Lead Opinion
after stating the facts: Taking tbe averments in the complaint to be true, as admitted by tbe demurrer, two questions are presented:
1. Was there a breach of duty to tbe plaintiff on tbe part of tbe defendants ?
2. Was it tbe proximate cause of tbe injury ?
It is said that tbe demurrer admits negligence. The demurrer admits the facts set out, with such inferences to be drawn from them as are most favorable to plaintiff. Tbe law prescribes tbe measure of duty which defendants owe to plaintiff upon tbe facts and tbe inferences to be drawn from them-. A defendant cannot by demurring change tbe law. Stripped of immaterial verbiage, tbe plaintiff says defendants were engaged in constructing a railroad between tbe points named;
Actionable negligence consists in a breach of duty to plaintiff. A public nuisance is actionable only when a private injury is *sustained by plaintiff. “In order to sustain an action, the plaintiff must state and prove facts sufficient to show what the duty is, and that the defendant owes it to him.” Shepherd, J., in Emry v. Nav. Co., 111 N. C., 94. “It has been often pointed out that a person cannot be held liable for negligence unless he owed some duty to the plaintiff and that duty was neglected.” Lane v. Cox, 1 Q. B. D., L. R. (1897), 415. “The duty itself arises out of the various relations of life and varying obligations under different circumstances. In one case the duty is high and imperative; in another it is of imperfect obligation.” In every case wherein negligence causing injury 'is alleged, it becomes necessary to inquire what relation plaintiff bears to defendant. It is impossible to ascertain whether the defendants owe any, and if so what, duty to plaintiff, until the legal relation existing between them in respect to the cause and occasion of the damage is settled. To say that the storing of the dynamite in the place and manner alleged in the complaint is a public nuisance does not in
It is a mistake to say that the defendants are driven to the defense of contributory negligence. The plaintiff fails to make a case of actionable negligence, because, in respect to the conditions existing and the manner in which he -sustáined damage, he shows no breach of a legal duty to him. It is by no means clear that the dynamite stored as described in the complaint was, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, a public nuisance. While we do not conceive that it is material to the decision of this appeal, we note an interesting discussion upon the question in Kleebour v. West Fuse, etc., Co., 138 Cal., 497 (94 Am. St. Rep., 62). In this case defendant had stored, in the prosecution of its business, a quantity of gunpowder in a magazine near dwelling houses. A Chinaman, who had been in the employment of defendant company, killed another Chinaman and fled into the magazine. He piled a number of metal cans, in which gunpowder was kept, in the door of the magazine, and announced that, if any officer attempted to arrest or take him, he would set fire to the powder. After some time spent in endeavoring to persuade him to come out of the magazine, an attempt was made to take him, when he set fire to and exploded the powder, destroying the factory, killing some of the officers and injuring the dwelling house of plaintiff. The trial court held that the defendant company was guilty of maintaining a nuisance per se, and “that it was an insurer against all damage from whatever cause.” Defendant appealed from a. judgment against it. The appeal was' heard by a “department” of the Supreme Court and affirmed. (69 Pac. Rep., 246). It was thereupon, in accordance with the system of hearing appeals which prevailed in California, heard “in BancJJ by the full bench
In Allison v. Railroad, 64 N. C., 382, the slave was placed by agents of the defendant company to sleep in a room, in which powder was stored under the bed. It ivas exploded and the slave was killed. The difference between the cases is obvious and needs no discussion. In Haynes v. Gas Co., 114 N. C., 203, defendant permitted a live wire to be on or near the sidewalk along a public street in the city of Raleigh. Plaintiff's intestate, a boy about ten years old, walking along the street, took hold of it and was killed. Burwell, J., writing the opinion, thus puts the case: “Plaintiff says to defendant: ‘The wire you put in the street killed my son while passing along .the highway, as he had a right to do. If you are not in default, show it .and escape responsibility.’ ” This language clearly points out the distinction between the cases. In Powers v. Harlow, 51 Am. Rep., 160, the shed w&s not securely fastened, and the child of one of defendant’s lessees got into it and exploded the cartridges. .Defendant was held liable. The child, in regard to whom an exception is always recognized, as in the “turntable cases,” was rightfully on the premises; its father was lessee. Conceding, however, that the defendant ivas guilty of negligence in storing the dynamite, as alleged in the complaint, and eliminating all question of contributory negligence, it is manifest that, upon the facts set forth, such negligence was not the proximate cause of the damage sustained by him. We know, without controversy, that the dynamite stored as described in the complaint would not have been exploded unless brought into contact with either an electric current or some substance adequate to that "end; that, as a matter of fact, plaintiff by his act caused the explosion; that no explosion at that time or in that manner
