20 N.Y.S. 130 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1892
Sic utere tua wb alienum non Icedas, the maxim which expresses the only restriction which the law places upon the ownership of property, is invoked by the plaintiff, and is made applicable by the allegation that the rock on which plaintiff’s house rests extends a considerable depth
The owner relies upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, which may apply to the facts as the defendants claim them to be, but, to make the principle applicable, the defendants should withdraw their admission, and deny the facts which make the other rule controlling. Where an owner contracts with another to do a lawful act, in a lawful manner, he is, of course, not answerable to a stranger for the manner in which the independent contractor or his servants do the work; but the peculiar facts alleged take the case out of this rule. Demurrers constitute a dangerous form of admission, (Moak’s Van Santv. Pl., 3d Ed., 778;) for it is difficult to make a legal argument contrary to the facts admitted. Yothing herein is to be construed as holding that blasting may not be lawfully carried on in a city when it can be done, as it ordinarily is, without serious injury to adjoining property. The decision is based on the special facts alleged and admitted. It follows that the plaintiff is entitled to interlocutory judgment on the demurrer, with leave to the defendants to withdraw the same and answer over on payment, within 10 days, of $20 costs, the trial fee of an issue of law.