Trexler v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Trexler v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiffs by their agent H. P. Reynolds shipped a stallion from Marklesburg on the Huntingdon & Broad Top Railroad in Pennsylvania to Pennsboro on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in West Virginia, to which latter company the box car in which the stallion was shipped was delivered at Hyndman, Pennsylvania. Between ten and eleven o’clock p. m. on the second day, the train arrived in Grafton, West Virginia, and a short time after its arrival, while standing in the yard, the car was found to be on fire. In spite of such efforts as were made to extinguish it the horse was so badly burned that it became necessary to kill it, which was done by the defendant’s order on the following day. This action of trespass was brought to recover its value and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. John E. Hess, the plaintiffs’ employee, who was in the car in charge of the stallion, also brought suit for the injuries received by him. 'Both cases were tried together and we have growing out of them three appeals, an appeal by the defendant in the present case, also an appeal by the defendant from the judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the Hess case and an appeal by the plaintiffs from the same judgment which we are now considering.
One of the principal disputed questions of fact raised at the trial was as to the origin of the fire. The defendant’s counsel contend that their request for binding instructions should have been granted because there was no competent and sufficient
The defendant’s second point, fourth assignment, in which binding instructions were asked upon the ground of contributory negligence of the plaintiffs’ employees, was based on the assumption that the plaintiffs’ evidence showed that these employees, at the time the horse was placed in the car for shipment, “spread straw all over the floor.” We do not so read the testimony. When the witness Hess testified, “ The straw was scattered all over the car, it (the fire) just whipped around the whole car,” he was speaking of the condition of affairs after the fire had broken out and the car was being hauled to the penstock. He was not attempting to describe the conditions at the time the horse was shipped on the preceding day. True the evidence shows that straw was placed in the car for bedding, but it shows also that this was done with the knowledge
The first and second assignments of error are not in accordance with our rules, but the question attempted to be raised by them is fairly raised by the third assignment and the appellant
“ Q. Where was this man standing that you heard make the remark that it had been set afire by the torch ? A. There was quite a crowd, round there. Q. You cannot tell who it was? A. No, sir. Q. And you do not know whether it was a train man or not ? A. No, sir. Q. He may have been a bystander who came into the crowd? A. I don’t know who he was. Q. And you cannot say it was one of the trainmen ? A. No, sir. Q. Nor can you say that the person you heard make this remark was connected with the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in any shape or form, can you? A. No, sir, I cannot. Q. You did not see him afterwards, did you? A. No, sir, not as I know of. Q. Suppose you repeat the remark that the man made, just as he made it ? A. He said he thought it was done by the car inspectors. Q. He didn’t say it was done by them? A. No, sir. Q. He said he thought it was done? A. Yes, sir. Q. He didn’t say he had seen it? A. He didn’t say. Q. That is all he said ? A. That is all I heard him say. Q. He thought it was done; you can’t tell who it was or anything about it? 'A. No, sir, I cannot. Q. Was he a white man or a black man ? A. I don’t know that; I did n’t see him at all. Q. Did you hear it when you were inside the car or outside ? A. Outside.”
After he had given this testimony the defendant moved the court to strike out his former testimony. The refusal so to do is the subject of the second assignment. The third assignment relates to that part of the general charge in which the testimony was submitted to the jury for their consideration. It will be noticed, first, that the remark testified to was not made at the time and place, when and where the fire originated, nor by anyone who was shown to have been then and there present; second, that the person who made it was not shown to have any connection whatever with the company, or to have any means
Judgment reversed and venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Trexler v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company
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- Syllabus
- Negligence — Railroads—Common carriers — Evidence—Contributory negligence. In an action against a railroad company to recover damages for the loss of a stallion killed by the burning of a car on which the animal was being transported, it is sufficient if'the plaintiff furnishes circumstantial evidence from which, in the absence of any other satisfactory and credible explanation by the defendant, a jury could reasonably infer that the fire was caused by an act of the latter’s employees. In an action against a railroad company to recover damages for the loss of a horse killed by the burning of a car in which the animal was being carried, the plaintiffs cannot be charged with contributory negligence in placing straw for bedding and hay for feed, in the car, or in leaving open the door for ventilation, where these acts are done with the knowledge and apparent acquiescences of the defendant’s agent, and in accordance with the usage of the company. * Negligence — Evidence—Inference from facts — Province of court and jury— Railroads — Carriers. Upon a state of facts, admitted or proved by direct and undisputed testimony, the court may pronounce the law applicable thereto; but, when alleged facts are the subject of inference from other facts and circumstances shown by the evidence, it is the exclusive province of the jury to consider the testimony and ascertain the facts under proper instructions from the court. In an action against a railroad company to recover damages for the loss of a horse killed by a burning of a car in which it was being carried, plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the fire originated from a torch of a passing inspector igniting straw in the car. The defendant claimed that the defendant’s agent in charge of the car had been guilty of contributory negligence in scattering the straw all over, the car so that it was exposed at the door left partly open for ventilation. It was, however, not beyond the range of possibility, that without negligence on the agent’s part, the motion of the car and the movement of the horse in the straw scattered it. Held, that the question of contributory negligence was for the jury. Negligence — Carriers—Railroads—Fire—Evidence—Res gestee. A mere expression of opinion as to the origin of a fire which destroyed a car, which was the litigated act, entertained by one not shown to have any knowledge or means of knowledge upon the subject, and made at a later time and a different place, although the fire was still burning, cannot be regarded as one of those “undesigned incidents of the litigated act which are admissible when illustrative of such act.” The circumstances do not raise the presumption, that it was a spontaneous utterance of thought created by or springing out of the transaction itself. It is quite as reasonable to presume that the declarant’s opinion was based on what he had been told, or that it was a mere surmise based neither on what he had seen nor on what he had been told.