In support of these actions, the plaintiffs contended, and offered evidence tending to prove, that at the time complained of, gas escaped from a fracture in the defendants’ main pipe, laid in Middlesex Strеet, in the city of Lowell, into the earth and thence through certain adjacent sewers and drains into their house; that the defendants had notice that they were sustaining injury from this cause, and did not thereupon use due care and diligеnce to find and stop the leak ; and that in consequence of then: carelessness and negligence the gas continued for several days afterwards to escape and penetrate into the house.
Upon the question of the due diligence of the defendants in making the excavations in the street which were necessary to enable them to find the place and cause of the leak in their pipe,
To show that the plaintiffs did not ascribe the illness they suffered to the gas which penetrated into their house, and also to cоntradict some statements they had made upon the subject in giving their testimony, the defendants were allowed to inquire of the witnesses, who visited the plaintiffs during their sickness, whether they said anything about its being caused by gas, or what was the cause of it; to which they severally answered that neither of the plaintiffs said anything as to its cause These
It appears to have been made a question at the trial, upon which conflicting evidence was produced by the parties, whether the properties of illuminating gas were such that its inhalation was noxious and capable of producing, and likely to produce, sickness аnd disease. Whether insalubrious or not, it is certain that it is disagreeable and offensive when the atmosphere is filled and pervaded by it, and is very dangerous from its liability to explosion, if large quantities are collected and confined in the closed cellars or apartments of a dwelling-house. And therefore it was the duty of the defendants, as it is of all incorporated companies which are invested, for their own profit and advantage, with the greаt and important privilege of supplying the community with light for private habitations and for other places devoted to public or private use, to exercise due care and diligence in keeping it constantly under their control, and preventing it from escaping into a dwelling-house or place of business, where the inmates or occupants are in such cases involuntarily subjected to its effects, whether they are positively injurious or merely disgusting and offensive. But if its effect is noxious as well as disagreeable, that is a reason why the diligence required to take care of and control it should be still more active and unremitting. The proper subject of inquiry therefore upon the trial was, when it was insisted that gas infused into the air of a dwelling-house is noxious to the health of its occupants, whether such is its usual, necessary or probable effect. And in reference to the duty of the defendants in view of this рrobable or possible consequence, it could j ustly make no difference what opinions were entertained by their agent or superintendent upon the subject, whatever pains he may have taken to obtain the bеst and most reliable information concerning it. If it be a fact that the inhalation of gas will produce sickness or generate disease, and this is to be determined by the
The evidence offered by the plaintiffs to show that wherever the gas which escaped from the fracture in the defendants’ pipe entered any dwelling-house in the neighborhood of the plaintiffs, sickness followed, was properly excluded. Each separate and individual case must stand upon, and be decided by, the evidence particularly applicable to it. The attending circumstаnces may be so different, that the occurrence of sickness in one house would have no tendency to show the cause of illness in the occupants of another. If such evidence was admissible, the issues in a single cause might be indefinitely multiplied; and this would tend only to confusion, and to mislead the jury. It was competent for the plaintiffs to show all the facts and circumstances attending their sickness, and to add to that, proof of the opinions of рersons of skill and experience as to the cause which produced such sickness, and particularly whether it might have been, or probably was, produced by the gas to which they were exposed in their house; but they werе restricted by the rules of evidence to these limits, and could not establish or strengthen the evidence in their own case, by any proof concern ing the condition of, or the injuries received by, another person.
So alsо the evidence offered by the plaintiffs, to prove that they had done for their own protection everything which the agent of the defendants had advised and directed the persons residing in the house of Mr. Clay to do, to avoid ill consequences from the gas escaping into it, was properly excluded. They could only
The defendants were rightly permitted to show that the plaintiffs made no claim on them or on their agent on account of any damages suffered or alleged to have been caused to her by the gas until March 1859. It had some tendency to show that they did not originally attribute their illness to the gas which flowed into their house; and therefore the defendants were entitled to avail themselves of this fact.
But as the rulings in several instances were erroneous, as is above stated, the plaintiffs’ exceptions in relation to them must be sustained, and the verdict for. the defendants set aside and a new trial granted.
Exceptions sustained.
