271 Mo. 516 | Mo. | 1917
Plaintiff sued the Kansas City Terminal Railway Company and the William P. Carmichael Company for damages to a building caused by an excavation made near it by the latter company as a contractor in the construction of a retaining wall for the right of way of the railroad.
The answer of the Carmichael Company included a counterclaim for $172.40.
On the trial there was a verdict for the Railroad Company, and a verdict for the plaintiff against the Carmichael Company for $10,000, and also a verdict for plaintiff against said counterclaim.
There was a remittitur of $2500 by plaintiff, and a judgment in his favor for the $7500.
The Carmichael Company, hereinafter called the defendant, has appealed.
On June 21, 1911, when the work of excavation for such retaining wall began, the plaintiff' was the owner of lot 1 in Block 1 in Graham’s Addition to Kansas City. On that lot was a building the wall of which was contiguous to the right of way of the Terminal Company. Tlrnre were then two deeds of trust on the property, one for $4000, the other for $2500, in both of which V. F.
At that place the railroad was in a cut about thirty-five feet deep, with a double track at about the center of the right of way, which was a hundred and twenty-five feet wide. The bank sloped upward from near the track to about the floor of the basement of plaintiff’s building.
The plaintiff was daily about his business in and around the building during the whole progress of defendant ’s work, and was fully aware of its extent and nature. The south bank of the excavation was about twenty-five feet from plaintiff’s building. The sides of the excavation were braced by sheet piles three inches thick, driven down to rock and supported by longitudinal and cross beams. Prom four to seven feet of that trench at the bottom was excavated by blasting the rock.- The evidence was conflicting as to whether such blasting was done by the use of overcharges of dynamite.
On September 9, 1911, while the work was in progress and before the wall was completed, plaintiff’s north wall slipped down and out so as to tear it loose from its connection with a considerable portion of the floors, but it remained standing. The piles by which defendant was attempting to support the side of its excavation were to some extent shoved out of" line by the pressure of the dirt against them. There was danger that the wall of plaintiff’s building would fall oii defendant’s work, and its workmen were threatening to quit on that account. Defendant’s foreman, Hamilton, thereupon employed one Bovard to prop the building to keep it from falling, and on behalf of defendant paid him $172.40 for that work.
Plaintiff testified that soon after the work began the foreman, Hamilton, told him that he need not protect his building and promised him that defendant would shore it up and protect it from danger. Hamilton on the stand denied making such promise.
1. Because defendant gave plaintiff no notice of such contemplated work.
. 2. That defendant promised plaintiff to protect him against damage.
3. That defendant failed to do such work in short sections.
4. That defendant failed to support the sides of the excavation with piles in sufficient number and strength to support the earth.
5. That defendant used overcharges of dynamite in blasting the rock.
The answer, among other things, contained a general denial, and the averment that the plaintiff was not the owner of the property, but that the same was. owned by C. H. Johnson and V. F. Boor and others. Defendant-did not file any motion asking that Boor or Johnson be made a party to the suit until after the evidence was all in, and when the cause was ready to be submitted to the jury.
The plaintiff and the Terminal Company are citizens of Missouri, and the Carmichael Company is a citizen of Indiana.
At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained a demurrer on the part of the Terminal Railway Company to plaintiff’s evidence. Thereupon the Carmichael Company filed its application and bond for a removal of the cause to the Federal court, which application was refused.
The third instruction for plaintiff was as follows:
‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the building of plaintiff and that portion of his lot upon which the same rested was injured (if you find it to have been injured) by reason of the fact that the building was not shored up and protected in time to have averted such injuries, and that the defendant through its foreman, Hamilton, had assured the plaintiff that defendant would shore up and protect the building and that plaintiff relied on such assurances, and*522 that defendant negligently and carelessly failed to shore up and protect the building as aforesaid, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff. ’ ’
And his second instruction embodied the same theory.
Defendant’s refused instruction Number 10 was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that there is no evidence in this case that defendant Carmichael Company agreed to protect plaintiff’s building or land from dam-, age on account of the excavation of the trench for the new retaining wall mentioned in evidence, and you are instructed that there can. be no recovery by plaintiff in this case on that theory.”
I. The fact that the trustee and beneficiary in the deeds of trust were not joined as plaintiffs herein is no defense to this action. It was said in Matthews v. Railroad, 142 Mo. l. c. 658: “The deed of trust, then, is really a mere security, and an injury to the freehold is a damage to the grantor, who is, in equity, the real owner, and he is at least a proper party to a suit to recover compensation therefor. ”
We may concede that the trustee and beneficiary, one-or both, may also sue for an injury to the freehold. [See Chouteau v. Boughton, 100 Mo. 406.]
