San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Moerbe
San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Moerbe
Opinion of the Court
Appellee instituted this suit against the receiver of the Southwestern Underwriters of San Antonio and appellant, wherein he sought to recover against them jointly the sum of $2,660, and against appellant alone the sum of $1,120. The suit was’ based on the loss by fire of a certain seed-house, ginhouse, gin stands, press, boiler, and engine which were insured by the underwriters in the sum of $3,000 against fire, and on appellant’s negligence in connection with the destruction of the insured property as well as other property not insured. The Southwestern Underwriters was dismissed from the suit, and the cause as to appellant submitted to a jury on special issues, and on the answers judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for $3,400.
The first, second, and eleventh assignments question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. They are answered by our conclusions of fact. If the evidence of appellee’s witness, Hart, is to be credited, as it undoubtedly was by the jury, appellant’s foreman and employés were grossly negligent in making no attempt to prevent or check the spread of flames arising in a car owned by appellant, standing on a siding in close proximity to appellee’s property. The foreman of appellant was occupying the car in which the fire originated, and he was not put on the stand or his deposition taken to show how the fire started, and the presumption would prevail, in the absence of testimony tending to sustain a different conclusion, that it began through some act or failure to act on the part of the foreman or other employé. Ineffectual efforts were made by parties visiting the fire to obtain assistance in moving the foreman’s car in which the fire had not made much headway at the time, and the commissary car which was not ignited at that time ,and was standing alongside the seedhouse. The commissary car was ignited from the foreman’s car, and if it had been moved out of reach of the flames, the seedhouse might not have caught from the other car. In the case of Railway v. Anderson, 173 S. W. 908, a fire originhted in a boarding car, while standing on a side track, and spread to a farm adjacent thereto and destroyed the grass thereon. There was no positive evidence of negligence in starting the fire, except that it started in the car and appellant did not account for how it started. The Court of Civil Appeals of the Second District held that if appellant was guilty of negligence in permitting the fire to spread from the car to the farm, it would be liable. The Supreme Court refused a writ of error in the case. The decision is well sustained by Texas cases, therein cited.
The third assignment claims error in the court refusing to sustain its plea in abatement for misjoinder of parties and causes of action. The'court did not refuse to sustain the plea in abatement, as appears from the qualification of the bill of exceptions, but the court postponed action on the plea until he heard the evidence, and after the evidence was heard appellee dismissed as to the insurance company. That action fully disposed of any complaint as to misjoinder of causes and parties. The assignment of error is overruled.
“Without entering into any discussion as to the degree of care a railway company should use to extinguish a fire caused by the escape of fire from its engines, we feel constrained to hold that the duty does exist however careful such companies may be to prevent the escape of fire from their engines, and that the failure to exercise such care as the circumstances of a given case would indicate to a prudent man was proper, will give cause of action for an injury resulting.”
The negligence would be the same whether the fire originated through negligence or not.
*131 “The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish by a fair preponderance of the testimony the material issues submitted.”
This clause was objected to by appellant as follows:
“This defendant excepts to that portion of the charge of the court in the concluding part of his charge, because the same does not properly declare the law applicable to the facts in this case, and no such charge should be given.”
In response to that objection, the court struct that portion of the charge relating to the burden of proof from the charge, and appellant now claims error, through the eighth assignment of error, in the court doing the very thing that it then thought should be done. If it was error, it was clearly invited by appellant. If appellant desired a charge on the burden of proof, it should have requested it.
“When I got there, I did not see Richardson or any one of the hands making any effort to put the fire out.”
Will Rives swore:
“I did not see the hands do anything towards trying to save the other property.”
No effort was made to check the fire in the foreman’s car or the commissary car. Some water was carried to the third car which stood north of the commissary car, away from the seedhouse. Neylon, a witness for appellant, testified:
“If I had had charge of that gang, and they had obeyed me, I believe I could have saved that gin. The hands were at work all right, but were working at the wrong end. I never saw Mr. Parvin. If intelligence had had control of those hands there, I believe they could have moved that first car, and have saved the ginhouse and property.”
And yet in the face of this array of testimony it is stated:
“That the employés who were boarding in said cars exercised all reasonable diligence to prevent the spread of the fire.”
The duty to prevent spread of the fire was on appellant in whose property it had started, and not upon appellee.
The judgment is affirmed.
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