163 Ky. 792 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Carl Massey, an infant, suing by his father and next friend, George Massey, brought this action against the Allegheny" Coke Company and its foreman, John Puller, to recover damages for personal injuries. Prom a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor against the coke company in the sum of $6,000.00 the latter appeals.
The facts are these: Defendant was preparing to erect a coal tipple at its plant in the town of Hellier, ini Pike County. It became necessary to break some stone
In his original petition plaintiff charged that the blasting was negligently done. In his amended petition he alleged that the blasting was being done within the corporate limits of the town of Hellier and within a very short distance of a large number of dwelling houses which were occupied by men, women and children, and that the blasting in such close proximity to the dwelling houses and the throwing of the stone into the dwelling house occupied by the plaintiff constituted a nuisance.
The court told the jury, in substance, to find for the plaintiff, if it believed that the defendants, while engaged in blasting for a tipple foundation, threw a rock into the dwelling house of George Massey and injured plaintiff.
It is a rule in this State that where the blasting operations result in a direct trespass upon the premises injured by casting soil or rocks thereon, the liability of the person causing the injury is absolute, and he must respond in damages irrespective of the question of negligence or want of skill. The reason for the rule is that-unless a party can show a right, either in the nature of a presumed grant or easement, or in some other mode, to use his property in a particular way, he cannot use it in that .particular way if it occasions injury to his neighbors, in the quiet enjoyment of their legal rights and privileges, and it makes no difference whether precautions are used or not to prevent the injury complained
Defendant insists that the above rule is based upon the sanctity which the ancient common law attached to the ownership and occupancy of real property, and especially to the sanctity which that law attached to one’s dwelling house, which was deemed to be his castle, and does not apply to personal injuries unless the blasting is done in a situation where it is necessarily dangerous to the public, as in a thickly settled portion of a city. Thompson on Negligence, Section 764. In other words, defendant’s position is that unless the blasting be done in a thickly populated city, no liability for personal injury arises unless there is negligence, as, for example, where care has not been taken to warn persons in the vicinity that the blast is about to be fired, in order that they might seek places of safety. As the accident did not happen in a thickly populated portion of the city and as ample warning of the blast was given, it is argued that the court not only erred in authorizing a recovery in the absence of negligence, but also erred ■in refusing a peremptory instruction in favor of defendant.
It is doubtless true that where a person is not injured in his own home, to which he has the right to go for protection, but is injured outside of his home, he must show either one of two things: that the blasting
“The plaintiff as the owner of her property was entitled to the undisputed possession of it. The entry of the defendant upon it, either by its street car or by the pole which it set in motion, was a trespass. One who trespasses upon another and inflicts an injury is liable for the injury unless caused by the act of God or produced by causes beyond his control. We have held that one who is blasting throws rock or other debris upon the land of another, is liable for injury done, irrespective of whether the blasting was negligently done or not, as there is in such a case an actual invasion of others premises and the act itself is a nuisance. The principle has been applied to the pollution of air or the abstraction of any portion of the soil, or the casting of anything upon the land in other ways. (Langhorne v. Truman,*796 141 Ky., 809, Langhorn v. Wilson, 91 S. W., 254.) The same principle must apply here.”
The question of contributory negligence is eliminated from the case by the fact that plaintiff was an infant only four years of age and could not, therefore, be guilty of contributory negligence, and by the further fact that even if the child’s mother was guilty of contributory negligence, such negligence, under the facts of this case, could not be attributed to plaintiff. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Wilkins, Guardian, 143 Ky., 572; South Covington & Cincinnati St. Ry. Co. v. Herrklotz, By etc., 104 Ky., 400.
When the warning of the blast was given the mother and child had the right to seek the protection of their own home. While there they had the right to be secure not only in their property, but in their person. Defendant’s act in causing the rock to be thrown into plaintiff’s home and causing the injury was a direct trespass and therefore a'nuisance. It follows that it was not necessary to show negligence in order to render! defendant liable. The trial court, therefore, did not err in so instructing the jury, or in refusing the peremptory instruction asked by the defendant.
Judgment affirmed.