320 Mass. 710 | Mass. | 1947
These are two actions of tort in which the judge, at the close of the plaintiffs’ opening, ordered verdicts for the defendants subject to the plaintiffs’ exceptions. The declarations in the two cases are substantially the same. In the first count of each the plaintiff alleges negligence by reason of a violation of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 48, § 16; the second counts allege negligence arising out of a violation of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 160, § 235, as amended. While the declarations do not specifically mention the statutes, it is obvious that they were drawn with reference to them.
In his opening, counsel for the plaintiffs read to the jury the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 160, § 235, as amended, and of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 48, § 16. He then stated that he would prove that at some time prior to April 30, 1942, the defendants had cut and piled up brush on their railroad location; that between April 1 and December 1 of that year they did not clear the location of dead leaves, dead grass, and other inflammable material; that some time in the early afternoon of April 30 the plaintiff Carbone, “who . . . [operated] a farm at some distance from this woodland, was advised by some of his workmen that his wood was on fire ” ; and that Carbone and others attempted to extinguish the fire “but it got beyond their control and got in onto . . . [the plaintiff] Nichols’s woodland, and from there into Carbone’s woodland,” burned about two hundred fifty cords of cord wood and about five hundred fence posts thereon, and damaged a sizable tract of land. Counsel then stated that he would offer in evidence photographs, which were taken as soon after the fire as possible, “to show that part of the location which was burned and from which it spread onto the woodland of the plaintiffs in these two actions.”
The following colloquy then occurred: “The Judge. If it is not clear on the record, may I say that as part of your opening you say that you have no evidence of what caused the fire? Counsel for the plaintiffs. That is true. The Judge. As to who caused it, or why? Counsel for the plaintiffs. That is true.” The Judge then said to the
The judge erred in directing verdicts for the defendants.
We lay to one side the contention of the defendants that G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 48, § 16,
It is true that in all of the cases that have come to our attention where violation of a statute has been held to be evidence of negligence, the statute under consideration was
The ordering of the verdicts cannot be supported on the ground stated by the trial judge. That the cause of the fire did not appear was not necessarily fatal to recovery. Geraci v. A. G. Tomasello & Son, Inc. 293 Mass. 552. In that case, although the cause of the fire was not shown, the plaintiff was allowed to recover on proof that the fire started at a place where the defendant had negligently allowed inflammable material (gasoline or oil) to accumulate. In the present cases the opening showed negligence on the part of the defendants in not complying with § 235. If this negligence was causally related to the fire that damaged the plaintiffs’ property, the plaintiffs were entitled to go forward with their evidence. The opening leaves this aspect of the case in some doubt. But we are disposed to resolve it in favor of the plaintiffs in the circumstances here disclosed.
While the practice of ordering a verdict on an opening
We are of opinion in these circumstances that the opening ought not to be interpreted as showing no causal connection between the inflammable material and the fire, and that the plaintiffs ought to have been allowed to go forward with their evidence.
This is the opinion of a majority of the court.
Exceptions sustained.
“Every owner, lessee, tenant or occupant of lands or of any-rights or interests therein, except electric, telephone and telegraph companies, who cuts or permits the cutting of brush, wood or timber on lands which border upon woodland, or upon a highway or railroad location, shall dispose of the slash caused by such cutting in such a manner that the same will not remain on the ground within forty feet of any woodland, highway or railroad location.”
Typical of such statements is the following: The “violation of a criminal statute is evidence of negligence ... as to all consequences that the statute was intended to prevent.” Bourne v. Whitman, 209 Mass. 155, 166-167. Similar expressions may be found in Gordon v. Bedard, 265 Mass. 408, 411, Falk v. Finkelman, 268 Mass. 524, 527, Wainwright v. Jackson, 291 Mass. 100, 102, Baggs v. Hirschfield, 293 Mass. 1, 3, Kralik v. LeClair, 315 Mass. 323, 326, and Deignan v. Lubarsky, 318 Mass. 661, 664.