165 Mass. 411 | Mass. | 1896
These are two actions of tort, to recover damages for injuries caused to the buildings of the plaintiffs by an explosion of illuminating gas in a store on the side of Mercantile Street in Boston, opposite to the buildings of the plaintiffs. The explosion took place on December 15, 1888. The gas escaped from the defendant’s main pipe, which had been laid in Mercantile Street and was found broken, and the evidence was that the break was caused by the subsidence of the soil under the pipe at the place of fracture, and that the gas had entered the store from the pipe through the fracture by underground passages in the soil. The main was laid in the year 1881. The street was accepted by the city in the year 1856. The contention of the plaintiffs was that Mercantile Street had been built upon a cob wharf, or log wharf, where there had been a dump, and where dirt and rubbish of all sorts had been thrown in on top, and that the main was negligently and carelessly laid, and had been negligently and carelessly maintained by the defendant. The jury returned verdicts for the plaintiffs, and the only exceptions are to the admission of certain evidence.
The testimony of the witness Grover, which was first admitted against the objection of the defendant, was, in effect, that for some time before the accident he had seen holes and depressions in the street, near the place of the accident, and that there seemed to be a settling down of the street. There was no 'evi
The testimony of the witness McMillan is of the same character as that of Grover, and was properly admitted.
The defendant also excepted to the admission of certain testimony on the cross-examination of Durell, who was a witness called by the defendant. Durell was an expert who had been for forty years in the employ of the defendant, and was superintendent of its street department, and he testified on direct examination, among other things, that he superintended the laying of the pipes in Mercantile Street, and had at different times superintended the laying of over one hundred miles of pipe in Boston, and that the pipe laid in Mercantile Street was as good as the average pipe. He was asked to give an opinion upon the propriety of digging down under the bed of a pipe when laying it to see what was under the pipe, and he answered, “ I do not think it would be a very good plan.” On cross-examination, he was asked his reasons for this opinion, and he answered, “ Because, if you dig up good fair solid ground, when
We assume that it would not have been competent for the plaintiffs to prove by this witness how he laid pipes in Beacon Street for the purpose of showing that he laid them carelessly in Mercantile Street. But for the purpose of affecting the value