7 N.Y.S. 426 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The defendant is engaged in the manufacture of oils from crude petroleum. In the process there is produced a fluid substance, called “naphtha,” which, at the low temperature of 13 deg. Fahrenheit, gives off vapor, or gas, which is inflammable, and explosive when confined. Its explosive power is estimated to be equal to 140 pounds to the square inch. The defendant’s works are located in the city of Rochester, on or near the bank of the abandoned Genesee canal. ’ The Municipal Gas Company is engaged in the manufacture and distribution for consumption of illuminating gas, consumed in the city of Rochester. Its works are also situated on the banks of said canal, nearly a mile and a half north of the defendant’s works. The latter company use naphtha in the manufacture of gas, consuming each month about 30,000 gallons, and the defendant supplies the same. Each company stores such quantity as it may have on hand in iron tanks. The
The real question presented is, was the evidence sufficient to sustain the charge imputing negligence to the defendant in the mode and manner of laying the pipe, or in neglecting to inspect the same to see if it remained in a safe and secure condition, or in failing to detect that it was broken and unfit, for use, on the day the accident occurred, in time to have prevented the escape of naphtha in such quantities as to become dangerous to life or property. The pipe was constructed from prime material by an approved process by manufacturers of experience, and had sufficient strength l'or the transportation of naphtha, and was well adapted for that use between the places mentioned, under the pressure applied for pumping, and was well laid and properly covered with earth. It had been in use several years, and there is no-evidence that its original strength had been wasted in any perceptible degree by use. The test which was made after the accident of the section of the-pipe which was broken fully sustains this statement. The last time the pipe was used before the accident was on the 7th day of December, 1887, on which day about 12,000 gallons of naphtha was successfully pumped through the pipe without any indication that the same was not in perfect order. There is no serious claim made by the plaintiff that the pipe was not in good order, and safe for use*
A private nuisance is defined to be anything done to the hurt or annoyance of the lands, tenements, or hereditaments of another. 3 Bl. 216. Any unwarrantable, unreasonable, or unlawful use by a person of his own property, real or personal, to the injury of another, comes within the definition stated, and' renders the owner or possessor liable for all damages arising from such use. Wood, Nuis. § 1, and authorities cited. To constitute a nuisance for keeping in store articles in common use in a community, the substance must be of such a nature, and kept in such large quantity and under such circumstances, as to create real danger to life and property. This rule seems to be fairly deduct ble from the many decisions which have been made by the courts on. this subject. The fears of mankind will not alone create a nuisance without the presence of real danger. “ The well-founded apprehension of danger, which would alarm men of steady nerves and reasonable courage passing through the street, in the locality where the business is carried on, is enough to- show that something is being done which°ought to be prevented by condemning it as a misdemeanor.” Reg. v. Lister, 3 Jur. (N. S.) 570; People v. Sands, 1 Johns. 78; Myers v. Malcolm, 6 Hill, 292; Heeg v. Licht, 80 N. Y. 579. In such a case, the rule which exonerates a party engaged in a lawful business, when free from negligence, has no application. In another part of his charge the learned judge instructed the jury that “if they should come to- the conclusion that the defendant was in the act of carrying on a nuisance, and also that this pipe was a sufficiently good pipe, but was broken by the act of a wrong-doer, under such circumstances as that the defendant had no right to expect that it would be broken, and under such circumstances that the defendant was not guilty of any negligence in not discovering that it was broken, but that it had every reason to believe that it had taken every precaution that a reasonably prudent man would have done to make this safe, and in fact had
‘ Dwiuht, J., concurs.' Macombeb, J., not voting.
Note by the Editor. The written opinion referred .to was filed December 28,1888, at special term, Ontario county, on a motion for a new trial, and is as follows:
“Rumsey, J. I shall consider no exceptions on this motion except those raised and argued on the brief of the defendant’s counsel, and those I will consider in the order in .which he spoke of them.
