314 Mass. 493 | Mass. | 1943
In this action of contract or tort the plaintiff seeks to recover for personal injury and property dam
For about three weeks the stove appeared to operate properly. Then one day two loud noises were heard in the stove, and enamel chipped off and fell to the floor. The salesman who sold the stove was notified, and said that he would send a man to examine the stove and that if anything was wrong it would be corrected. He was told that the plaintiff “was scared of it.” The next day men from the defendant came and apparently examined the stove, but did not repair it. The plaintiff continued to use the stove, including the heating unit. On February 3, 1938, the stove exploded, injuring the plaintiff and damaging her property.
After the explosion an employee of the defendant came, tightened a nut under the stove and put some soap on the joint. The heating unit was never used again, but the rest of the stove continued in use. The stove was not wholly paid for until May 28, 1938. The plaintiff produced as a witness a metallurgist who was familiar with the properties of brass, of which many of the fittings of the stove were made. He testified that “brass is subject to a very active type of corrosion, particularly in an atmosphere containing ammonia, including household or cleaning ammonia. Any atmosphere containing very minor traces of ammonia causes corrosion. In a brass pipe made up of a length of pipe and some connections, nuts, etc., the point on the pipe where such corrosion would be expected would be where the metal had been strained. Such straining would be caused by the tightening up of the nut to an excessive degree.” The wit
i After the plaintiff had introduced evidence of the foregoing, she rested, and the defendant also rested. The plaintiff presented six requests for rulings that were denied. We need not consider them, for the judge ruled that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. That ruling presents the only question of law for our consideration. If that ruling was right, the case is at an end. The Appellate Division dismissed a report, and the plaintiff appealed.
The plaintiff puts her case upon negligence, and not upon breach of warranty. She seeks to hold the defendant liable for negligence in selling, installing and failing to repair the stove. We assume in her favor that she had a contractual relation to the defendant. There was no evidence that the defendant was the manufacturer, and apparently it was not. The stove was not an inherently dangerous article, and the defendant is not liable for negligence unless it knew or ought to have known of its defective nature. Kusick v. Thorndike & Hix, Inc. 224 Mass. 413, 414. Barrango v.
It is true that the plaintiff was not required to show the exact cause of the explosion (Barnett v. Roberts, 243 Mass. 233, 235; Adams v. Dunton, 284 Mass. 63, 66; Dunbar v. Ferrera Bros. Inc. 306 Mass. 90, 92; Thomas v. Spinney, 310 Mass. 749, 751), or to exclude all possibility that it resulted without fault on the part of the defendant. Navien v. Cohen, 268 Mass. 427, 431. Adams v. Dunton, 284 Mass. 63, 66. But the plaintiff had to show a greater probability that it resulted from the defendant’s negligence than from a nonactionable cause. Walker v. Benz Kid Co. 279 Mass. 533, 537. Thomas v. Spinney, 310 Mass. 749, 752. This in our opinion she failed to do.
In this case it cannot be said that res ipsa loquitur. The situation was not in the exclusive control of the defendant. The characteristics of the stove were determined by its manufacturer, and its operation was in the control of the plaintiff. Under these circumstances the mere happening of the accident does not warrant an inference that it was caused by negligence of the defendant. Conley v. United Drug Co. 218 Mass. 238. Reardon v. Boston Elevated Railway, 247 Mass. 124, 126. Di Leo v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 255 Mass. 140, 143. Goldman v. Boston, 274 Mass. 329, 330. Wilson v. Colonial Air Transport, Inc. 278 Mass.
Order dismissing report affirmed.