12 F. Cas. 283 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia | 1802
was of opinion for the defendant upon both points, and that opinion, so far as it respected the first point, was affirmed by the supreme court upon writ of error, at February term, 1803. 1 Cranch [5 U. S.] 345. But that court gave no opinion upon the question of inevitable casualty.)
This question arises upon the demurrer to the first plea, which alleges that before the expiration of the lease the demised premises, “against the will, and without the negligence, or other default of the defendant, were burned and consumed by fire, happening from some cause to him then and yet wholly unknown;” “and that saving and excepting the damage occasioned by the said burning and consuming, he hath at all times kept in good and sufficient repair the said demised premises, and that he hath, at the end of the term, delivered up the same to the plaintiff, so well and sufficiently kept in repair, excepting,” &c. To this plea there is a general demurrer; and the question arising is, whether the facts stated in the plea bring the defendant’s case within the exception of inevitable casualties. It is admitted that a casualty may be inevitable without happening by the act of God, or by the public enemies of the country. In the present case the expression seems to me to mean only such casualties as are inevitable by the defendant, and not such as might not be avoided by the united efforts of the whole society. But it was contended, on the part of the plaintiff, that the plea obliges the plaintiff to prove more than ordinary negligence on the part of the defendant, and that such is the meaning of the expression in the plea, “negligence or other default.” I confess I do not so understand the plea, nor do I know where the plaintiff’s counsel will find an authority for their definition of the term. I consider negligence and default as synonymous words. Negligence is the want of care and diligence, and the degree of one is in inverse proportion to the degree of the other. The slightest degree of negligence is the omission of the greatest degree of care and diligence. Where there has been no negligence or default, there the greatest degree of care and diligence has been used. When, therefore, the plea avers that the house was burned without the negligence or default of the defendant, it is tantamount to saying that it was burnt notwithstanding the greatest degree of care and diligence on his part. The question then occurs, whether a casualty which happens notwithstanding the use of the greatest degree of care and diligence on the part of the defendant to prevent it, is not, as to him. an inevitable casualty. It is unnecessary for us to inquire what degree of negligence is sufficient to charge the defendant, because the. plea denies all negligence whatever. If issue had been joined on the plea, it might have become a question what degree of negligence the plaintiff must prove in order to maintain the issue on his part. The term negligence cannot be appropriated exclusively to the omission of any given degree of care and diligence. Its degrees are infinitely variable,. from the omission of the greatest possible care, to the very boundary of fraud. I have no hesitation, therefore, in saying, that an accident which happens without the slightest degree of negligence or default of the defendant, is as to him, an inevitable casualty.
Thus far the argument is grounded on the words of the plea, which I consider as a more advantageous plea for the plaintiff than any