We bad occasion to consider tbe doctrine of proximate cause as an element in actionable negligence involving tbe intervention of an intelligent independent agent in Harton v. Tel. Co., 146 N. C., 429. In that case injury resulted from tbe conduct of an intervening agent. It was held that her administrator could not recover. We do not care to review the authorities cited in that opinion. Our investigation bas discovered several well-considered cases on this much-discussed doctrine. Georgetown Tel. Co. v. McCullough's Admr., 80 S. W. (Ky.), 782; McGohan v. Gas Co., 140 Ind., 335 (49 Am. St. Rep., 199). Tbe doctrine is well stated in Wright v. C. & N. 17. Ry. Co., 27 Ill. App., 200. Defendant, in violation of tbe town ordinance, stored in a frame building a large quantity of crude petroleum, gasoline, etc., which was dangerous to plaintiff’s building. Defendant’s building took fire and tbe oil exploded, destroying plaintiff’s building. The cause of tbe fire was not'stated. Tbe Judge rendered judgment of nonsuit. The question was whether keeping tbe oil in tbe building in violation of tbe ordinance was the proximate cause of tbe injury. Tbe Court said: “Tbe mere keeping tbe oil in its building, although prohibited by tbe ordi
Error.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: The demurrer admits every allegation properly pleaded in the complaint. It is, therefore, admitted, for tire purposes of the demurrer, that the defendant White & Oo., while engaged in building a railroad for its codefendant, “wrongfully, unlawfully and negligently kept 1,600 pounds of dynamite in a small wooden building near the railroad track and near a public road, about one mile from
It further admits “that said wooden building in which said dynamite was kept was in a public pláce, where trains were passing and where many people passed to and fro; that the house appeared to be an old, abandoned shanty, without any evidence that it contained dynamite.”'
It further admits that storing such a quantity of dynamite near a .public road, where many people passed to and fro, near a city, in an apparently abandoned shanty, without any notice of dynamite being stored therein, “was a public nuisance to the citizens of Craven County and others along said railroad and said public road.”
The demurrer further admits that the plaintiff, who was an employee, “constructing a telegraph line and living in a camp near said shanty containing said dynamite, without any knowledge on his part that dynamite was stored therein,” and, “on account of the negligence of the defendant in keeping dynamite stored in said shanty, without any notice of such storage and without any guard, shot at a knot hole in said shanty, causing a terrific explosion,” demolishing the house, portions of which were blown against and severely wounded and injured the plaintiff, who- barely escaped with his life.
It was criminal negligence, greater by far than setting a spring gun or strewing poison about, to store 1,600 pounds of one of the most powerful explosives known to science in an apparently abandoned old shanty near a public road frequented by many passers-by, in a mile of a populous city and without the slightest notice that it contained concealed therein a most deadly peril. Any boy passing along the public road would be tempted to throw a stone and any sportsman to fire at a mark on an “apparently abandoned” old shanty near the side of the public road, when there was no notice or other reason to suppose that it was dangerous or other than it seemed.
The demurrer admits the allegation that such conduct of the defendants was such negligence as to make it a “public nuisance,” and admits in express terms that “on account of such negligence” the plaintiff was moved to fire at 'a mark on such “apparently abandoned old shanty.” Upon such admissions, his Honor, in accordance with numerous precedents, a few of which are cited below, overruled the demurrer, so that the defendant might set up his defense. The defendant, notwithstanding the known diligence of his counsel, does not cite a single precedent in his brief to show error.
The doctrine is well known that spring guns and traps placed on one’s own premises, but to the danger of others, are a nuisance. This dynamite was in effect “concealed,” for it was put in an apparently abandoned shanty, where no one could, with the greatest forethought and sagacity, suspect it to be, and it does not appear even that it was on the premises of either of the defendants. Presumably it was not on thé premises of the owners of the dynamite, who were contractors; and whether or not the codefendant, the railroad company, was responsible for such negligence of an independent contractor is a matter not arising upon the demurrer. The demurrer
Where dynamite was stored on a farm in a shed not securely fastened, and the child of one of the landlord’s lessees got into the shed and exploded one of the cartridges, the landlord was held liable for the injury because there was no- warning on the shed to notify parents of the danger. Powers v. Harlow, 51 Am. Rep., 160. Yet there, unlike here, it appeared that the shed was on defendant’s own premises, and that it was not near the road.
It is negligence for a railroad company to leave on its own track explosive and dangerous objects, like a signal torpedo (exploded like dynamite), without notice or other precaution. 19 Oye., 15.
