CLARK v. MANCHESTER.
Supreme Court of New Hampshire
June, 1883.
62 N.H. 577
G. B. French, for the plaintiff.
J. B. Fassett, for the defendants.
Doe, C. J. On a quantum meruit the plaintiff demands what he is justly entitled to. The contract which he repudiated, and on which four payments had been made, was an entire one for two years’ work. He can recover no more than is equitably due; and equity considers the whole transaction, including the fact that during the first four months he received more than he earned. The question of justice is not limited to a month, or to the damages for which the defendants can maintain an action against him. The law of the case is no more inconsistent with moral right than his contractual disability requires. Hall v. Butterfield, 59 N. H. 354; Bartlett v. Bailey, 59 N. H. 408.
Judgment for the plaintiff for $16.
Stanley, J., did not sit: the others concurred.
CLARK, Adm‘r, v. MANCHESTER.
Supreme Court of New Hampshire, Hillsborough
June, 1883.
62 N.H. 577
When an injury results from negligence in the management of corporate property used for business purposes, and from which profit and advantage are derived, the corporation is liable in the same way that an individual would be liable for negligent acts.
The corporation owes no duty to one trespassing upon its land, or who is there without license or invitation; and if a person, without such license or invitation, goes upon the land for mere pleasure or to gratify curiosity, and there meets with an injury consequent upon the corporation‘s negligent management of its property, he has no remedy unless the negligence is of so gross a character as to amount to a wanton infliction of injury; and no distinction is made in favor of an infant child so receiving an injury.
Damages for injuries resulting in death, and provided for by the act of 1879, must be confined to injuries suffered by the decedent before death, and cannot include the loss to relatives by reason of his death, nor extend to any injury beyond his life.
CASE, for injuries resulting in the death of the plaintiff‘s intestate. Plea, the general issue. The plaintiff offered to prove the following facts: In 1863 the defendant city established a reservoir of water for public use in extinguishing fires. The reservoir was on land of the defendant, bounded easterly and northerly by public streets, and enclosed by a substantial fence. The defendant maintained the reservoir in this way until the latter part of 1878, when it was abandoned, and the city began filling the excavation with earth, that the land might be put to more valuable purposes. To facilitate the filling of the reservoir, the fences around it were removed. In September, 1879, the southerly and easterly parts for a considerable distance had been filled, but a portion of the excavation still remained, containing water to the depth of four feet. The water in the reservoir and the process of filling it had a tendency to attract children there, and in the summer of 1879 young boys had fallen into the water several times. North-west of the reservoir land was an enclosed field, where entertainments and sports, like ball-playing and other games, were carried on, and a foot-path led from the street east of the reservoir across the northerly part of the reservoir land towards the play-ground. In the afternoon of September 27, 1879, the plaintiff‘s boy, a little less than four years old, and living with his parents about one hundred and fifty feet south-easterly from the reservoir, went with his older brother, following a band of music with a crowd of other boys, to the play-ground. In the crowd about the gate of the play-ground the brothers became separated. The older boy went home without his brother, and the younger one, wandering by the reservoir excavation, fell into the water and was drowned. There was no license or invitation to the child to go there. The plaintiff claims that there was no fault or negligence on the part of the boy or his parents; that the defendants managed the filling of the reservoir in a negligent and improper manner by leaving it for so long a time unprotected by any fence or guard; and that the injury resulting in death was caused by such negligent management.
The defendants moved for a nonsuit, which was denied. The question whether, on proof of the facts stated, the action can be maintained, is reserved.
A. F. Stevens and W. R. Patten, for the defendants.
Allen, J. In the absence of a statute creating the liability, no action can be maintained against a municipal corporation for an injury arising from the neglect of a public corporate duty, from the performance of which the corporation receives no special benefit, pecuniary or otherwise. Edgerly v. Concord, 8 ante. But when the neglect is not of a public but of a private duty, and is in respect to the care and management of property from which a pecuniary or other special advantage is received by the corporation, it is liable for an injury arising from the neglect in the same manner that individuals would be liable. Cool. Torts 619, 620; 2 Dill. Mun. Cor. 981; Hill v. Boston, 122 Mass. 344, 359.