“The first exception is taken to the question asked of the expert witness Peckham as to the comparative explosiveness of naphtha and gunpowder. The objection taken was that the evidence was incompetent and immaterial. This objection raised no question as to "the competency of the witness to testify. Schwander v. Brige, 10 N. Y. St. Rep. 802. Nor is the propriety of the question to be determined by the fact that the .witness, in reply to it, gave an objectionable answer which he was not asked for. The remedy in that case is by a motion to strike out the testimony. Fowler v. Machine Co., 20 Wkly. Dig. 521. The ruling upon the exception must be made on the theory that
“It is suggested that the same class of evidence, when offered by the defendant, was excluded. The point is raised where Mr. Latimer was asked whether,he would regard crude oil as more dangerous than naphtha. This stands upon a different footing. The fact itself.is entirely immaterial, whether it be considered as asking for Prof. Latimer’s opinion, or as to the"fact of the danger of crude oil. The only question was the danger of naphtha. As a means of aiding the jury to decide whether the transmission of naphtha was or was not dangerous, the comparison was of no use, because they knew no more of crude petroleum, considered chemically, or with reference to the gases evolved by it, than they did of naphtha; and when they were told that one was more dangerous than, another they would still need instruction as to the absolute danger of crude petroleum, before being able to apply the comparison, or make it available to judge of the material thing, which was the danger of the transmission of naphtha. For this reason it. was not error to exclude this evidence as immaterial.
“The evidence of Mr. Kinchling was entirely immaterial. The question only asked for the knowledge of the witness,—which no one pretends was material,—and for that reason alone it was properly excluded. But, if it be construed as asking for the fact, it was properly excluded for two reasons: First. The question did not ask for thebest. evidence. That was the records of the executive board. The objection having been sustained upon a general objection, stating no grounds, it is not error, although the-ground upon which the ruling might be sustained is one which could have been obviated, had it been stated. The opposite counsel is not misled if he does not ask that the-grounds should be stated. Height v. People, 50 N. Y. 393, 395. Second. The fact was not material. The pipe was laid in the bottom of the Genesee Valley canal by the consent of the railroad company, which was in possession of the canal. No permission of the executive board, or of the authorities of the city of Rochester, was necessary to authorize the laying of the pipe. The defendant was not a wrong-doer by laying the-pipe, but by pumping naphtha through it. There was no offer to prove that the executive board consented to that use of the pipe, but it was practically conceded that such consent was not given. No consent was required to authorize the laying, and it was-not material whether it was given.
“The evidence of Neville was clearly immaterial. If it had been proposed to follow it with the proof of any fact which would have made the rejected evidence material, such offer should have been made. As it was not, there was nothing to show the materiality of the rejected evidence.
“The evidence of Moore was rejected, and the ruling is strongly attacked; but, irrespective of the question whether it was erroneous to reject the evidence, I do not think there was any harm done to the defendant. The object was to show that the pipe could only be broken by outward violence. It was not disputed that the pipe was so broken, and the charge to the jury was based entirely upon the theory that such violence caused the break. If the evidence had been admitted, its effect would have been
“The questions asked of Prof. Latimer as to the effect of a break in a gas-main do not require much consideration. The counsel for the defendant concedes that the hypothesis was not based upon any facts which appeared in the case, and that disposes of the exception. There was no break in a gas-main, and the question of the flow of gas through such a break was a mere abstraction, of no importance in this case.
“The next error alleged is the refusal of the court to charge a proposition presented. As to the particular proposition, the fact which lay at the foundation of it is that, at the time when the watchman Sweeny should have given notice that the naptha did not run into the tank of the gas company, the discharge into the sewer had already been so great as to cause the disaster. Of this there is no evidence on which the jury might have found either way. Por that reason there was no error in the refusal to_ charge exactly as requested. De Luce v. Kelly, 5 Wkly. Dig. 33. After reading again what was said by the court in reply to that request, I still think that it covered all that the defendant had a right to expect on that subject, and that the exception to the refusal to charge was not well taken.
