Hill v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
Hill v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant appeals from a judgment for damages caused by fire set out upon its right of way. The allegation was that the defendant’s servants and agents “while engaged in burning a fire guard along the line thereof, either upon or adjacent to said eighty acres of land, negligently allowed the fire so set out to escape and burn over the entire eighty acres of land and were negligent in setting out the fire at the time and that by reason of the negligence,” etc. In addition to the general verdict the jury answered special questions to the effect that the section men were negligent in setting out the fire on the right of way, such negligence consisting in “setting out more fire at one time than they were able to control.” It is contended that this is a departure from the negligence declared upon in the petition and that under the well-settled rule the former was in the minds of the jury left without evidential support, and that it was error to deny the defendant’s motion for judgment on the special findings. But we see no conflict between the charge that the section men neg
Since the submission of the case it has been made to appear by stipulation that the motion for a new trial was withdrawn, and hence another alleged error complained of is eliminated.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. C. Hill v. The Missouri Pacific Railway Company
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Negligence — Damage by Fire — No Departure Between Allegations and Findings of Negligence. A finding that the defendant’s section men set out more fire at one time than they could control is not a departure from the allegation that they “negligently allowed the fire so set to' escape and burn over the entire eighty acres of land, and were negligent in setting out the fire at the time.”