So long as the defendants maintained and used the reservoir for the public purpose of extinguishing fires within the city, they were exercising a public corporate duty, and for an injury arising from any neglect in the performance of that duty they could not have been liable. But, at the time of the injury complained of, the reservoir had not been used for any public purpose, nor in fact for any purpose, for nearly a year. Its use as a reservoir for water had been abandoned, and the defendants were engaged in filling the excavation so as to use the land for some valuable and more profitable purpose. The city was dealing with and managing the land as a private owner deals with and manages his own property. Under such circumstances the defendants would be liable for an injury resulting from their want of care, in the same manner and to the same extent that an individual would for his negligent acts in the care and management of his property.
But the owner of land, for whatever purpose it may be used, is under no obligation to keep his premises in a safe condition for the prevention of injury to trespassers and persons intruding, without license or invitation expressed or implied. He owes them no such duty. For injuries received by strangers upon his premises through his want of care, he is liable only to those who may at the time be there by invitation, by license express or implied, or upon legitimate errand. Beck v. Carter, 68 N. Y. 283, citing Blyth v. Topham, 2 Cro. Jac. 158; Pierce v. Whitcomb, 48 Vt. 127; Sweeny v. Old Colony R. R. Co., 10 Allen 368; Tobin v. Railroad Co., 59 Me. 183. The plaintiff‘s intestate was not upon the land of the defendants, where he was drowned, by express or implied invitation, for any purpose. The fact that the ground was unenclosed, and that the deceased and people at their pleasure went there without objection, was not an invitation; and from that fact alone no license to go there can be inferred. Cool. Torts 606; Severy v. Nickerson, 120 Mass. 306; Hargreaves v. Deacon, 25 Mich. 1. The fact that the person who suffered injury and death was an infant
On the facts stated, the action cannot be maintained.
Case discharged.
The foregoing opinion was given at the June term, 1882. Since that time the plaintiff has amended his declaration by the addition of two counts; and the question is reserved, whether the action can be maintained upon the facts alleged in either of the new counts, and if so, what the rule of damages may be.
Allen, J. The first of the plaintiff‘s amended counts, after reciting the material facts offered to be proved under the original declaration, alleges that the place of the reservoir, at the time of the injury, was an unguarded excavation, pit, and trap, near to the public street and the residences of a large number of people including that of the plaintiff, and the water therein, together with the work of filling the excavation, was calculated to and did allure to it young children; that the defendants had knowledge of the situation, and these facts were a license and invitation to the plaintiff‘s child to come there; and that, neither he nor his parents being in fault, he went there, fell into the pit, and was drowned.
If the facts stated in this count were proved, they would not establish the defendants’ liability. The excavation for a reservoir was not made and filled with water for a trap, but for lawful use by the defendants on their own land. The work of filling it was not carried on for the purpose of attracting boys there and giving them sport and pleasure, but for the improvement and beneficial use of the city‘s land. The averment of license and invitation to the child to go there is one of argument by inference from the facts stated, and the facts positively averred do not warrant and support the inference. The fact that children went to the reservoir pit from curiosity or for pleasure, without objection of the defendants, was not an invitation nor a license to go there. The child was not upon the land by invitation, nor under circumstances which made it the duty of the defendants to protect him. He was there to gratify his curiosity, or for mere pleasure, and the defendants owed him no special duty. It was not a case of set-
The second amendment adds a count which states a case for an injury from an insufficiently guarded highway. On this amendment the question arises whether it is a necessary prerequisite to the maintenance of an action for an injury from an insufficient highway resulting in death, upon the statute of 1879 (Laws of 1879, c. 35), that the plaintiff shall first file in the city clerk‘s office his claim, under oath, setting out the time, place, and character of the injury, and the amount of damages demanded, as provided in
In the law of 1879 there are no provisions requiring the preliminary statement under oath to be filed as a condition of the suit, and there is no reason to infer that the legislature intended to couple with the statute a provision of such vital importance without in some way expressing that intention. The plain language of the statute is, that an executor or administrator may have an action in all cases of death from the wrongful act or neglect of another, where, if death had not ensued, the person injured would have been entitled to recover damages for the injury. No distinction is made against cases of death from an insufficient highway, and no conditions are imposed in such cases not applicable to all cases of death from the wrongful act or neglect of another. The statute is,
The rule of damages depends upon the construction to be given to the statute of 1879, the question being whether damages are given to the surviving relations of the deceased for the loss and injury to them from his death, or for the injury to the deceased which caused his death; whether for the injury resulting from death, or for the injury resulting in death. The statute is, that the executor or administrator may recover damages for the injury, when the person injured, if death had not ensued, would have been entitled to recover damages. The damages are for the widow and children, in equal shares; and if there be no child, wholly to the widow; and if no widow, to the heirs of the deceased according to the law regulating the distribution of intestate estates. In this case the father of the deceased child will be entitled to the recovery.
