40 Pa. Super. 163 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action of trespass to recover damages caused by the defendant in negligently and carelessly storing large quantities of dynamite and blasting powder within a short distance of the plaintiff's residence, and in not properly caring for and protecting the said explosives, so that they exploded and destroyed his dwelling house, household goods, etc. A verdict of $615 was recovered and the defendant brings this appeal.
Plaintiff’s witnesses testified to having seen this stove when it was hot, red hot, and very red, so that the wooden boxes were made brown with heat and at times were smoking. To explode the dynamite, cartridges, caps or exploders were used by the workmen, and it was testified, that a number of these appliances were lying around on the floor of the dynamite house. Some were wrapped in packages and others were lying around loose and “a blow from a hammer or from a foot on these would put them off.” The first explosion occurred in the dynamite house, and one witness testified that a few minutes before this
It is admitted that the defendant is engaged in a lawful business, but it is urged, that to erect and maintain such a manifestly dangerous establishment as the defendant conducted at this place was a nuisance, and that the cause of the explosion was the careless management and care of the dynamite house. As to whether it was a nuisance the court could not do otherwise than to submit that question under the evidence, to the jury, and it is not material so far as this case is concerned whether it was a nuisance per se or not. Whether it was a nuisance at all depended wholly on the proof, and whether the plaintiff's evidence established that fact, could not be determined as a matter of law by the court, but was properly submitted to the jury: Gavigan v. Refining Co., 186 Pa. 604.
The difference between a nuisance per se, and where a lawful business is carried on so as to become a nuisance, is not in the remedy but only in proof of it. In the one case the wrong is established by proof of the mere act; in the other by proof of the act and its consequences: Dennis v. Eckhardt, 3 Grant, 390.
The common experiences of mankind teaches us that in certain localities and surroundings certain pursuits are universally injurious to health and to property, no matter how carefully
The burden rested upon the plaintiff to satisfy the jury on the question of nuisance as complained of, and the evidence furnished abundant support for the verdict. It is not an answer to the plaintiff’s claim, to state that the defendant was engaged in the prosecution of a business useful to the public, and that the plaintiff’s rights are subordinate to the larger interests of the defendant and the public. The defendant chose to locate its dynamite and powder house in proximity to the plaintiff’s property, and to manage and care for it in a way that the jury has decided in this case, to be negligent and harmful. Neither the magnitude nor importance of its business permitted an invasion in the rights of another. See Green v. Sun Co., 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 521; Sigman v. Powder & Oil Co., 39 Pa. Superior Ct. 559.
The testimony in this case is substantially the same as in Derry Coal and Coke Co. v. Kerbaugh, 222 Pa. 448, in which case the exact cause of the explosion was not shown, and while the exact cause is not determined in this case by the testimony of an eyewitness, yet, a jury would be fully warranted in concluding that it was caused by a superheated stove, or by friction of the percussion caps which were lying around on the floor in the dynamite house, and as in the case just cited, the jury was not left to find negligence from the mere fact of the explosion. A condition entirely under the control of the defendant was shown, to which the producing cause of the explosion might be attributed. The presence of a red hot stove in a small building, and within a few inches of the dynamite, and the explosive caps on the floor, was, under the testimony an unsafe condition from which the explosion might result. In the recent case of Sowers v. McManus, 214 Pa. 244, it was
In Kerbaugh v. Caldwell, 151 Fed. Repr. 194, a case growing out of the same accident, it was held, “The mere possession of explosives by a person who is using them in his business is not unlawful, but no person can store them in large quantities so near a dwelling house as to endanger it or its occupants, without being guilty of maintaining a nuisance, public or private.” What constitutes a nuisance is usually a question of fact to be determined by the jury. Whether the act of so storing these explosives constituted a nuisance was a question that could not be properly withdrawn from the jury in view of the first count in the plaintiff’s statement, charging the defendant with maintaining a private nuisance. The jury found, without doubt, that the storing of such a large quantity of explosives in the neighborhood was a nuisance, and having so found, the defendant became liable for all damages resulting therefrom to the plaintiff.
A rehearing of that case was refused; the authorities which are cited by the appellant in this case were there considered, and the court concluded in view of the very large quantity of explosives kept by the plaintiff, in its magazines, that the case was distinguished'from the line of cases in which it has been held, that damages resulting from concussion, following explosion of dynamite or powder used in a lawful business, and with care and skill are damnum absque injuria. The points represented by the third, fourth and fifth assignments of error were rightly refused. The plaintiff assumed the burden of affirmatively showing negligence in the care of these warehouses and adduced sufficient proof to warrant the jury in accepting his theory. The judgment is affirmed.