Judges: Boyd, Briscoe, Burke, Constable, Pattison, Stockbridge, Thomas, Urner
Filed Date: 1/13/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The declaration in this case contains three counts. In the first count it is alleged that on the 18th of September, 1914, the plaintiff was the owner and occupant of a frame dwelling house on the northeast corner of Old York road and Wyanoke avenue, in Baltimore City, known as number 600 Wyanoke avenue, and also the owner of a large quantity of furniture and other household articles contained in said dwelling; that on the day mentioned the defendant, its servants and agents, were engaged in grading a portion of Old York road, one of the public highways of the city, and in the prosecution of the work operated a steam shovel opposite and in close proximity to the dwelling of the plaintiff, and that in consequence thereof the dwelling, furniture and other household articles of the plaintiff were partially destroyed by fire occasioned by sparks emitted from the shovel while being so operated, and was further damaged in an effort to extinguish the fire and to save the property from total destruction, and the plaintiff was also deprived of the use of the property for two and a half months; that the sparks were so emitted because the defendant, its servants or agents, negligently and wrongfully used upon the highway mentioned a steam shovel *Page 479 which was so constructed and equipped as to make its use dangerous to all buildings near the place of its operation, and that the fire was due to the lack of ordinary care on the part of the defendant, etc., in the selection and equipment of the steam shovel, and not to any negligence on the part of the plaintiff directly contributing thereto. The second count charges that the sparks were emitted because the steam shovel was negligently and carelessly operated by the defendant, etc., and the third count alleges that the sparks were emitted because of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant, etc., in no providing the steam shovel with suitable fixtures for preventing the emission of sparks therefrom after allowing a sufficient draft to create sufficient steam to properly propel the shovel, etc.
The defendant demurred to the declaration and each count thereof, but the Court below overruled the demurrer, and the trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $1,382.50, from which judgment the defendant has appealed.
During the trial the defendant reserved eleven exceptions, the first ten of which are to rulings of the Court below on the evidence, and the remaining exception is to the action of the lower Court on the prayers. As the defendant's first, third and fifth prayers present the contention of the defendant, that there is no evidence in the case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover for the damage caused by the fire to either the dwelling or furniture, they will for the sake of brevity, be considered in connection with the ruling on the demurrer.
The plaintiff's house was located on the corner of Old York road and Wyanoke avenue, with a frontage of twenty-two feet on Wyanoke avenue and a depth of fifty-two feet on the Old York road. It was a frame dwelling, covered with wooden shingles, which had been on the house about twenty-five years. For some time prior to the fire, which occurred on the 18th of September, 1914, the defendant was engaged in grading Old York road, and in doing the work *Page 480 used a steam shovel. The diameter of the smokestack of the engine, which extended several feet above the cab, was about ten inches. At the time of the fire the shovel was being operated at a point west of, and about thirty feet from, the rear end of the plaintiff's dwelling, and the wind, which was blowing from the west, carried the sparks from the smokestack to the plaintiff's house. There had been no rain for some time, and the shingles on the roof of the house were very dry. The defendant had been operating the steam shovel in the neighborhood for about ten days, and a number of witnesses testified that when the steam shovel was in operation large and glowing embers or sparks, ranging in size from that of a chestnut to that of a pigeon egg, were emitted in large quantities from the smokestack and blown from thirty to forty feet in the air. James A. Clark, the captain of No. 31 Engine Company, testified that while his company was engaged in extinguishing the fire, and he and the engineer of the company were on the third floor of the plaintiff's dwelling, sparks from the steam shovel about the size of his little finger fell upon them. The evidence also shows that there was no fire in the house during the afternoon of the day of the fire, and that the fire which destroyed the third story of the dwelling and caused the damage complained of, started on the roof and on the side next to where the steam shovel was in operation, and that the steam shovel was not provided with a spark arrester of any kind.
