82 Minn. 84 | Minn. | 1900
The complaint states that plaintiff owns and has in operation on certain lots on Dale street, St. Paul, a large greenhouse plant, consisting of a residence, florist’s cold-storage house, engine and boiler rooms, a steam-heating plant, and fourteen large greenhouses, and all appurtenances thereunto belonging. Then follow allegations to the effect that the business consists in growing every
Defendant moved the court below to strike out certain parts of the complaint, including paragraph six, on the ground that the same were irrelevant and immaterial. The court granted the motion as to the sixth, b.ut denied it as to the other paragraphs. Plaintiff appealed, and the only question before us is the ruling of the court in striking out the sixth paragraph.
Eespondent contends that the part stricken out was wholly irrelevant and immaterial, because the damages therein alleged to have accrued were purely consequential, and too remote. We are unable to say upon what theory of damages this paragraph of the complaint was drawn, — whether it is intended as an independent cause of action setting forth special damages, or a statement of ,the peculiar conditions of the business, stated for the purpose of calling attention to the fact that the greenhouse system was regarded as one plant or an entire business. We are not called upon .to decide whether this paragraph was intended as a separate cause of action for special damages, or whether the matter stated is descriptive merely of the business. The question of the sufficiency of the pleading is not before us. If the matter objected to bears any substantial relation to the issue tendered by the complaint either on the theory of general damages or of special damages, it cannot be stricken out as irrelevant and immaterial. It
Taking the complaint as a whole, it appears that the system of greenhouses constituted one entire plant and business; that the business was peculiar, in this: that its success did not depend upon the raising and selling of individual flowers and plants, each having its own peculiar market value as such, but the business consisted in growing a vast collection of flowers and plants, consisting of all varieties and colors, and that a demand was created for such a collection, and the business built upon such a demand,— in effect, that the people do not go to greenhouses to buy one kind of plant or flower; that it requires all kinds and varieties to gratify the public taste and to sustain such a trade. If it is true that plaintiff had built up such a line of plants and flowers to meet such demand, and the gas killed a part, and those remaining constituted a broken and imperfect stock, unsalable and worthless alone and without the aid of those which were actually killed, why does it not follow that the gas was the proximate cause of the loss of the latter as well as the former? In the case of La Londe v. Peake, infra, page 124, the rule as to proximate cause is stated thus: Where the wrongful act or omission produces the injury, and it would not have been produced but for such wrongful act or omission, such act or omission is the proximate cause of the injury, if it be one which might be reasonably anticipated as a natural consequence. Again, citing Milwaukee & St. P. Ry. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469, it is stated that it must appear that the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the negligence or wrongful act, and that it ought to have been foreseen in the light of the surrounding circumstances. The case before us comes within these rules. There is no suggestion in the complaint of any other intervening cause. The escaping gas, and that alone, according to the facts pleaded, caused the result; and, from the
The paragraph in question was not open to the objection made, and the order is reversed.