This is a suit to enjoin the defendants from blasting on land adjoining the plaintiffs’ property, and to recover compensation for damage caused by the blasting. At the time of the hearing the blasting operations of the defendants had ceased and there was no need for injunctive relief. The judge, however, retained the suit for the assessment of damages.
Reynolds
v.
Grow,
The facts found by the judge are these. The defendant entered into a contract with the town of Arlington for the construction of an addition to a junior high school. The school property was adjacent to a house and lot owned and occupied by the plaintiffs. In the course of the construction work it became necessary to blast a ledge of rock which, although located on the town property, was close to the plaintiffs’ property. The defendant obtained a blasting permit from the appropriate authority, and engaged D. M. Bernardi, Inc., hereinafter called Bernardi, to do the blasting. Bernardi was a “reputable . . . organization” which had had many years of experience in blasting operations *466 and there was no negligence on the part of the defendant in selecting Bernardi for this work. When the blasting was done “the usual technique was employed to safeguard adjacent property from harm.” These precautions included the placing of railroad ties and a mat over the rock to be blasted. “[0]n certain occasions the safety devices resorted to by . . . [Bernardi] were inadequate and as a result rock and debris . . . [were] cast upon the land of the plaintiffs, ” and the plaintiffs’ house was damaged. “[B]ecause of the blasting, a water main was broken and water overflowed the plaintiffs’ land, causing considerable damage. ”
The judge ruled that, since the work Bernardi was engaged to perform was inherently dangerous, the fact that it was an independent contractor did not relieve the defendant from liability.
The defendant rightly does not challenge the ruling of the judge just stated. See
McConnon
v.
Charles H. Hodgate Co.
For another reason urged by the defendant the findings ought to be clarified. There was evidence that the plaintiffs’ property sustained damage from the blasting that exceeded considerably the amount assessed as damages by the *467 judge. But the evidence shows that virtually all of this damage resulted from concussion or vibration generated by the blasts, as distinct from direct damage resulting from rocks or debris cast on the plaintiffs’ property. The proof of damage for the most part related to the house and consisted of evidence of cracked ceilings, cracked walls, a broken oil tank, and the like. There was some evidence that rocks and debris were cast on the plaintiffs’ property, but we infer that the damage from this source was negligible as compared with that to the house.
Under our decisions one carrying on blasting operations is liable without proof of negligence for all direct injuries to the property of another, as where stones or debris are cast upon it; but in the absence of negligence there is no liability for consequential harm such as is caused by concussion or vibration.
Goldman
v.
Regan,
That portion of the final decree which dismisses the bill as to the defendant Monahan is affirmed; that portion relating to the defendant Grande & Son, Inc., is reversed and the case is to stand for further action by the trial judge in conformity with this opinion. The defendant Grande & Son, Inc., is to have costs of this appeal.
So ordered.
