Court Opinion

ID: 8186549
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:09:05.081373+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:26.242093
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed December 15, 1899:
Dodge, J.
1. The first and second assignments of error are alleged upon the refusal of the court to require plaintiffs to make complaint more definite and certain as to the place or places where originated the fires which were claimed to *621have injured plaintiffs’ lands, the specific acts of negligence charged to defendant, and the course pursued bj a certain fire started July T. While it may well be that the complaint should have been more definite as to some of these matters, and plaintiffs could have made it so if they had knowledge enough to justify them in commencing suit at all, yet it must be noted that these orders now complained of, and the exceptions thereto, are not brought into the record by the bill of exceptions. They cannot, therefore, be considered on this appeal, unless they involve the merits of the action and necessarily affect the judgment. Sec. 3070, Stats. 1898; Tronson v. Union L. Co. 38 Wis. 202; Hewitt v. Follett, 51 Wis. 264; Donkle v. Milem, 88 Wis. 33; Keller v. Gilman, 96 Wis. 445; McCormick v. Cleveland, 98 Wis. 522. The orders in question probably involve the merits, but did they necessarily affect the judgment? Defendant’s affidavits, as also the evidence on the trial, make apparent its knowledge of both of the fires attempted to be proved by plaintiffs, and its preparation to meet such proof. True, the labor and expense of that preparation, as also of the trial, may well have been enhanced by uncertainty in the complaint, but this is not enough. Not every order which affects the trial or a party’s convenience necessarily affects the judgment. We find it impossible to say from this record that the same judgment might not have been reached upon an entirely certain and specific complaint. The orders in question, therefore, did not necessarily affect it, and the error, if any, is not before us for review.
2. The third, fifth, and sixth assignments of error present the question whether there was any evidence which, upon the most favorable consideration, and with every reasonable inference resolved in plaintiffs’ favor, might have justified the jury in finding that the two several fires reached and destroyed plaintiffs’ timber. The view of the trial court is *622of much weight on such question. Maitland v. Gilbert P. Co. 97 Wis. 476, 491; Lewis v. Prien, 98 Wis. 87. Especial^forceful is such opinion upon a trial like this, where much of.' the testimony was given with reference to a inap spread before the court and jury, and the finger of the witness was. almost as frequent a medium of information as his spoken words, and the witness’s “ Here ” and “ There ” were explanatory and instructive, while they are so nearly meaningless in the printed record. The charge, in its multiplicity of detail, leaves no doubt of the great care exercised by the trial court, nor of his complete mastery of the very complicated evidence relating, not only to the fires set by defendant, but to numerous other fires of independent authorship, claimed on the one hand to have intervened and at least shared responsibility for plaintiffs’ damage, while plaintiffs, claimed to have established the contrary as to each and all. Careful study of the record convinces us that there is evidence tending to prove plaintiffs’ contention as to each of the fires-alleged. Any extended discussion or analysis thereof would serve no useful purpose here. As to the so-called “milepost No. 173 fire,” the testimony of Chalker, Bowen, and Charles Darrell, taken together and uncontradicted, would fully justify the conclusion that such fire continued from defendant’s right of way northeastward, passed through sections 8, 9, 16, and 17, township 36, range 3 E., in which plaintiffs had lands burned, and that it passed on eastward, towards other lands of plaintiffs. While Darrell’s testimony is somewhat uncertain as to the date when he first saw this fire, and whether it was located at the mile post or further east, the testimony of Chalker fixes the time, and that of both Chalker and Bowen refutes the existence of any other than the mile-post fire in the direction and at the time of Darrell’s observation. Peter Anderson and John W. Emerson also give testimony justifying conclusion of identity of the fire as to which Chalker and Darrell, and indeed, many *623others, testify, with that set by defendant at the mile post.. As to whether this fire was extinguished, or was intercepted by others, there is a mass of conflicting testimony, which was fairly submitted to the jury, within whose province it. especially belonged. "We cannot say that the trial court, erred in refusing to exclude this fire from the consideration of the jury.
