In the first count of the plaintiffs’ declaration it is alleged that the defendant “broke and entered the [plaintiffs’] close” and carted away one hundred loads of loam and sand and gravel, and undermined the soil of the plaintiffs’ property. In the second count it is alleged that the defendant “broke and entered the plaintiffs’ close” and drove heavy teams across their lawn, and deposited large quantities of stone thereon, all to their great damage.
At the trial, against the exception of the defendant, the plaintiffs introduced evidence that the inside of the house standing on the plaintiffs’ land had “settled on the rear”; that the walls and ceilings were cracked; that the house “appears to be so strained that the roof is leaking quite
There was no allegation in the plaintiffs’ declaration that a house stood on the premises, or that any damage resulted to it by reason of the trespass of the defendant. In Sampson v. Coy, 15 Mass. 493, it was said at page 494, “. . . the defendant cannot be supposed to come prepared to defend against any cause of action of which he has no notice in the declaration.” Damages which naturally or necessarily result from a trespass may be recovered under a general allegation of damage; but where special or peculiar damages are caused, they must be specially set out. G. L. c. 231, § 7, cl. 2. Damage to the plaintiffs’ house was not a necessary consequence of the acts alleged, nor did such injury naturally flow from these acts. The defendant had no notice from the declaration that any injury was done to the house, or that the plaintiffs relied on such contention. The statement in the declaration that the soil was undermined, did not bring to the defendant’s attention the special and peculiar injury to the house. See Brown v. Cummings, 7 Allen, 507. In Antokol v. Barber, 248 Mass. 393, 394, under an allegation in the declaration that the defendants negligently ran into a stationary automobile of the plaintiff, and “greatly damaged it,” the plaintiff was allowed to recover damages for the loss of the automobile while it was being repaired. It was held that an allegation of great damage to an automobile, implies not only the expense of repair, but the loss of use while repairs are being made; that the loss of use during this period is as much a natural and necessary consequence of the wrongful act of the defendant, stated in the declaration, as is the cost of repair. The injury to the plaintiffs’ house is not to be inferred from the defendant’s trespass, and such injury is not a natural or necessary consequence of the unlawful entry, of carting away the earth, undermining the soil, and of the other acts mentioned.
If the plaintiffs relied on the injury to the house as an item of damage, they should have alleged it. Sampson v. Coy,
Exceptions sustained.