Court Opinion

ID: 3818800
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:54:26.641246+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:29.552830
License: Public Domain

This action was commenced in the district court of Sequoyah county by S.B. Jones and J.H. Jarman against the Kansas City Southern Railway Company to recover damages for the loss of two mules by fire. It is alleged the mules were in a barn which was set on fire by a locomotive engine operated by defendant upon its railroad. A trial was had to the jury, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff.
The first proposition presented for reversal is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the evidence offered by the plaintiff and refusing to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. The *Page 232 
evidence on behalf of the plaintiff disclosed that the barn was located approximately 230 feet from the track. The side of the barn toward the railroad had an open space several feet wide, and about four feet from the ground, that was used for the purpose of placing the feed in the stalls. There was a strong wind blowing, and it carried the smoke from the defendant's engine toward the barn. That a large engine pulling a long freight train passed by the barn and before the same was out of sight the fire was discovered. There was no cause suggested as to how the fire originated except it was set by the engine.
The plaintiff did not identify the engine that was supposed to have emitted the sparks that caused the fire. There was evidence that large engines of the defendant in pulling long freight trains running in the same direction had prior thereto thrown out sparks, and on one or two occasions set fire to vegetation as far away from the track as the barn. The train at the time was running upgrade, and it was described as a hard pull for the engine, and the trains in making this grade would run very slow.
The plaintiff in error contends the facts in this case are almost identical and it is controlled by the case of Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Henderson, 54 Okla. 320, 153 P. 872. Mr. Henderson was the owner of the barn at the time the mules were destroyed, and he brought suit to recover for loss of the barn. Judgment was rendered in his favor, but reversed by this court in a commissioners' opinion, for the reason the evidence was insufficient to support a verdict. Without passing upon the correctness of the decision in the case of K. C. Southern Ry. Co. v. Henderson, the opinion in that case reversed the case because there was no showing that the wind was blowing in the direction that would carry sparks emitted from the engine toward the barn, nor that sparks would live the distance that the barn was from the railroad, nor the velocity of the wind.
Mr. Teague testified that he passed by the barn about 30 minutes before the fire. That he was about 300 yards from the barn, across the creek, sitting on a fence; saw the freight train passing, running slow, as most freight trains run slow at that place, as it was a heavy grade. That a few minutes after the freight train passed, he discovered the fire. He did not believe the train was out of hearing when he first discovered the fire. The fire started at the north end of the barn, and must have been in the manger on the north corner next to the railroad. He testified he did not observe the freight train throwing sparks, but it was a big, long freight train, and looked like the same kind of engine they used on the railroad to pull freight trains. He testified he had seen other engines, apparently the size of this one, pulling long freight trains, that emitted sparks or threw out cinders, and set fire to vegetation close to a lumber pile, which was farther from the railroad than the barn.
Mr. Henderson testified that he had known engines pulling freight trains to set grass afire in the same vicinity about as far from the railroad track as the barn was. Mr. Alexander testified the wind was blowing from the railroad toward the barn. Mr. Trosper testified that the wind was blowing about the same gale upon this night that it did on another occasion when fire had been set out from sparks from an engine about the same distance from the railroad. This evidence meets the objections that were made by this court in the case of K. C. S. Ry. v. Henderson, supra.
The facts produced in this case, as heretofore stated, bring the case squarely within the rule announced by this court in the case of Midland Valley R. Co. v. Taylor, 85 Okla. 95,204 P. 1102, St. Louis  S. F. R. Co. v. Shannon, 25 Okla. 754,108 P. 401, and Wichita Falls  N.W. Ry. Co. v. Arnold,56 Okla. 352, 156 P. 296. This court in the case of M., K.  T. Ry. Co. v. Simerly, 72 Oklahoma, 180 P. 551, stated as follows:
"Circumstantial evidence in a civil case, in order to be sufficient to sustain a verdict, need not arise to that degree of certainty which will exclude every reasonable conclusion other than the one arrived at by the jury."
The Supreme Court of Kansas in two very similar cases held that evidence of the character above referred to is sufficient to take the case to the jury. See Otey v. Midland Valley R. Co. (Kan.) 197 P. 203; Hammon et al. v. Midland Valley Ry. Co. (Kan.) 189 P. 909.
We think this evidence sufficient to bring the case within the rule above announced, and sufficient to take the case to the jury, and there is no error in overruling the demurrer.
It is next contended the court erred in permitting certain evidence to be introduced, to wit: That other large engines of the company, pulling large freight trains up this same grade, had emitted sparks, and the same were carried as far as the barn was situated from the railroad. We think there was no error in the admission of this evidence. Plaintiff in error contends it was *Page 233 
incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove that the engines were identical in construction with the one supposed to have set out the fire. While it is true some of the courts have used that language, yet when the plaintiff has produced evidence that other engines of the company, similar in size, pulling similar trains, emitting sparks, we think this is a sufficient circumstance to go to the jury.
In the case of Midland Valley R. Co. v. Taylor, supra, this court quoted with approval from the case of Gibbons v. Wisconsin Valley R. Co. (Wis.) 17 N.W. 132, as follows:
"Where there is no proof of what particular engine set the fire, and the circumstantial evidence is such that there is a strong probability that some engine on the road did set the fire, then it may be proper to show that the engines on that road generally emitted sparks, or that some one or more of them did so at other times and places. Sheldon v. Hudson River R. Co., 14 N.Y. 221; Field v. N.Y., etc., R, Co., 32 N.Y. 339; St. Joseph, etc., R. Co. v. Chase, 11 Kan. 47; Huyett v. Philadelphia, etc., R. Co., 23 Pa. St. 373."
We think there was no error in the admission of this evidence.
If there was any difference in the engine which is supposed to have set the fire from other large engines of the railroad company, this fact was within the knowledge of the company, and could have been easily proven by the company. No such defense was offered, nor was there any contention that all the large engines were not similarly constructed.
These are the only two assignments of error referred to in the brief and will be the only ones considered.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
NICHOLSON, BRANSON, HARRISON, and MASON, JJ., concur.