Court Opinion

ID: 8188065
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:10:50.903844+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:29.996290
License: Public Domain

Dodge, J.
1. The jury having negatived all charges of defective apparatus or of negligence in operation of the same, this case presents nothing of the peculiar liability of railroad •companies in the conduct of their inherently dangerous business. It presents a question equally applicable to every property owner who maintains an inflammable building in close proximity to railroad tracks over which engines must pass, ■emitting, as they always do, some measure of sparks. It may be conceded, for the purpose of discussion, that maintenance of frame buildings with shingle roofs within forty feet of a ¡main railroad track is so common that such act alone is, as *330matter of law, not negligence; it being so in accord with the' known custom of the great mass of mankind. That, however, is not the question upon which this case turns. Though it. be conceded that the maintenance of a sound, solid building near a railroad track is not negligence, must it not be held that some degree of variance from such a condition, whereby ignition from the ordinary perils of the railroad becomes more-probable, may be so variant from the ordinary conduct of mankind as to open the door for the jury to characterize it as-negligence ? It seems this must be so. Indeed, counsel for the appellant does not controvert this view. He seems to. concede that, if inflammability was increased by the age and dilapidation characterizing this building, that the door was-open to the jury to consider whether it exceeded in that respect buildings maintained by the -great mass of mankind,, and, if so, to find the .conduct negligent in the legal sense, if" the other element of reasonable anticipation of injury might also be found.
The principal argument, however, is that there is no evidence that old and decayed wood, when dry, is more inflammable than sound wood, equally dry. Counsel insists that, if such be the fact, it is capable of proof by experts, or those-having special experience on the subject. But this discussion ignores other elements in the evidence to the effect that not only were the roof boards and shingles upon the top of this building decayed and old, but that they were loose,, curled up, and that in many places the shingles were entirely-lacking. These facts seem clearly to present a situation more-likely, in common knowledge, to furnish a lodgment for flying cinders than if the roof were sound, and covered with-smooth, flat shingles; and that such enhanced peril of ignition presents properly a jury question whether it extended' to the degree of negligence, namely, the absence of that care- and caution which ordinarily prudent persons do exercise-under like circumstances, and so that the ordinarily prudent *331person would anticipate that sparks such as fly from tlie usual locomotive engine might probably lodge and ignite the roof in times of drouth and high wind.
Still another element of possible negligence in the maintenance of such a building is the increased peril that after ignition it may, by reason of its dilapidation, looseness of shingles, and the like, more readily communicate the fire to' other buildings. In connection with this idea it is shown that the warehouse was set upon posts three or four feet from the-ground, with no inclosure under it, so as to furnish an under-draft of air, giving it almost the effect of a funnel, thus rendering probable, if not certain, the more easy and rapid carrying away of the burning brands, attached so loosely as they were to the roof. ‘This was, of course, an element of the-negligence ascribed to the defendant if it increased the probability of communicating fire to other buildings. One maybe as careless as he pleases with reference to his own property, and not be chargeable with negligence in law, unless-an ordinarily prudent person might reasonably anticipate-that such carelessness might probably result in injury to-others. We are not prepared to say that the extreme dilapidation of this building in the respects above suggested did not present a case from which a reasonable mind might conclude-that there was negligence.
2. By the sixth question of the special verdict the court inquired of the jury whether the negligence of the defendant in maintaining the building in question was the proximate-cause of the plaintiff’s loss, and, in connection with that question, instructed the jury that it might be such proximate cause-when such injury is the natural and probable consequence of' the negligence, and “when, in the light óf all the attending-circumstances, the party chargeable with such negligence should" reasonably have foreseen that it might cause some-similar injury.” Also that they might answer the question in the affirmative if they found “that the defendant company,. *332.acting through, its proper representatives and servants, should •reasonably have foreseen, before the fire occurred, that such negligence might result in communicating fire to other property.” It is urged by appellant that these instructions are -erro"oous, in that they set up as a test merely what the jury think the defendant ought to have anticipated, instead of ■that which an ordinarily prudent person, under like circumstances, would have anticipated. This subject was quite fully discussed in Atkinson v. Goodrich T. Co. 60 Wis. 141, 18 N. W. 764, and in Dehsoy v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. 110 Wis. 412, 416, 85 N. W. 973. In the latter case, in ■speaking of a charge which allowed the jury to consider the ■ care and foresight which might reasonably have been anticipated of the conductor of a street car, we said:
“It permits the jury to use as a standard their ideal of what a conductor ought to be, instead of that which he customarily is, as ascertained by actual human experience and ■ common knowledge. In this, error was committed.”
The instruction complained of was erroneous in this respect, and necessitates the conclusion that in the sixth question and answer, standing alone, are not found all the elements of proximate-cause. That question and answer probably did find, under instructions which are not assailed, actual or natural causation, but did not find that element of an■ticipation by a reasonably prudent man, which in so many •eases has been said to be essential. We are convinced, however, that this failure of the jury to find this issue in answer to the sixth question is cured by question 9-J, which inquired ■directly:
“Ought a man of reasonable care and prudence, engaged ■in the same business that the defendant was in at the time in question, and under similar conditions and circumstances, -to have reasonably anticipated that, because of the condition that the Degenhart warehouse was in, it would be likely to •take fire from sparks epiitted from the stack of a locomotive, ;and that the burning brands or shingles would be carried *333from tbe fire so started, tinder similar conditions, to tbe property of tbe plaintiff, forty rods away, or to other property as far away in that vicinity, and set fire to tbe same ?”
In tbis question tbe jury were given tbe correct standard,. and have found tbe element of anticipation wbicb, by reason of tbe erroneous charge above mentioned, escaped them in tbe sixth;
Tbe appellant further complains that tbe court refused to-embody in tbis question 9?¿, after the word “locomotive,” tbe ■ words “properly equipped with proper spark-arresting machinery in good condition.” There was no error in refusing tbis request. There bad been considerable evidence of cinders and sparks of-a size inconsistent with such equipment and' condition; and while, by tbe verdict, it is now recognized as-a fact that there was no defect, it was one of tbe controverted issues when tbe verdict was submitted. Tbe court embodied', in tbe question tbe duty to consider all the conditions and circumstances, wbicb, of course, included tbe condition of tbe engine, as they might find it. Further, however, it is not to be expected that tbe court shall attempt, in framing a special verdict, to embody all tbe facts and circumstances as in a-hypothetical question to an expert. An attempt to do so-would involve much of danger, for any omission might be-very misleading.
We find no error well assigned.
By the Gourt. — Judgment affirmed.