Southern Ry. Co. v. Ross

110 So. 369, 215 Ala. 293, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
Docket8 Div. 798.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 So. 369 (Southern Ry. Co. v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Ry. Co. v. Ross, 110 So. 369, 215 Ala. 293, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 416 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

This is an action by W. T. Ross and others, late partners under the name of Ross & Nagle Lumber Company, against the Southern Railway Company, a corporation, to recover damages for the destruction by fire of certain pine lumber, piled on its right of way near or at Chisca Station, about 20 or 30 feet from the switch track. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs. This appeal is by the defendant from a judgment thereon by the court.

There are three counts in the complaint as amended. Demurrers to each were overruled by the court. The defendant insists that each count is defective in so far as it fails to show “that the alleged damages proximately resulted from the "negligence of defendant’s servants, agents, or employees.”

Count 1 charges:

“The defendant, its servants, agents or employees, while acting within the line or scope of their emplyoment, negligently set fire to and damaged or destroyed certain lumber to the amount of 137,334 feet more or less.”

This sufficiently avers the damage “proximately” resulted from the negligence of defendant, its servants, etc. This count is sub *295 stantially the same as count 2 in Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co. v. Loveman, 196 Ala. 684, 72 So. 311, which was practically approved in the opinion as stating a cause of action.

Count 2 of this complaint alleges:

“Which said lumber was damaged or destroyed by fire communicated .to it by sparks emitted from the engine or locomotive operated by the defendant; and plaintiff alleges that said fire was communicated from said engine or locomotive to said lumber through the negligence of the defendant, its servants or agents and destroyed or damaged said lumber to the great damage of plaintiff in' the sum of $2,000 as aforesaid.”

These averments clearly show the damages claimed “proximately” resulted from the negligence of the defendant, its servants, etc. And this count 2 follows substantially count 2 in Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co. v. Planters, in 153 Ala. 242, headnote 3, page 262, 45 So. 82. See, also, Alabama Great Southern Railroad Co. v. Taylor, 129 Ala. 238, 29 So. 673.

Count 3 contains the following averments:

“That on’, to wit, the 2d day of July, 1921, certain pine lumber belonging to the plaintiffs at Ohisca, Ala., was burned by reason of a fire communicated to it from the right of way of said defendant, and the plaintiffs allege that said fire was caught by negligence of the defendant, in that it negligently allowed dry grass and combustible matter to accumulate on its said right of way, to which fire was communicated from the engine of said defendant company, and thence to plaintiffs’ property, destroying it, to the damage of plaintiffs as aforesaid.”

This sufficiently shows the damage claimed “proximately” resulted from the negligence of defendant, its servants, etc. This count is sufficient under authority of Southern Railway Co. v. Dickens, 161 Ala. 144, headnote 4, 49 So. 766. See, also, L. & N. R. Co. v. Miller, 109 Ala. 505, headnote 1, 19 So. 989.

So we must and do hold the court did not err in overruling the mentioned .ground of demurrer to each count No. 1, 2, and 3 of the complaint. The defendant pleaded the general issue.

Plaintiffs asked Cochran, one of their witnesses, this question:

“Had you at that time or near that time seen other fires near this place and about this same time along the right pf way of the Southern Railway Company?”

He answered, “Yes, sir.” And on cross-examination, he testified:

“1 said I saw other fires at different times; let’s see, just a short time before that I saw a fire, It must not have been a year. It was not as long as a year I know. I could not say exactly, it must have been more than a month. I do not think really it was a month since we had put a fire out la front of the house that had caught from a train in passing. The fire started from the grass which was not green. I reckon this was in June.”

Plaintiffs asked Geise, one of their witnesses, this question:

“At this place and about this time did you notice other fires along the right of way of defendant’s track which had been set out by trains?”

He answered:

“I know that the trains caught the grass on lire all up and down the track along there near the same place.”

This witness, on cross-examination, stated:

“I just could not tell you how long before that fire since I had seen another fire. I have seen them a good deal. I was apt to see them most any time. .That is a frequent thing along there for the railroad to set the grass on fire in the summer and fall. I do not know how long it was before the Ross Nagle fire that I had seen another fire. I do not know whether it was the same year or not. The weather was dry at the time I saw the fire along there.”

Plaintiffs asked Rutland, their witness, a similar question, and he stated:

“I have seen fires along there at different times, but just exactly when or how before I could not say; * * * somewhere along there about that time.”

On cross-examination the witness said:

“I saw another fire than the Ross fire within a year of the Ross fire. It was during that summer. I do not know the other fires were set out by trains; I could not say for sure.”

The defendant objected separately to each of the foregoing questions, and moved to exclude all of the answers separately. The court overruled the objections to the questions and the motions to exclude the answers, and the defendant duly excepted to each ruling of the court. These rulings of the court are assigned separately by appellant, and each is insisted on in brief, but they are treated together by appellant, as it states:

“Since they present so- nearly the same legal proposition, for the sake of brevity, we deem it advisable to treat them together.”

It appears from the evidence that three engines of the defendant passed that station, Ohisca, that night, between 8 and 10 o’clock— all before the fire was discovered and within sufficient time to have set out the fire. Under the evidence it was uncertain, not definite and direct, whether the fire that caused the destruction of the lumber came from the engine of the freight train, local, passenger train, or the fast Memphis special of defendant, which passed there between those hours, or whether the fire came from some other source. There was positive .testimony that sparks were thrown from one of these engines, as it passed this lumber, which were large enough to-be seen for a quarter of a mile, the witness seeing *296 them being that far from them. And there was evidence that one of these engines stopped near this lumber, and, “as it started off, it was throwing sparks.” There was other testimony that an “engine as it passed was throwing out sparks.” One witness for plaintiff, an engineer on one of these engines, testified:

“If the engine is in good condition it won’t throw sparks.”

He also stated:

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 369, 215 Ala. 293, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-ry-co-v-ross-ala-1926.