99 Mo. 653 | Mo. | 1889
This is a suit for damages brought by the plaintiff against the four defendants who had charge of and gave a pyrotechnic display in the city of Mexico on the night of the eleventh of November, 1884. The plaintiff was hit in the face by a sky rocket which broke his cheek bone and destroyed one eye.' There was a verdict and judgment for deféndants, to reverse which the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The petition states that defendants negligently selected the veranda of the court house for the purpose of giving the display; and that they so carelessly and negligently handled and shot off the fire works, and permitted the same to be so negligently handled and shot off, that the plaintiff was struck by a sky rocket in the charge of and under their control.
From the record it appears various citizens of the city of Mexico concluded to celebrate the result of the presidential election of 1884. The programme adopted consisted of speaking, marching of political clubs, and a display of fireworks. The plaintiff, in company with his club, went to Mexico in the afternoon for the purpose of participating, and at night marched in the procession. He did not contribute to the purchase of the fireworks, and took no hand in the execution of that part of the pro-gramme; but he learned from a companion while on the way that there was to be such a display; and there is evidence from which it may be inferred that he had such knowledge before he started.
The defendants stored the fireworks in a room in the second story of the court house, and took them out on the veranda from time to time as needed. They would take out at one time a bundle of large rockets, from two to four or five boxes of darts or small rockets, and a quantity of Roman candles. The candles were placed in chairs and in the windows, and the darts, or small rockets, were kept in the boxes, but were placed on the floor next the wall of the building. The rockets, when fired from the troughs, threw back sparks of fire on the floor, covering a circle of two, three or four feet. One witness says: £ £ I will not say they did not go back as far as the wall of the court house, nor to the fireworks that were on the floor.” Towards the close of the exhibition, a bunch of candles were discovered on fire on the floor of the veranda, whirling around and throwing out balls of fire in every direction; these balls of fire came in contact with the rockets and darts, causing a conflagration, and the defendants retreated into the court house. Several witnesses say they saw the sky rocket which hit the plaintiff leave the veranda just as they
The evidence of the defendants tended to show that the unexploded fireworks were placed away from the ends of the troughs. They do not know how the candles got on the floor, nor how they were ignited. Some other persons were on the veranda against the orders of the defendants, and some were there or in the windows by their consent.
1. The first question presented is, whether the display of these fireworks was of itself an unlawful act. In Conklin v. Thompson, 29 Barb. 218, a boy on the Fourth of July exploded a fire-cracker under the plaintiff ’s horse, while he was traveling upon the streets in a city, whereby the horse was frightened and died. The act, it is said, was wrongful, and the party committing it assumed the responsibility of all thé bad consequences which ensued. In Jenne v. Sutton, 43 N. J. L. 257, the plaintiff was hurt by the explosion-of a bomb fired in the street of a city to signal the meeting of a political club; and it was said that the use of a street for such a purpose was illegal, and per se constituted a public nuisance, and that all persons concerned in doing the act, or who caused it to be done, were liable for all damages proximately resulting therefrom. Judge Cooley, in his treatise on torts, citing these and other authorities, lays down the law in these words: “ When one makes use of loaded weapons, he is responsible only as he might be for any negligent handling of dangerous machinery, that is to say, for a care proportionate to the danger of injury from it. ’ The firing of guns for sport or exercise is not unlawful, if suitable place is chosen for the purpose; but in the streets of a city, or in any place where many persons are congregated, it might be negligence in itself.” Cooley on Torts [2 Ed.] 705.
2. The plaintiff’s eighth refused instruction in substance states that, if plaintiff was struck with a sky rocket, fired off by the explosion of rockets, darts and candles in the control of the. defendants, then it devolves upon the defendants to show how such explosion occurred; that it occurred through no act of theirs; and that no precaution on their part would have prevented it, and, unless the defendants do so show, the verdict must be for the plaintiff.
In support of this instruction we are cited to Morgan v. Cox, 22 Mo. 373, and Conway v. Reed, 66 Mo. 46. The first was a suit for negligent shooting of the plaintiff’s slave, and the only question in the case was as to the fact of negligence. The court, after disposing of the case on that ground, which affirmed the judgment, goes on to say that the facts of the case would have supported an action of trespass m et arm,is; and that in all such cases, when the injury is proved to be inflicted by the defendant, the case is made out, and the defendant must show that the injury done was inevitable. The other case "was one for the alleged unlawful and
There are cases where the evidence which shows an injury inflicted by the defendant is sufficient of itself to make out a case entitling the plaintiff to go to the jury; but it cannot be said the burden of proof is on the defendant in all cases of trespass vi et armis, when the injury is shown to have been inflicted by the defendant. Speaking of a battery, Greenleaf says: “And here also the plaintiff must come prepared with evidence to show, either that- the intention was unlawful, or that the defendant was in fault; for, if the injury was unavoidable, and the conduct of the defendant was free from blame, he will not be liable.” 2 G-reenl. Ev., sec. 85. This statement .of the law is approved in Paxton v. Boyer, 67 Ill. 132, and in Brown v. Kendall, 6 Cush. 292. The case last cited was an action of trespass for an assault and battery. The defendant, with a stick, attempted to separate two dogs that were fighting, and, in raising the stick over his shoulder, he accidentally hit the plaintiff in the eye, inflicting a severe injury. Si-iaw,. C. J., speaking for the court, said: “If the act of hitting the plaintiff was unintentional, on the part of the defendant, and done in the doing of a lawful act, then the defendant was not liable, unless it was done in the want of exercise of due care, adapted to the exigency of the case, and, therefore, such want of due care became part of the plaintiff ’ s case, and the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to establish it.” Where the injury is unintentional and is inflicted in the doing of a lawful act, there can be no recovery either in trespass, or trespass on the case, except by .