Still, the grantor in the deeds of trust is not united in interest' with the trustee and beneficiary so as to require them to be made parties under Revised Statutes 1909, section 1733. It was held in Little v. Harrington, 71 Mo. 390, that joint owners of personalty should unite in a suit for its conversion. Such joint owners of personalty are united in interest. Undoubtedly the defendant had the right to proceed by motion timely filed to have the trustee and beneficiary in the deeds of trust made parties to this suit, in order that all the rights of the parties in relation to each other and to the cause of action might be adjudicated and settled in one proceeding, and that the defendant be not vexed with a multi
II. The trial court properly refused to transfer the cause to the Federal court. In Berry v. Railroad, 118 Fed. 911, and in Powers v. Railway Co., 169 U. S. l. c. 92, it was held that where the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed as to the resident defendant, the non-resident defendant was entitled to a removal. But in Whitcomb v. Smithson, 175 U. S. 635, Fuller, C. J., held that where the trial court directs a verdict in favor of the resident defendant without the consent of plaintiff, there is no right to a removal.
III. Lord Tenterden, in Wyatt v. Harrison, 3 Barn. & Adol. l. c. 876, said:
“It may be true that if my land adjoins that of another, and I have not by building increased the weight upon my soil, and my neighbor digs in his land so as to occasion mine to fall in, he may be liable to an action.”
^ In Charless v. Rankin, 22 Mo. 566, Leonard, J. quoted that language, but added: “When, however, the lateral pressure has been increased by the erection of buildings, it seems, to be well settled at common law by authorities, that no man has a right to an increased support unless he has acquired such a servitude by grant or prescription. It is so laid down in the early case of Wilder v. Minsterly, 2 Rolle’s Abr. 564.”
It was also there said:
“It is to be observed that the defendant was upon his own ground, and in digging upon it, exercised an undoubted right of property, which the plaintiff had no right, either by express grant or prescription — by stat*524 ute or local ordinance — in any way to interfere with or prevent; and although, in exercising his rights, it was certainly his duty to his. neighbor to use ordinary care in order to avoid doing him harm, he was not bound to observe the same care that he would have taken, as a wise and sensible man, if he had been the owner of both buildings — the one erected and the one about to be erected. He would, of course, in that event, have shored up and would have submitted to many inconveniences, and, indeed, would have incurred considerable additional expense in doing the new work, rather than expose the building already erected to any risk. Every prudent person, in such a situation, would take precautions — subject himself to inconveniences, and forego the exercise of every right that would endanger his present building, if he found it for his interest to do so. In the present case, if the laying of the new foundation, in very short sections, would have been attended with increased expense and danger to the sufficiency of the new wall, and the defendant had been the owner of the plaintiff’s building, he might have found it for his interest to have submitted, and most probably would have submitted, to this inconvenience and risk, and even increased expense, to avoid all hazard to his own property; yet the law does not exact of him thej same - forbearance and care and expense for the security of his neighbor’s property that he would have found it for his interest to have taken for his own.”
In Obert v. Dunn, 140 Mo. l. c. 485, is this:
“If, as shown by the authorities, plaintiff was only entitled to lateral support from the lot of defendants for the soil of his lot in a natural state, and not to such support for a building placed on his land, and if, as also shown by the authorities, defendants when engaged in excavating on their own land for a cellar, and in the exercise of ordinary care and skill, and after due notice to the owner are not liable to such owner, though in digging on their own land they dig so near the foundation of the house of their neighbor as to cause it to crack and settle or even fall down, then it must follow that the*525 only question in the case is whether the digging was done with ordinary care and skill.”
It follows that, in the absence of an agreement or promise to do so, the defendant was under no legal duty to shore up or support the ground upon which the building- stood, but was liable only for the lack of ordinary care in doing its work.
If there were any evidence in this case to show that under the conditions which prevailed at the time plaintiff’s ground would have slipped and sunk even if there had been no building on it, the case would be different in its legal aspects.
IV. No notice to the plaintiff of the intended excavation was necessary. The work began in June and the damage did not occur until September. In the meantime plaintiff had full knowledge of the scope and progress of the work with ample opportunity to protect his property. [Larson v. Street Ry. Co., 110 Mo. 234; Gerst v. St. Louis, 185 Mo. 191; Burk Bros. v. Foster, 159 Mo. App. 537.]
V. Hamilton, defendant’s foreman, had no authority as such to bind the defendant by a promise to plaintiff (if any such was made) to protect plaintiff from damage by the slipping, sinking or falling of the wall.
