DocketNumber: Appeal No. 64
Citation Numbers: 87 Pa. Super. 489
Judges: Gawthrop, Henderson, Keller, Linn, Orlady, Porter, Trexler
Filed Date: 2/26/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
The employees of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, in relaying tracks through the plaintiff’s farm, threw pieces of wire, most of which it is claimed formed part of the signal appliances of the road, on bundles of corn which the plaintiff had cut and was about to remove to the silos on the farm. Some of these wires became entangled with the corn, and were ground up with it. Small pieces were afterwards found in the stomachs and other vital parts of the animals to whom the ensilage was fed. It was shown that the presence of the wire in the animals caused them to sicken and many of them to die. There were post mortems made of a number of the animals, and the fact that the wires caused the deaths, seems to have been very evident.
The defendants submitted several points, which the court refused without reading, which were to the effect
Some of the animals on the farm were sold to a Dr. Marshall. He testifies that they died from the wire which was féd to them. The plaintiff contends that the finding by the jury that the wires got into the defendant’s ensilage, through the defendant’s ensilage-cutter, was but an inference, and the inference that the other cows died from the same cause would be piling an inference upon an inference. "We cannot follow this reasoning. The employees of the defendant company cut the wire and there is evidence that it was thrown on plaintiff’s field, where plaintiff’s corn was lying in bundles, that the wires were carried into the ensilage, the wire was identified as that of the same kind used by the railroad and one piece still retained the shape it had when it was in place and formed part of the signal appliance of the railroad company. Further, the wire was fed to the cows in their fodder and found in their stomachs and other vital organs after their deaths. We can hardly call these facts such as merely support an inference. When such facts follow consecutively, and the wire is traced from the railroad to the bodies of the cows, we need infer nothing, as to what caused the trouble. If one of the links of the chain were missing, we might say that the conclusion was arrived at by an inference. From these facts, that these wires were found in the bodies of a number of cows, and that other cows were fed from the same ensilage, the inference drawn that they died from the same cause is neither far fetched nor untenable. The conclusion that they died from the same cause is fully borne out by the statement of Dr. Marshall, which is too long to insert here, but which fully
Some of the men who worked on the farm at the time the silos were filled, were not called as witnesses, and the court affirmed a point submitted by the defendant, that “where a party in litigation has within its power to produce evidence material to the cause of action being tried and wMch would aid the jury in reacMng a correct conclusion and fails to call the witness or produce the evidence and does not explain its failure, the jury may presume that the evidence if produced would be unfavorable to the party.” Following tMs point the plaintiff submitted a point wMch was to the same effect, but assumed that the men so employed had the opportumty to observe whether the wire was entangled in the corn and may have heard it passing through the ensilage-cutter, and blower-pipe, and that the plaintiff had failed to show what became of the fourteen cows sold to Dr. Marshall, etc. The court very properly refused this point, for it did not appear that these witnesses had the opportunity to observe whether the wire was entangled in the corn or that they might have heard the wire passing through the ensilage-cutter and blower-pipe. The men who testified did not hear it, and the reference to the cows sold to Dr. Marshall was an entirely different subject and had no relation to the other part of the point, and which we need not discuss, for, if any part of the point was improper, the court could negative the whole. We see no error in the court’s refusal of this point.
There is some contention that the court’s instructions to the jury did not limit the liability of the company to times when the employees were acting in the line of their duty, and that the court in its charge indicates that the defendants were liable to the acts of their employees without making this distinction. We
The alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff was not a matter of law for the court; it was properly left to the jury. The value of the animals was, we think, fixed in a proper manner. We see no reason why a person who has frequently seen a herd of cattle, and is acquainted with the market value, and who has shown his expertness, may not say that the average .market value is a certain sum per head.
All the assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.