Case ID: nc_169/html/0731-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "AlleN, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

W. W. KEMP v. NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY.
    (Filed 27 October, 1915.)
    1. Railroads — Negligence—Fires—Presumptions—Evidence—Trials—Nonsuit.
    The application of the doctrine that where a railroad company has set out Are, causing damage to another, there is a presumption of negligence on its part, requires that there should he evidence that the railroad company set out the fire; and where the evidence tends only to show that the defendant’s depot caught fire during the night, which was communicated to the plaintiff’s building and destroyed it, a judgment as of nonsuit upon the evidence is properly allowed.
    2. Railroads — Negligence—Evidence—Cordwood—Fires.
    Cordwood is a recognized and necessary commodity, with no extra hazards in its transportation or shipment; and a railroad being compelled to receive it- when tendered for shipment, under a statutory penalty (Revisal, section 2631), and as it is impracticable to store it in a warehouse, it affords no evidence of negligence in communicating fire to plaintiff’s building, when properly piled on the right of way, awaiting cars for shipment, in the absence of evidence that the place at which it was piled was an improper one, and it is not shown that the defendant had originally set out the fire or was responsible for it.
    
      Appeal by plaintiff from Daniels, J., at the June Term, 1915, of Wake.
    Action to recover damages for negligently burning two buildings, the property of the plaintiff, situate on land adjoining the defendant’s right of way.
    The plaintiff admitted that he could not prove that the fire was set out by the defendant or that it originated from sparks emitted by the defendant’s engine. The evidence tended to prove that the depot of the defendant caught fire after midnight, and it was not shown whether the fire originated in the depot building or on the top of it; that the burning of the depot building set fire to a box car on a side-track and the fire was then communicated to three or four carloads of dry pine wood placed on the railroad yard for shipment in which there was mixed a little dry oak, and that the fire was thence communicated to the buildings of the plaintiff; that the wood had been delivered to the defendant for shipment and had not been shipped because of a car shortage, and that the agent had been using his best efforts to secure cars; that the usual place for delivering wood was further from the plaintiff’s houses, but that the wood was not placed there because that place was filled with other freight; that the wood had remained on the right of way for about five weeks.
    At the conclusion of the evidence his Honor entered judgment of non-suit upon the motion of the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted and appealed.
    
      Robert 0. Strong for •plaintiff.
    
    
      R. N. Simms for defendant.
    
   AlleN, J.

The authorities, beginning with Ellis v. R. R., 24 N. C., 138, and running through a long line of cases which are cited in Currie v. R. R., 156 N. C., 422; Kornegay v. R. R., 154 N. C., 389, and Hardy v. Lumber Co., 160 N. C., 116, fully establish the proposition that where it is shown that the railroad company has set out fire which causes damage to another, that there arises a presumption of negligence, nothing else appearing. This principle has, however, no application here, because there is no evidence that the defendant set out the fire which was finally communicated to the property of the plaintiff.

It was admitted by the plaintiff upon the trial in the Superior Court that he could not prove the origin of the fire, and there is no evidence in the record that any engine of the defendant ever passed the point where the fire originated, unless it may be inferred from the circumstances that the defendant was maintaining a depot building and a railroad track. The plaintiff must, therefore, recover, if at all, upon the theory that although the fire was accidental, it was negligence on the part of tbe defendant to permit cordwood to remain on its right of way, and that tbe communication of tbe fire from tbe wood to bis property was tbe cause of bis damage. Tbe wood was ordinary seasoned pine and was piled in tbe usual way. It bad been delivered for shipment and was left on tbe right of way until cars could be procured. Tbe defendant was compelled to receive tbe wood when tendered, under a penalty for refusing to do so (Eev., sec. 2631; Currie v. R. R., 135 N. C., 535), and as it was impracticable to store it in its warehouse, it could only place it on its right of way. If it bad gone out of tbe right of way without permission it would have been a trespasser.

We have, then, a ease in which there is no evidence that tbe defendant set out tbe fire, and tbe only negligence relied on is permitting wood to-remain on tbe right of way, and as wood is a recognized and necessary commodity, with no extra hazards in its transportation or shipment, and as tbe defendant was compelled to receive it and could only store it on its right of way, in tbe absence of evidence that tbe wood was placed at an improper place or improperly piled, we must bold there is no-evidence of negligence. As tbe fire originated accidentally, there is no-difference in principle between this and tbe ease of tbe private citizen who buys bis winter’s wood and stores it on bis lot near bis neighbor’s bouse.

Tbe case of Insurance Co. v. R. R., 132 N. C., 78, is easily distinguishable from this in that there was evidence in that case that the-defendant set out tbe fire and that it permitted cotton to remain on its platform near its track with the bagging off and tbe upper end of tbe bales with tbe lint bulged out and exposed to fire from tbe passing engines.

We are of opinion that judgment of nonsuit was properly entered.

Affirmed.