“The last exception argued is that one taken to the charge of the court with regard to the storing or keeping of the naphtha. The jury were charged that the defendant was keeping or storing naphtha in a way different from that allowed by the statute. To this, exception was taken. It is claimed that the naphtha kept in the tank, and especially that kept in the pipes, was not ‘ stored,’ within the statute. The statute forbids, not only the ‘storing,’ but the ‘ keeping on sale,’ of refined petroleum, except in a certain way. It then gives the regulations for ‘ storing or keeping ’ naphtha or benzine, of which it forbids the keeping of more than ten barrels in a place over a cellar, or more than three barrels in a cellar or basement. It then provides that ‘ crude or refined petroleum ’ may be stored in a certain way. There is a clear distinction made in the statute between crude petroleum and naphtha and benzine. The regulations for storing naphtha and benzine are express and clear, and they imply a prohibition against storing it in any other way than is therein prescribed. Landers v. Prank St. M. E. Church, 97 N. Y. 119, 124. The defendant says that the keeping of naphtha in the pipe was not ‘storing’ it. But the statute speaks of ‘kept’ and ‘ stored.’ Even if the word ‘ stored ’ alone was used, this way of keeping naphtha in a pipe was within the statute. It seems that the naphtha was allowed to run into the pipe, and was there kept until it was required to be used at the gas company’s tank, when it was forced into that tank. As soon as a sufficient quantity had been pumped into the tank at the gas-works, the stop-cock was turned, and the pipe left full of naphtha until a new supply was required in the gas company’s tank. During the time that elapsed between the several pumpings the naphtha was left in the pipes. The word ‘ store ’ is defined by Johnson and Webster to mean, ‘ to stock against a future time.’ It is defined in this state as ‘ the keeping of merchandise in safe custody, or where the keeping is the principal obiect of the deposit.’ O’Niel v. Insurance Co., 3 N. Y. 122,127. In 'the case last cited it is used in distinction from keeping for consumption or sale in the course of business at the place where it is kept. The naphtha was kept in this pipe to be delivered as wanted. It was kept, as appears from the evidence, from 15 to 30 days, being pumped into the gas-tank once a month in the summer, and twice a month in winter. While so kept, it was not used for any purpose. If the keeping had been in a tank, there would have been no question that it was a ‘ storing,’ within the statute. The fact that the receptacle, holding some 3,000 gallons, was a pipe, and not a tank, does not alter the case. The cases cited by the defendant were actions on policies of insurance in which the insurance company sought to insist upon the forfeiture because certain prohibited articles were stored in an insured building which had been burned. The articles were kept for sale or temporary use, and the court held that was not a ‘ storing,’ within the policy. They adopt the definition of ‘ storing ’ given above', but say that the cases before them were not within it.
“But it is said that the uncontradicted evidence showed that the pipe had been empty for two weeks when the disaster occurred, and for that reason the defendant could not have been storing naphtha in it. That is just the trouble. The defendant had attempted to keep naphtha in this unauthorized way in this pipe, which broke, and the naphtha ran out and caused the explosion. The disaster was directly due to the attempt to keep naphtha in the pipe. Suppose there had been at Atkinson streeta tank with a capacity of 2,885 gallons, (the capacity of this pipe,) which had been kept full of naphtha for periods of from 15 to 30 days, and that from this tank naphtha had been allowed twice a month to run into another one, the first being kept full by pumping. If a hole had been broken in the bottom of the first tank, and all the naphtha pumped in had run thence into the sewer, no one would doubt that the defendant had been violating the statute, and that such violation was the cause of the filling of the sewer with naphtha. I can see no difference between the supposed case and the one under consideration. The object of the statute was to prevent the accumulation of large quantities of naphtha within the limits of a city. That object is defeated if, as in this case, a forbidden quantity is so kept that, upon the breaking of the receptacle, it may run out and do mischief, and the statute is violated as much whether the vessel is whole or broken, if the result is
“The defendant alleges no other errors. I think none of those alleged are in fact erroneous rulings, and that a new trial must be denied, with costs. ”