88 N.Y.S. 483 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The city of Albany entered into a contract to an one public parks. The plaintiff was one of the numerous spectators, and chose her position in a street adjacent to the park, and at no great distance from the place of firing. When the exhibition had been in progress about half an hour, and several large rockets had been fired without damage, the plaintiff, while gazing upward, was hit in the face by the stick of an exploded rocket, and severely injured. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the court granted the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff appeals.
The appellant urges that the defendant was guilty of a nuisance per se in discharging fireworks in such proximity to a public highway as to be dangerous to persons traveling thereon, and was therefore liable irrespective of any question as to its negligence in the manner of doing it. We do not think this is so. The display was not unlawful of itself. The authorities of the city of Albany had sanctioned and directed that the display take place in its park. Besides, the plaintiff was not, in a legal sense, using the public highway for the purposes of travel. She selected her position as a place of view. She was not a passer-by injured by an unforeseen, unlawful act. We do not mean to be understood that she was guilty of negligence, as matter of law, in standing as she did, but her legal status was changed so that she cannot -invoke the principle of protection accorded to a mere passer-by injured by the discharge of fireworks in such proximity to the public highway as to be dangerous. 1 Thompson’s Com. on Neg. § 791.
The principle upon which the defendant was held liable in Speir v. City of Brooklyn, 139 N. Y. 6, 34 N. E. 727, 21 L. R. A. 641, 36 Am. St. Rep. 664, was quite different from that involved in the present case. There fireworks were discharged in the street, and a rocket entered a window of plaintiff’s house, and set it .on fire. In the course of the opinion, however, the court in that case says:
“It has been decided in some cases that the discharge of fireworks in the streets of a city or village is a nuisance per se, and subjects persons engaged in the transaction to responsibility for any injury to person or property re-
In the well-considered case of Dowell v. Guthrie, 99 Mo. 653, 12 S. W. 900, 17 Am. St. Rep. 598, it was held that the discharge of fireworks from a veranda in front of the second story of a courthouse in the populous part of a small city, from troughs so arranged that the rockets would pass over the assembled people who were there for the purpose of witnessing the display, was not of itself an unlawful or wrongful act, and not a nuisance per se; and that a spectator injured under such circumstances occupied a different position from one injured while making the ordinary use of the highway for the purpose of travel.
It is manifestly the rule that, where the person injured is not at the time in the ordinary public use of the highway for the purposes of travel, but is attending a celebration or exhibition permitted by municipal authorities as a voluntary spectator, the question of the liability of the person discharging the fireworks depends upon whether there was negligence in discharging them. Dowell v. Guthrie, 99 Mo. 653, 12 S. W. 900, 17 Am. St. Rep. 598; Scanlon v. Wedger, 156 Mass. 462, 31 N. E. 642, 16 L. R. A. 395; Frost v. Josselyn, 180 Mass. 389, 62 N. E. 469. The plaintiff’s counsel must have been of this opinion, for the complaint is clearly one in negligence alone. But upon the theory of negligence the appellant insists that the mere happening of the accident was sufficient proof of negligence. Thompson, in his Commentaries on Negligence, after citing and commenting upon the cases arising out of injuries to spectators by the discharge of fireworks, says:
“It follows that in an action for damages for such an injury the burden will be upon the plaintiff to show negligence on the part of the defendant over those for whom he is responsible, and the mere fact of an accident proceeding from such a source will not be evidence of negligence to warrant a recovery of damages, under the principle of res ipsa loquitur, so as to devolve upon the defendant the burden of showing how the explosion occurred, in such a manner as to exonerate himself from the imputation of negligence.”
In Griffen v. Manice, 166 N. Y. 196, 59 N. E. 927, 52 L. R. A. 922, 82 Am. St. Rep. 630, the court, by Cullen, J., says:
“When the facts and circumstances from which the jury is asked to infer negligence are those immediately attendant on the occurrence, we speak of it as a case' of res ipsa loquitur; when not immediately connected with the occurrence, then it is an ordinary case of circumstantial evidence. In Benedick v. Potts, 88 Md. 52, 40 Atl. 1067, 41 L. R. A. 478, it is said: ‘In no instance can the bare fact that an injury has happened, of itself and divorced from all the surrounding circumstances, justify the inference that the injury was caused by negligence. It is true that direct proof of negligence is not necessary. Like any other fact, negligence may be established by the proof of circumstances from which its existence may be inferred.’ ”
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. All concur, except SMITH, J., who dissents.
I cannot to the conclusion reached Justice HOUGHTON. The plaintiff was injured while an invited spectator of these fireworks exhibited by the defendant. If she must prove specific negligence in the firing of the specific rocket, her case is, of course, hopeless, and she is without a remedy for the severe injury which she has suffered. As far as appears, this rocket only fell among a crowd of spectators. All other rockets were properly guided out of harm’s way. If this rocket had been properly directed, it would not have fallen where it did, unless through the interference of some unusual force. There is no evidence that the wind was blow-1 ing in a way which would have carried the rocket where it fell, and that there was no such wind would seem to .be evidenced by the fact that no other rockets fell there. The fact that the rocket fell in that particular place is to my mind prima facie evidence that it was so directed by the agency which fired it, and such direction was sufficient evidence of negligence at least to put the defendant to proof of care in the discharge of the rocket. In Colvin v. Peabody, 155 Mass. 104, 29 N. E. 59, a dealer in fireworks was sued for an injury caused by
“There was sufficient evidence for the jury of the negligence of the defendant’s agents. The evidence tended to show that the mortars were discharged in too small an inclosure for perpendicular firing to be safe; that insufficient time was taken for preparation; that the firing was done in somewhat of a hurry; that due care in firing bombs requires that the mortars should be so aimed that the bombs will not fall upon the people; and that the bomb or shell which hit the plaintiff fell at a place far from where it was intended to fall, or safe for it to fall. The defendant now contends that there was no evidence of the negligent firing off of a particular mortar from which the plaintiff received her injury. There was, however, nothing to show that anybody else was discharging mortars near by, and the jury might well find that she was hurt by a bomb or fragment of a shell" carelessly fired from a mortar by the defendant’s agents, and this was enough, without identifying the particular mortar, or the particular discharge, or tracing the bomb in its flight.”
While all of the elements of negligence there enumerated are not found in the case at bar, the fact that the bomb fell at a place far from where it was intended to fall, or safe for it to fall, is part of the evidence which was held sufficient to sustain a finding of negligence in that case. See, also, Griffen v. Manice, 166 N. Y. 188, 59 N. E. 925, 52 L. R. A. 922, 82 Am. St. Rep. 630.
For this reason, I think the trial judge erred in directing a nonsuit.