiffs, over defendant’s objection and exception, showed that the next morning as the train went out from Doniphan that it set fire to some grass on plaintiffs’ premises, north of the burned house, but about the same distance from the track. Defendant meets this evidence by saying that this was on the up grade, and when the engine was working the steam.

The defendant assigns as error the refusal of the court to direct a verdict in its favor, and in admitting certain evidence over its objection.

In considering the demurrer we consider as true every material fact which plaintiffs’ evidence tends to establish and every reasonable inference deducible therefrom. Plaintiffs established, therefore, that their house was burned; that defendant’s train passed just before the house was discovered to be on fire by Mrs. Riggins; that the fire was first discovered “at the comer of the front part of the house, ’ ’ next to the railro.ad, and away from any flue; that the wind was strong and was blowing from the railroad track toward the house. It was not shown that the train was emitting any sparks as it passed the house, or near the house, or that any engine at any time had emitted sparks passing down this grade in the neighborhood of this house, or anywhere else on this grade when the train was coasting, and not working the steam. It was shown that sometimes the fire box was shaken down when coasting down this grade and that when this was done live coals and [31]*31cinders fell a distance of a few inches to the space between the ties. Bnt there is no showing that such occurred on the occasion when plaintiffs’ house was burned, or that if it had occurred that it was within the realm of reasonable probability or possibility that one of the cinders so dropped from the fire box could have been picked up and carried by the wind to plaintiffs’ house. Plaintiffs were not required to establish by direct evidence that their, house was set on fire from sparks or cinders from defendant’s locomotive engine, but they were required to establish facts from which a reasonable inference is deductible that the house was so set on fire. Unless such facts were established the demurrer should have been sustained. [Gibbs v. Railroad, 104 Mo. App. 276, 78 S. W. 835.] The probative force of the evidence must be strong enough to induce in the minds of reasonable men, the jury, that the fire in fact originated from one of defendant’s locomotive engines. It is not sufficient that it might have so originated. [Big River Lead Company v. Railroad, 123 Mo. App. 394, 101 S. W. 636; Taylor v. Lusk, 194 Mo. App. 133, l. c. 139, 187 S. W. 87; Railroad v. Richardson, 91 U. S. 470.]

In Gibbs v. Railroad, supra, the destroyed house, a hotel, was in the town of Leasburg, and stood about fifty feet from the railroad. The house faced the track and was a story and a half hig'h with a porch in front, which porch extended around the corner a short distance. A sign board was fastened to the roof of the porch, but there was evidence that this sign had blown over and was lying on the porch roof. It was claimed that the fire started from a cinder from a locomotive engine catching against the sign. The fire was discovered about 1 o ’clock A. M. and at that time was burning on the northeast corner of the porch roof in a patch about one and one-half feet wide, and from two to three feet long, close to, if not in contact with, the roof. There were fires in the house early in the evening in three stoves. ' One of these was a king heater which was filed [32]*32with, wood when the family retired. Other fact asppear in the opinion which brought forth from the court the remark that such facts argued that the house was on fire in the inside when the fire was discovered on the roof. The train had passed three or four minutes before the fire was discovered. Discussing this case and the facts the court said: “Equally important is the lack of evidence to make the proof of defendant’s responsibility at all satisfactory. There was no testimony that the train which passed immediately before the discovery of the fire threw out sparks, and no evidence tending to prove it did, except the statement of Mary Gibbs that it seemed to be a heavily loaded train and the fact that the track runs through Leasburg on a rising grade. No witness saw the train.

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Related

Grand Trunk Railroad v. Richardson
91 U.S. 454 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Peffer v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
71 S.W. 1073 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
Bates County Bank v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
73 S.W. 286 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
Taylor v. Lusk
187 S.W. 87 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1916)
Walker v. Stoddard
31 Mo. 123 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1860)
Campbell v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
25 L.R.A. 175 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1894)
Matthews v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
44 S.W. 802 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1898)
Fritz v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co.
148 S.W. 74 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1912)
Gibbs v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad
78 S.W. 835 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1904)
Big River Lead Co. v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railroad
101 S.W. 636 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
Manning v. Cape Girardeau & Chester Railway Co.
119 S.W. 464 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1909)
Hudspeth v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad
155 S.W. 868 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
208 Mo. App. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riggins-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-moctapp-1921.