The efficiency of the fire originated by defendant just east of Clifford to damage plaintiffs’ timber in section 30, township 36, range 4 E., is supported by the direct testimony of several witnesses to personal observation and knowledge, and of many to facts supporting the inference, and it is denied by testimony of others who put squarely in dispute facts, testified to by plaintiffs’ witnesses; but if the jury credited the testimony offered by plaintiffs, they might well have found, as they did, both as to the fact and amount of damage attributable to this fire. It would needlessly and very greatly extend this opinion to take up this conflicting evidence here in detail. That was done between counsel and the trial court, and we concur in the conclusion here reached that, wherever the preponderance of evidence may have been, the testimony of the plaintiffs’ witnesses was not so-incredible nor so antagonized 'by any undisputed conditions or circumstances that it could not support a verdict.
Appellant assigns error upon the refusal of the following instruction: “It appears by the uncontradicted evidence-that an extensive fire, for which the defendant is not responsible, and whose origin is unknown, was working southeasterly towards section 30, and that such fire might have reached the lands of the plaintiffs in said section, and burned over-the same, independently of the fire charged to the defendant. If the jury believes, from all the evidence, that the fire set by the section men did run north over some of the lands-of the plaintiffs in section 30, and the jury believes that the northwest fire also burned over some of the lands in said. *624section before such other fire reached them, and the jury is unable to say from the evidence what lands were so burned over by the fire set by the section men, or is unable to ascertain with reasonable certainty the amount of damage done to such lands burned over by said last-mentioned fire, the plaintiffs cannot recover for any injury to said section 30.” Two sufficient reasons exist why this refusal cannot be reversible error: First, because the instruction requested is itself erroneous, in asserting that the uncontradicted evidence established the presence of a fire to the northwest of section 30, township 36, range 4,/or which the defendant was not responsible, and which might have extended into said section 30. This assertion is predicated upon the same argument as is the contention that there was no evidence to carry to the jury the question of the efficiency of the mile-post fire for any of plaintiffs’ damage. The fire referred to by appellant as possibly invading section 30 was discovered by bark peelers at work in sections 14 and 24, township 36, range 3, to the north and west of them, on and prior to the 26th day of July. We have already pointed out that there was evidence ■carrying the mile-post fire through sections 8, 9,16, and 17, township 36, range 3, and from there on eastward, as early as about July 20 or 22, and the inference was by no means impossible that the fire seen by the bark peelers, and which finally drove them out of their camps, was this same fire, responsibility for which was not conclusively removed from the defendant. In order to constitute its refusal error, a requested instruction must be correct, so that the court can properly give it without change. Sec. 2853, Stats. 1898. The second reason why the refusal of this instruction was not error is that the rule of law therein attempted to be stated as a guide to the jury was sufficiently and correctly given in the general charge. South Milwaukee B. H. Co. v. Harte, 95 Wis. 592; National Bank v. Illinois & W. L. Co. 101 Wis. 247. The court instructed the jury: “If the evidence, fairly *625considered, leaves' this matter in doubt, so that you are left to guess or conjecture as to whether the fire from defendant’s right of way or some other fire caused the damage complained of, there can be no recovery for the plaintiffs by reason thereof, and your verdict upon that issue must be for the defendant.” This was the whole gist and substance of the instruction requested, namely, that the jury must find from evidence that the damage was caused by a fire for which the defendant was responsible, and, if their conclusion to that effect could be only the result of conjecture or guess, they could not allow the damages. It was not necessary for the court to indulge in repetition of this instruction by applying it to the several places where damage was claimed to have occurred, or to any of them.
We find no reversible error in the record.
By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.
BaedeeN, J., took no part.
A motion for rehearing was submitted on the briefs of Alfred II. Bright, attorney, and M. B. Koon and II. B.DUce, of counsel, for the motion, and on that of Cate, Sanborn, Lam-breux c& Bark, contra.
The motion was denied February 21, 1900.