Sutton v. . Herrin

163 S.E. 578, 202 N.C. 599, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 13, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 578 (Sutton v. . Herrin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutton v. . Herrin, 163 S.E. 578, 202 N.C. 599, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 164 (N.C. 1932).

Opinion

ClakksoN, J.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the defendants made motion for judgment as in case of nonsuit. The court granted the motion and in this we can see no error.

C. S., 4309, N. C. Code, 1931 (Michie), in part is as follows: “If any person shall intentionally set fire to any grassland, brush land or woodland, except it be his own property, or in that case without first giving notice to all persons owning or in charge of land adjoining the land intended to be fired,” etc.

This action is brought by the plaintiff to recover property damage, due to fire, which plaintiff alleges was negligently set out by the defendants, or their employees, or intentionally set out without giving notice to adjoining landowners, contrary to the statute, supra, and from which fire the plaintiff’s property was damaged.

This statute is one of importance and has been frequently construed by this Court. The language is plain, but we think that the only material question involved in this action is: Was the evidence of the plaintiff of sufficient probative force to entitle plaintiff to have her case submitted to the jury on the issues• arising on the pleadings? We think not.

The plaintiff is a widow. Her 8-room house and outhouses were destroyed by fire on 27 February, 1930. Also about 30 acres of her cleared land burned over. The Gore estate land, on which defendants were cultivating the turpentine trees adjoined her lands on the north and west. The fire started from the west. She testified, in part: “The *602 burning extended from my bouse out across on the north and on the west. I had a conversation with the defendant, Herrin. He said he did not put the fire out, that he had told his employees — that he had not had any fire out in three days, that he had told his employees on account of the dry weather not to put any fire in the woods. He said there was a hunter around through the woods. He said he had not put any fire out in three days, and he had warned his men not to do it on account of the dry weather. I never received any' notice from Mr. Her-rin or the Naval Stores Company they were going to put'out a fire. . . . The house was not occupied at the time of the fire. It had been vacant from November, 1929.”

J. E. Brantley, witness for plaintiff, testified, in part: “The fire that burned up Mrs. Sutton’s house was set in the fork of the branch. (Mr. Hackler) Did you see it set? Answer: No, sir, but I saw where it was set. (The court) That is a conclusion. . . . Q. What did you find at that point? Answer: Well, I found horse tracks where a fellow got down and tied his horse and where he walked around there after the fire burned over. The tracks were in the fire-burned area. I went back to the most northerly part of the burning. I found the tracks in the most northerly part of the burning. There were turpentine trees there. Out on the ridge had been burned off clean for a week or ten days before, and where this fire was there were pine burs and stumps burning, and that was a mighty short distance from where I first saw the fire. I mean by a short distance not over one or two hundred yards. I trailed the horse further up the swamp and found the same performance in the meadow. I saw.where it was burned out. It was a fresh fire. Saw a man’s track and a horse’s track. I had, a conversation with Mr. Herrin immediately after the fire. He' said he had no one in there but his woods rider. . . . The place where I saw the tracks was not a public road or path. From that point I traced the fire.”

C. J. Hunt, testified, in part: “Court: Did you say.he got off and fired up that place ? Answer: I would not swear positively; all I know, a man tied his horse and walked over there. I did not see the horse, I saw the tracks, and at the place I saw the horse’s tracks I saw man’s tracks. I would not swear the man’s tracks were large. They were large horse tracks, but I did not pay any attention to the other. Q. How far up in the woods above the marsh was the place where you say you saw the horse tracks? Answer: In a fresh burned place. I would term it a half mile from the center of the marsh. You could not go in there. That wás mud. That was land that Mr. Herrin was cultivating turpentine on.”

In 23 C. I., sec. 1795, at pp. 51-2, we find: “A verdict or finding must rest upon facts proved, or at least upon facts of which there is *603 substantial evidence, and cannot rest upon mere surmise, speculation, conjecture or-suspicion. There must be legal evidence of every material fact necessary to support the verdict or finding, and such verdict or finding must be grounded on a reasonable certainty as'to probabilities arising from a fair consideration of the evidence, and not a mere guess, or on possibilities.” S. v. Johnson, 199 N. C., 429; Denny v. Snow, 199 N. C., at p. 774; Shuford v. Scruggs, 201 N. C., 685.

It is the settled rule and accepted position in this jurisdiction that, on a motion to nonsuit, the' evidence which makes for the plaintiff’s claim, and which tends to support his cause of action, whether offered by the plaintiff or elicited from the defendant’s witnesses, will be taken and considered in its most favorable light for the plaintiff, and he is entitled to the benefit of every reasonable intendment upon the evidence, and every reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom.

There is no direct evidence that defendants or their agents or employees set out the fire on the Gore estate land, on which defendants were cultivating the turpentine-trees. Nor do we think there was circumstantial evidence of any sufficient probative force. The plaintiff testified that the defendant Herrin “said there wás a hunter around through the woods. He said he had not put any fire out in three days, and he had warned his men not to do it on account of the dry weather.”

There was evidence as to the horse’s tracks and man’s tracks, but it is not clear whether they-were made before or after the fire. Brantley testified: “I found horse tracks where a fellow got down and tied his horse and where he walked around there after the fire burned over. The tracks were in the fire-burned area.”

Brantley testified that after the fire Herrin told him and Mrs. Sutton that “he had no one in there but his woods rider.” Mrs. Sutton testified that Herrin told her that “he had told his employees on account of the dry iveather not to put any fire in the woods.”

In the present action there was no evidence sufficient to be submitted to a jury that defendants or their agents or employees were responsible for the origin of the fire. In fact, the evidence on the part of plaintiff was to the effect that defendant Herrin gave his employees positive instructions, on account of the dry weather, not to “put any fire in the woods.” -

The plaintiff contends that the other questions presented: (1) Was it competent for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant in cultivating its turpentine burned over the land so cultivated? (2) Was it competent to prove that defendants, over a period of years, from Christmas until spring, burned over the lands they were cultivating in turpentine?

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 578, 202 N.C. 599, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutton-v-herrin-nc-1932.