The contention of the appellant is that the declaration does not specify the particular act or acts of negligence relied upon, and that the evidence fails to show that the fire was caused by sparks from the steam shovel or was due to any act of negligence on the part of the defendant. In Sims v. American Ice Co.,
In the case of Green Ridge R.R. Co. v. Brinkman,
Upon the authorities cited the declaration was not open to the objection urged against it, and we think the evidence was legally sufficient to support its averments, and that it was for the jury to determine whether the fire was caused by sparks from the steam shovel, and whether under the circumstances the defendant was guilty of negligence in the operation of the steam shovel and in failing to equip it with a spark arrester.
There was no error in the ruling in the first exception. The witness had already testified to the condition of the furniture as the result of the fire; that he was a cabinet maker; had made many sets of furniture and knew from experience the cost of repairing furniture. He was therefore competent to state what it would cost to repair the furniture that was damaged by the fire.
The second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth exceptions are to the testimony of a number of witnesses who observed the size and quantity of sparks emitted from the smokestack of the steam shovel while it was in operation near the plaintiff's property within a few days before or after the fire, and to evidence to the effect that one of the plaintiff's neighbors had to use a hose to wet his house in order to prevent it from catching fire, and that when, a few days after the fire, the defendant's servants put a wire hood or screen over the smokestack, the sparks were very much smaller. Under the rulings in Gantt's Case, supra, and Ryan v. Gross, supra, this evidence was clearly admissible, not only for the purpose of showing that the fire was caused by the sparks from the steam shovel, but also as tending to show negligence on the part of the defendant. The mere fact that the defendant or its servants after the fire put a wire hood or screen ever the smokestack would not be admissible for the purpose of establishing an admission of liability by the defendant *Page 484
(Ziehm v. United Electric, etc., Co.,
The ninth exception is to the refusal of the Court to allow the witness to say whether the steam shovel in question threw out any more sparks than steam shovels usually throw out. In Baltimoreand York Turnp. Co. v. Crowther,
A witness for the defendant having stated that in operating a steam shovel, the shovel "excavates dirt, lifts it and deposits it in wagons which haul it away at a distant point. The horses and wagons get as close to the shovel as possible," was asked if "any of the horses were burned as result of sparks emitted from steam shovel?" and the tenth exception is to the refusal of the lower Court to allow the question to be answered. It is not clear that the evidence of this witness referred to the operation of the particular shovel in question while it was employed in the neighborhood of the plaintiff's property, or that the witness ever saw the steam *Page 485 shovel while engaged in that work, and the fact that no horses had been burned could not have aided the jury in determining whether the fire which injured the plaintiff's house was caused by sparks from the steam shovel, or whether the defendant had used proper care to avoid injury to the same.
The defendant's second prayer was withdrawn. Its fourth prayer asserted the proposition that if the plaintiff's house was insured, and he received the sum of $885.00 from the insurance company in payment of the loss caused by the fire, he was not entitled to recover, and is disposed of by the case of CityPass. Ry. Co. v. Baer,
Plaintiff's first prayer was approved in Sims v. AmericanIce Co., supra. No objection was urged in this Court to the plaintiff's third prayer except that the case should have been withdrawn from the jury, and the objection to plaintiff's fourth prayer, which instructed the jury that they were not to consider the payment made by the insurance company, is disposed of by what we have said in reference to defendant's fourth prayer.
Finding no error in the rulings of the Court below the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to the appellee. *Page 486
Sims v. American Ice Co. ( 1908 )
Phelps Ex Rel. Phelps v. Board of County Commissioners ( 1912 )
Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad v. Hawthorne ( 1892 )
Hodges v. Baltimore Engine Co. ( 1915 )
Ziehm v. United Electric Light & Power Co. ( 1906 )
Blanco v. J. C. Penney Co. ( 1968 )
Nicholson v. Blanchette ( 1965 )
Hagan v. Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission ( 1974 )
State Ex Rel. Parr v. Board of County Commissioners ( 1955 )
Kremen v. Maryland Automobile Insurance Fund ( 2001 )
Barnes v. United Railways & Electric Co. ( 1922 )
Becker Pretzel Bakeries, Inc. v. Universal Oven Company ( 1968 )
Norfolk Southern Railway Corp. v. Tiller ( 2008 )