1 Mechem on Agency (2d Ed.), section 715, says:
, “It is a fundamental principle in the law of agency that every delegation of authority whether ‘general’ or ‘special,’ carries with it, unless the contrary be expressed, implied authority to do all of those acts, naturally and ordinarily done in such cases, which are reasonably necessary and proper to be done in this ease in order to carry into effect the main authority conferred. This doctrine rests upon the presumed intention of the principal that the main authority shall not fail because of the lack of express authority to do the incidental acts reasonably necessary to make that authority effective, and also upon the presumption that the principal expects*526 the business to be done in the usual and ordinary way.” Section 743 of that work has this: “It is therefore declared to be a fundamental riile, never to be lost sight of and not easily to be overestimated, that persons dealing with an assumed agent, whether the assumed agency be a general or special one, are bound at their peril, if they would hold the principal, to ascertain not only the fact of the- agency but the nature and extent of the authority, and in case either is controverted, the burden of proof is upon them to establish it.” And section 750, this: “Attention must also be given to the question, of whom shall inquiry as to authority be made? Must the other party go to the principal or may he rely upon the statements of the agents or of strangers? To this question, the law in general gives but one answer: The party dealing with the agent must not rely on what the agent alone may say or do, and a fortiori not on what mere strangers say or do, but he must be able to trace the authority on which he relies back to some word or deed of the principal. ”
Respondent’s brief says that it is a conceded fact at the trial that Hamilton was defendant’s foreman. So it was; but that is not a concession that Hanlilton had any power to assume such additional obligation on the part of his principal. That brief also calls attention to the fact that, after the building cracked and was in danger of falling, Hamilton arranged with Bovard to shore up the building, and that the defendant thereafter paid the bill for that work. Bovard, plaintiff’s witness, testified that when Hamilton arranged for that shoring up defendant’s workmen were threatening to leave for fear that the house would fall on them. Thus it happened that both the plaintiff and defendant were at that time desirous of protecting the building, the plaintiff, because it belonged to him, the defendant, because it did not want it to fall on its work and on its employees. In such a situation Hamilton owed his employer a duty to protect that employer’s interests by such shoring up, but such duty did not involve the power to bind his principal to protect the interests of this plaintiff. When
We have not overlooked what was said in the case of Larson v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., supra. But there is a clear line of demarcation between that case and this. The owner of the adjoining property had no previous notice of the intended excavation as in this case. But in that case the foreman (there called the superintendent), during the progress of the work, told the adjoining proprietor that he intended doing the work in sections. The first part of the work was done that way. But later, and in the absence of the adjoining proprietor, and without any notice to him of a change of plan, the work was rushed through without regard to sections, and the portion of the house adjoining the last excavation fell. It was there said:
“We think that plaintiff had the right to rely upon the statement of the superintendent, made during the progress of the work and of his agency (and, hence, res gestae), as to the care which defendant intended to exercise towards the property of plaintiff with reference to which that statement was made. He had the right to assume that the course foretold would be followed, at least until he had notice to the contrary and a reasonable opportunity thereafter to act upon such later notice. We have added this last observation to meet the suggestion of defendant that plaintiff was duly advised that the excavation was not being done in sections. But on this point it appears that one section was first built, substan*528 tially as promised; and that the long and dangerous excavation later, to which the fall of the building is charged, occurred between half past two and five o’clock of the afternoon preceding the injury.
“On these facts the court cannot justly declare, as a conclusion of law, that plaintiff, in the exercise of reasonable care, was chargeable with notice that the plan of construction, previously indicated by the superintendent, was not to be followed, and should have taken measures of his own for the protection of his domicile.”
In that case the statement of the foreman was not treated as a valid and binding contract of his principal that the adjoining proprietor should he protected against loss. That statement was there considered merely as affecting the question of notice. The foreman in that case did not say: “We will protect your property from damage.” He merely said in effect: “We are going to do the work in sections,” and then he suddenly did it in another way without notice of such change of plan.
In this case there is no complaint of a lack of notice or of a sudden change of plan. From June until September the work went on under plaintiff’s eyes. . The sides of the excavation were supported by piles which were braced in a certain manner. The plaintiff was not misled by what he saw. If the method of protecting the sides of the excavation was insufficient, he had ample opportunity to take such course as he saw proper for the protection of his property. As between the parties the responsibility for the protection of the property rested upon the plaintiff, the defendant being responsible only for the lack- of ordinary care. If the foreman agreed with the plaintiff that defendant would shore up and protect the building, such contract was without any consideration and beyond the powers of the foreman as agent.
Appellant raises several other interesting questions, but as they are not likely to arise, at least in the same way, on another trial, we will pass them by.
The foregoing opinion of Roy, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court