Under our practice act the petition simply states the facts constituting the cause of action, but this does not, of course, alter the rules of evidence. In the present case the plaintiff’s own evidence shows that the defendants were engaged in a lawful business; and it shows beyond all question that the injury was accidental, that is to say, it was unintentional, and to make the defendants liable it must appear that they failed to úse due care in handling the explosives. The plaintiffs’ case, both on the pleadings and on his evidence, is founded on negligence, and the burden of proof is upon him, throughout the trial, to prove it.
3. In other of plaintiff’s refused instructions, he selects out some of the leading facts, and asks the court to declare, as a matter of law, that such facts constitute negligence. In giving such an instruction, all the other evidence must be viewed in its most favorable light for defendants; and it must appear, in spite of the other evidence thus viewed, that the defendants were negligent, and the inference of negligence must be a neces-. sary one, and there must be no room for a difference of opinion among fair-minded persons. Applying this rule, the instructions of the character before named were properly refused.
Persons' who take upon themselves the business of exploding fireworks must exercise great care. The care must be proportioned to the dangerous character of the explosives used and the danger to be apprehended from the use of them. The real question in this case is whether the defendants used that care in handling and discharging the explosives that cautious and prudent
4. The first instruction given on behalf of the defendants, after reciting a number of immaterial matters, proceeds to say: “Then the mere facts that said fireworks were discharged by the defendants, and that they were of a dangerous character, and that plaintiff was injured thereby, are not sufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover, but he must go further and show to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that defendants were guilty of that want of care inconsistent with the handling of the goods they had charge of, and plaintiff ’s injuries resulted therefrom.”
Abbott, in his treatise on trial evidence, at page 584, with the citation of a number of cases, says: “It is enough for the plaintiff to raise a fair presumption of negligence. Probability is sufficient to go to the jury. If defendant had charge or control of the instrument of disaster, and if it was highly dangerous, or if he owed a special duty of care of one in the position of plaintiff, the disaster is evidence of negligence, sufficient to go to the jury, unless the circumstances indicate some cause consistent with due care on defendant’s part.” The defendants in this case had charge of instruments which were highly dangerous, and the evidence which disclosed the disaster was of itself sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to go to the jury. It may be true, in an abstract sense, that the facts stated in the instruction would not authorize a verdict for the plaintiff; but the jury must have understood the instruction to mean that the evidence which showed that the fireworks were dangerous and were discharged by defendants, and that plaintiff was injured thereby, would not alone authorize them to draw the inference of want of due care. We
The court, at the request of the defendants, gave the following instruction: “2. The court instructs the j ury that they cannot lawfully resort to guess or conjecture in determining what caused the sky rocket to be ignited and discharged in the direction of the plaintiff, and, unless the evidence proves to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury what caused it to be so ignited and discharged, and that such cause was the result of negligence or carelessness on the part of the defendants, the plaintiff cannot recover any damages.”
The evidence tends to show that a large quantity of the combustible material was placed on the floor of the narrow veranda, in the windows and in chairs; that defendants smoked cigars during the entire performance; and that loose candles were found on the floor on fire. The jury might well infer that defendants were negligent in all of these respects, and that some one of these negligent acts caused the explosion, without being able to point out which one it was. It was not necessary to a verdict for the plaintiff that the jury should settle in their minds which particular negligent act caused the conflagration. It is enough to know that the rocket which caused the injury was put in motion by reason of the carelessness of the defendants in handling or shooting off the fireworks. Under the circumstances of this case, this instruction is not a fair presentation of the law. The defendants’ fourth instruction is of a like character, and should be refused.
There seems to have been an effort on the part of the plaintiff to get the court to direct a verdict for him, and, on the other hand, the defendants endeavored to procure a verdict by cutting the evidence up into pieces. We do not approve of either theory. It is unnecessary to review the instructions in detail. We have said
5. There is no evidence showing or tending to show that the plaintiff was a joint wrong-doer. He took no part in, and had nothing to do with, the display of the fireworks. The fact that he was present at the display does not show, nor does it tend to show, contributory negligence. Fisk v. Wait, 104 Mass. 71; Bradley v. Andrews, 51 Ft. 530. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.