Prior to the statute of 1879, no action for an injury resulting in death could be maintained unless commenced before the death of the injured person. The right of action for personal injuries did not survive. Wyatt v. Williams, 43 N. H. 102; Vittum v. Gilman, 48 N. H. 416; Sawyer v. Railroad, 58 N. H. 517 The English statute of 1846, known as Lord Campbell‘s act, was, in its first section giving the right of action, substantially like our statute;
While our statute reserves the damages recovered for the benefit of the surviving relations of the deceased, it omits the provision for assessing the damages upon the injury to them as a basis of recovery. The ground of recovery in our statute is the injury to the deceased which resulted in or caused his death.
The rule which requires that construction which will most nearly effect the intention of the legislature and will best suppress the mischief which the act was designed to remedy, points directly to the injury resulting in death as the one for which damages are to be given. In the case of Sawyer v. Railroad, ante, the court was very earnestly urged in argument to overrule the doctrine of Wyatt v. Williams and Vittum v. Gilman, that a cause of action for personal injuries did not survive. After argument, decision, and re-argument, the doctrine was adhered to as one too long established and too well settled to be overthrown by anything short of legislative action. The final decision in Sawyer v. Railroad was given in March, 1879, and the statute in question was enacted at the next session of the legislature, in July, 1879. It could not well be made, by inference from circumstances, to appear more plainly or pointedly, that the legislature intended that rights of action for personal injuries resulting in death should survive, and that the mischief intended to be suppressed by the act was the loss by death of a right of action before complete.
Under the Massachusetts statute of 1842, by which actions of tort for personal injuries were made to survive, it was decided that in case of instantaneous death there could be no action, for no injury preceded death in point of time, or the injury was merged in the death. Kearney v. Railroad, 9 Cush. 108. Under a similar statute in Tennessee the same decision was made. Louisville &c. Railroad v. Burke, 6 Cold. 45. This case was subsequently overruled in Nashville &c. Railroad v. Prince, 2 Heisk. 580; see, also, Foulkes v. Railroad, 9 Heisk. 829. In Connecticut, under a statute providing for the survival of actions of tort for personal injuries, it has been decided that the action can be maintained in case of instantaneous death. Murphy v. N. Y. & N. H. Railroad, 30 Conn. 184. The New York statute is construed in the same way. Brown v. Railroad, 22 N. Y. 191. A construction which denies the action in case of instantaneous death rests upon purely metaphysical and technical grounds, and, if insisted upon, leads to unjust discrimination by defeating the operation of the statute in a large class of meritorious cases. Practically and in substance, though the intervening time may be very brief, an injury causing death or resulting in death must precede death in point of time. And in all cases of injury occasioned by the wrongful act or neglect of another resulting in death, the cause of action survives, and damages for the injury are given to the executor or administrator for the benefit of the survivors named in the statute.
Case discharged.
Stanley, Smith, and Clark, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred.
