delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the defendant in error to recover damages for the death of his intestate, Milton Palmer, resulting, as is alleged, from the negligence of the plaintiff in error. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of the administrаtor for $10,000, and the case has been brought to this court by tlm Light and Power Company.
The record shows that on discovering the fire, young Palmer, instead of sounding the alarm through a telephone in the building, ran to a house across the street, and sought to do so with a telephone located there. After an ineffectual effort to make connection, he abandoned it, and returned to the power house. By that time the fire had spread until it was a serious conflagration. The flames and smoke were рouring out of the main entrance and the windows in that part of the building. There were other openings or doors into the power house, but, seeing Palmer in the act of passing in through this main entrance, a policeman on the ground expostulated with him on what he characterized as “foolhardiness.” Disregarding the
This is a meager outline of the fire and its results, so far ás they affect the present case. While the evidence attributing the origin of the fire to negligence of the company was attenuated, it may be assumed that, with its inferences, it was sufficient tо preclude us, under the rule, from saying that there was not material evidence to support the verdict on this point. Assuming, therefore, that the jury were warranted in finding that the defendant company was guilty of such negligenсe, were they also warranted in .finding that this negligence was the proximate cause of Palmer’s fatal injuries? For there must be a concurrence of these essentials in order to maintain the present aсtion.
It seems to be well settled that, where one person is exposed to peril of life or limb by the negligence of .another, the latter will be liable in damages for injuries received by a third party in a reasоnable effort to rescue the one so imperiled. Pennsylvania, Co. v. Roney,
But whether the benefit of this rule is to be extended to one injurеd in an effort to save his own or another’s property, exposed to danger by the wrongdoing or negligence of a third party, is a question that has provoked, much difference of judicial opinion. Oppоsed to this extension are found the cases of Eckert v. Railroad Co.,
In his charge to the jury the trial judge gave the
An examination of tbe cases will confirm tbe statement of Mr. Archibald Watson, of tbe New York bar, in bis recent аnd very valuable work, entitled “Damages for Personal Injuries,” that “no branch of tbe subject of personal injuries presents greater difficulty than tbe determination of liability for a specific loss, with reference to its naturalness and proximity as a consequence of tbe wrongful act complained of.”
So great has this uncertainty been felt, that many courts have reached tbe conclusion that, at last, “to a sound judgmеnt must be left each particular case.” Harrison v. Berkley,
While there is much of practical truth in these statements, and the most careful study of the best textbooks and opinions of courts will fail to discover an infallible guide, yet it will be found that all agree on certain general formulas or rules, which, though difficult of application in some, are of value in all, cases involving this question of proximate or remote cause.
In Deming v. Cotton Press Co.,
In each of these cases, while the injury complained of was not the necessary effect of the particular act of negligence held to be the proximate cause, yet it was the natural result, and one which, in the face of
But the consequential injury, according to the authorities, must be natural, “folloAving upon the original wrongful act, in the usual, ordinary, and experienced course of events.” Wiley v. Railroad Co., 44 N. J. Law, 248; Railroad Co. v. Kellogg
On the other hand, where the result is such that no reasonable man would exрect it to occur, and no knowledge is shown in the person doing the negligent or wrongful act that such a state of things exists as to make the damage probable, we think the rule is that the injury will not be regarded as actiоnable as against the wrongdoer. Sharp v. Powell, L. R., 7 C. P., 253. And especially should this be true where the injury results from an act com
On this phase of the subject, Mr. Watson, in section 82 of the work already referred to, says: “It is not necessary, it is believed, to show that the plaintiff’s intervening act, which may render the defendant’s act the remote cause of the fоrmer’s injuries, amounted to contributory negligence in law. Whether, in its character, the plaintiff’s act is' negligent or otherwise, it will, just as an intervening cause of any other uature, if unexpected, and of a charaсter which could not have been contemplated or foreseen, and without which no injuries would have been occasioned, relieve of liability the author of the original wrong.”
Now, in view of these generаl rules, which it would' seem, are based on common fairness and right reason, where, upon the undisputed facts as disclosed in the record, rests the responsibility for the loss of young
Whatever may hereafter be developed, at least on the record as it now is, we think these questions must
