Tate v. St. Louis & Southwestern Railway Co.

209 S.W. 978, 201 Mo. App. 212, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 42
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 978 (Tate v. St. Louis & Southwestern Railway Co.) 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
Tate v. St. Louis & Southwestern Railway Co., 209 S.W. 978, 201 Mo. App. 212, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 42 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

— This is an action under section 3151, Revised Statutes 1909, to recover the- value of a dwelling house, and of household goods and other property-situated therein, and a smoke-house, cellar-house and milk-house, and the contents of these, belonging to plaintiff, which were destroyed by fire on September 18, 1914, and which are alleged to have been set on fire by a spark or burning cinders emitted by a locomotive engine operated upon defendant’s railway tracks nearby The trial, before the court and a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and the defendant appeals.

Plaintiff’s dwelling house, and the adjacent structures destroyed by fire, were situated a short distance north of defendant’s station at Idalia, in Stoddard County, Missouri, west and north of defendant’s tracks; the railroad .tracks at this place extending approximately northeast and southwest. The house faced north upon a wagon road, but being built in the shape of the letter “T,” the extention at the rear thereof was nearest to the railroad track. This rear portion of the building contained a kitchen, and also a small room, referred to as the clothes room or dressing room, and a porch, all under the same roof; this small room and the porch being on the east side of this part of the building, facing the railroad track.

The evidence shows that plaintiff’s dwelling house became ignited, on the day mentioned, shortly after noon, i. e. between 12:30 and 1:00 P. M., within a few minutes after a freight train upon defendant’s road had passed the place going north. At this point (defendant’s track, it is said, has some upward grade to the north; and there is testimony that this passing freight train -was “pretty heavily loaded,” and that the engine appeared to be “pulling heavy.” The weather was exceptionally dry, and a strong wind was blowing from the east or southeast.

[217]*217The testimony in behalf of plaintiff is to the’ effect that upon the day of the fire plaintiff and his_ family ate their noonday meal earlier than usual, about 11:30 A. M., and that plaintiff and his son went/‘down the railroad track,” on their way to their work, and sat down for a time “on the old track;” and that while they were sitting there a freight train passed going north; that after the train had passed perhaps ten or fifteen minutes they heard a hell ringing at the house and discovered that the building was on fire. According to their testimony the fire, when they discovered it, was on the roof of the rear portion of the house above the window of the small room mentioned above, near the point where this room adjoined the porch; that it had “burned a little circle” in the roof at this place, which was not far from the eave of the roof and about twelve feet from the kitchen chimney which extended through the ridge or comb of the roof. The distance from the window mentioned to the nearest point of the railroad track was, it is said, about 269 feet. It appears that the house burned rapidly, and that the adjacent buildings mentioned took fire and were also quickly consumed; though some of the contents of the house were saved.

A number of witnesses other than plaintiff and his son testified as to the fire, hut none of them saw it until after it had gained some headway. There is testimony that the high wind from the east or southeast, carried burnt shingles or other burnt material from the house to a great distance, some thereof as far as a mile. And one witness for plaintiff testified that he saw “coals” from the burning building which had been carried half a mile.

No witness saw any sparks or live cinders thrown out by the engine drawing the freight train which passed plaintiff’s house shortly prior to the fire. There is some testimony, however, tending to show that sparks or live cinders from defendant’s engine, in passing this place, had been carried as far as plaintiff’s house. In the course of his testimony, plaintiff said:' “I have [218]*218observed fire fall from passing engines over at' my bouse before.” "When tbis occurred, if it did, does not appear. On cross-examination plaintiff said: “I don’t know that I ever saw a cinder fall on my bouse, I bave felt them bit my bat.” There is testimony of other witnesses that upon previous occasions fires bad started in plaintiff’s garden and orchard, at distances as far from the railroad as was plaintiff’s bouse, shortly after a train bad passed, without other showing as to their origin. Plaintiff’s son, Albert Tate, testified, over defendant’s objection, that be bad seen such fires in the garden twice and in the orchard “a time or two,” “about three years” prior to the trial which took place in January, 1916; and that more than once cinders had fallen upon his hat while in his father’s yard, but that he could not say “whether they were live cinders.” Over defendant’s objection also, a daughter of plaintiff testified that in 1912 she saw such fires start in plaintiff’s orchard and garden, farther from the railroad track than was plaintiff’s house, and that the fire.in the orchard occurred shortly after a train passed. And another daughter of plaintiff, over defendant’s objection, testified in regard to a previous fire in plaintiff’s garden which she said occurred about four years prior to the trial, and which was' discovered ten or fifteen minutes after a train had passed; and that “a year or two” later similar fires occurred on the same day both in plaintiff’s garden and in his orchard.

A witness for plaintiff, one Hooper, testified, over defendant’s objections, that about five years prior to the trial, while he was working at “Nomes Spur,” about a mile and a half from plaintiff’s house, a certain pile of sawdust, situated as far from the railroad track as was plaintiff’s house, frequently was found on fire “after a heavy train would pull that grade.”

The testimony for plaintiff tends to show that there had been no fire in or about defendant’s house on the day in question except that in the stove in the kitchen, which was used to prepare the noonday meal; and the [219]*219testimony is that there had been no fire in this stove after 11:30 A. M. And plaintiff testified that he had inspected the kitchen fine shortly prior to the fire and .found it in good condition.

The testimony for defendant tends to show, among other things, that the engines operated upon the road were equipped with spark arresters; that the engine which passed plaintiff’s house a few minutes prior to the fire was so equipped, and that it was inspected both on the day prior to the fire and the following day. and the spark arrester, and the engine, generally, found to he in good condition upon both inspections.

I.

It is argued for defendant, appellant here, that the evidence adduced by plaintiff failed to make out a prima-facie ease, and that defendant’s demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. It is true that the evidence adduced to establish the ultimate fact that the house was set on fire by a spark or live cinder or ember emitted by the passing locomotive is entirely circumstantial, as is usual in such cases; but we are of the opinion that the competent evidence adduced sufficed to warrant a finding by the jury that the fire originated in this manner. Direct testimony of this ultimate fact is not essential.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anderson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.
367 S.W.2d 657 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1963)
Smith v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
285 S.W. 524 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 978, 201 Mo. App. 212, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-st-louis-southwestern-railway-co-moctapp-1919.