White v. Colorado Cent. R.

29 F. Cas. 1004, 5 Dill. 428
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedJuly 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1004 (White v. Colorado Cent. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Colorado Cent. R., 29 F. Cas. 1004, 5 Dill. 428 (circtdco 1879).

Opinion

HALLETT, District Judge.

On the 1st of January last, plaintiff’s intestate shipped a lot of dry goods and clothing from Georgetown to Denver over defendant's line. The goods were received at Denver and placed in defendant’s warehouse on the morning of the 3d of the same month. Two days later they were destroyed by fire which originated in the building without fault of defendant. This action, in which plaintiff seeks to recover the value of the goods so destroyed, is founded upon an alleged liability of defendant to plaintiff as a common carrier and as a warehouseman.

As to the first count in'the declaration, in which plaintiff sought to charge defendant as a common carrier, the jury have found against the plaintiff, and thus all questions arising on that count have been eliminated from the ease. On the second count, in which defendant is charged with negligence as a warehouseman, the jury found for [1005]*1005plaintiff in the sum of $4,704.75, and the motion now to be considered is directed against that verdict.

It seems from the evidence that defendant’s warehouse was a long wooden structure — one hundred feet or more in length— and that the company’s offices for transacting its freight business were kept in one end of it. These offices were divided off from the main building by partitions, and the remainder of the building was used for storing goods. At about the center of the building, on each side, and communicating with the part which was used for storage, were large doors, through which the goods were passed when received into or taken out of the building. The plaintiff’s goods, when received, were put in that end of the blinding which did not contain the office, and, of course, at some distance from the doors last mentioned.

By the same train which brought plaintiff’s goods, a quantity of gunpowder, amounting to about one hundred and sixty kegs, was also received; and this powder was put by defendant in the same room with plaintiff’s goods, but upon the other side of the doors before mentioned, and towards the offices, which were in that end of the building. So that, with reference to the doors which opened through the warehouse, it may be correct to say that the offices and the powder were in one end of the building, while the plaintiff's goods were in the other end of the same building. But the powder was, in fact, pretty near the door on that side where it lay, and between the offices and the plaintiff’s goods.

The fire which destroyed the building and the goods, when first discovered, was in the roof immediately above the offices, and, of course, at some distance from the plaintiff’s goods. Thus it appears that the fire was in one end of the building and the plaintiff’s goods in the other, while the powder was between the fire and the goods, on the same side of the large doors before mentioned as the fire. This was the situation when members of the fire department arrived in considerable force on the ground with their apparatus, for the purpose of extinguishing the fire. The weather was cold, and some delay occurred before water was obtained, but three or four streams were soon brought to bear, so that, under ordinary circumstances, the flames might have been suppressed before half the building was destroyed. One witness testifies that there was an opportunity to cut off the fire at the large doors before mentioned, by carrying the water in at that place and playing on the fire from the inside.

But nothing of this kind was attempted, and. indeed, the firemen would not go within seventy or eighty feet of the building on the outside, because they feared injury from the powder. Some testimony was given at the trial to show that this fear was unfounded. but if the experts who testified on that point had been present at the fire to explain the properties of gunpowder to the terrified firemen, it is doubtful whether the explanation would have been entirely satisfactory. The theory advanced is that metallic cans, in which the powder was put, are so expanded and cracked by the heat of a burning building that the powder escapes, and in that condition, if ignited, it produces only a flash in the pan, which is not at all dangerous to those who are outside of the building. If, however, one who is inside the building swallows the fire, as one of the witnesses said, it is deadly; so that even on this theory it was not safe to go into the building at the large doors before mentioned, for the purpose of suppressing the fire. So, too, a prudent person might well be excused from assuming that all of the cans would be cracked and laid open by the heat so as to render them harmless. Altogether, it may be said that this evidence does not prove, nor tend to prove, that the powder was not dangerous to life in the situation where it was found, but merely that the workmen might have approached the building more closely without danger to theihselves. Whether they could have worked more effectively at a distance from the building of twenty-five or thirty feet than at a distance of eighty feet, does not appear, but may be a matter of reasonable inference. It does, however, appear that the gunpowder prevented the, firemen from going in at the large doors before mentioned, with hose, and there operating against the fire. All the witnesses agree that this movement would, under the circumstances, have been full of danger, and it seems probable that it was not made for that reason. One witness testifies that he suggested it to the firemen, and was answered that it was dangerous to go there on account of the powder. Looking to the form of the building, the fact that it was built of wood, and the situation of plaintiff’s goods with reference to the fire, it also seems probable that the goods would have been saved if the powder had not been stored in the building. Upon the evidence showing or tending to show that the loss of the goods was due to the presence of the powder in the warehouse, the court charged the jury as follows:

“As to the second cause of action, the liability of defendant, if any exists, depends upon the effect of storing powder in the warehouse, if any was stored there. You are advised that storing a considerable quantity of powder in the same house with plaintiff’s goods was negligent conduct, and if the loss was occasioned by the presence of powder in the house, the defendant is liable. In order to fix such liability, however, it must appear to you from the evidence that the loss was certainly occasioned or produced by that cause. If those who were én-gaged in suppressing the fire would have [1006]*1006been able to save plaintiff’s goods, and would have done so, if no powder bad been kept in the building, the defendant may be held. But if this is a doubtful matter, and it is uncertain whether the presence of powder in the house occasioned the loss, the defendant is not liable. TJpon that point you remember what the witness said about it, you determine as well as you can whether this loss certainly proceeded from that cause —from the presence of the powder. If it is doubtful in your mind, upon the evidence here, whether the loss was occasioned by that, that is to say, if, withdrawing the powder from the house, you think it still doubtful whether the goods would have been saved, the defendant cannot be held liable upon that. The only act of negligence, as it seems to me from the evidence here, was the putting of the powder there, and you must be able to ascribe that loss to that cause, and certainly to that, if you are to hold the defendant upon that. That is the position in which the matter stands.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1004, 5 Dill. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-colorado-cent-r-circtdco-1879.