The law implies a duty not to place an explosive where it is likely tó injure property or persons. 7 Current Law, 16, 378. If some one else had exploded this concealed dynamite, injuring the plaintiff, who- happened to be near, the demurrer could not be sustained. It is, therefore, a question of contributory negligence, to be raised by answer, whether the defendant is protected from liability because the plaintiff himself fired the shot, which the demurrer admits he was moved to do “on account of the negligence of the defendant” in storing the dynamite in an unlikely place without notice. Whether the storage of dynamite, by reason of the location or its manner, is negligence, is a question of fact for a jury. The highest degree of care is required as to so powerful an explosive. Tissue v. Railroad, 112 Pa., 91.
In Allison v. Railroad, 64 N. C., 382, the company was held liable where an employee was killed by an.explosion of powder temporarily placed under his bed without his knowledge, the explosion having been caused, as was supposed, by fire from a torch while he was looking for his hat.
This apparently abandoned old shanty near a much-traveled public road and near the .railroad track also, in a mile of a large town, had no notice on it, and nothing' else visible to indicate that it had 1,600 pounds of dynamite therein and that it was more deadly than a live wire.
Whether it was contributory negligence or not for a passerby to shoot at the old shanty, is a defense, and might be raised if set up by the answer; but surely it should not be held that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, or that the defendant was not guilty of negligence, upon a demurrer which admits that the storing of dynamite in such a place, without notice of any kind, was “a public nuisance,” and that “on account of such negligence” the plaintiff was moved to fire at the shanty.
The explosion was not caused by the shot striking the shanty, but by its striking the dynamite negligently stored therein by defendants, without any notice posted or other precaution, and that such storage was negligence is averred in the complaint and admitted by the demurrer.
On a complaint and demurrer the facts must be taken as stated in the complaint. There is no statement therein that the shanty was “on the defendant’s premises,” nor that the plaintiff shot “at its house.” It is not alleged that the defendant contractors had any premises; and, while it is alleged that the shanty was along the railroad track and near the public road, it is not alleged, how wide the right of way was, nor hoAv near the shanty was to the track, nor that it was on the right of way, and there is no allegation to justify the assumption that the plaintiff was a trespasser. Eor all that appears,
If the demurrer does not admit the allegations in the complaint, i. e., (1) that the dynamite was “negligently, wrongfully and unlawfully stored near a public road”; (2) that, thus stored, without any notice, it “was a public nuisance,” and (3) that, “on account of the negligence of the defendants in storing dynamite at such place, without any warning to the public or this plaintiff,” the plaintiff shot at a knot hole on the shanty; if the demurrer does not admit these allegations, which are in the complaint, but, on the contrary, does admit facts not stated in the complaint, i. e., (1) that the shanty was on the defendant railroad’s right of way, and (2) on the defendant contractor’s premises, and (3) that the plaintiff was a trespasser, and (4) that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, then the defendants were well advised to resort to a demurrer instead of setting up such allegations in an answer which they might have found difficult to prove.
The vice in the argument of defendants is not only in assuming as a fact that the dynamite was stored on defendants’ premises, but, if that had been a fact (which could not be true as to but one of the defendants, if true as to either), in ignoring that the storing of so dangerous a substance “near a public road” without notice or other safeguard, is per se negligence and a public nuisance as well, because of the danger. When such is the case, the party guilty thereof is liable when injury occurs, whether the injury proceeds from the
In Smith v. Pelah, 1 Strange, 1264, Chief Justice Lee held that, if the owner of a dog knows that it is dangerous and has once bitten a man, and lets him go about or lie at his door, he is liable to an action by anyone bitten thereafter, though it happened by such person treading on the dog’s toes. Id., 3 Starkie Ev., 981. This Court has followed the same ruling as to liability of the owner for injury caused by a dog, though on the owner’s premises, if he knows he is dangerous. Harris v. Fisher, 115 N. C., 318. How much more, therefore, are the defendants liable for storing 1,600 pounds of dynamite “near the public road,” without any warning, and in a dilapidated shanty, where its presence could not reasonably be suspected.
In Woolf v. Chalker, 31 Conn., 131, the above English case is cited with approval, the Court adding that, when the owner of a dangerous dog allows him to be at large on his own premises and a trespasser has been bitten by him, the owner has been held liable, citing Loomis v. Terry, 17 Wend., 496; Sherfey v. Bartley, 4 Sneed, 58, both of which cases so hold. The above and many other like cases are cited and approved in Muller v. McKesson, 73 N. Y., 200. The fact that the dog is known to the owner to be dangerous makes him liable for the injury done by the dog, even on the owner’s premises and even to a trespasser, because such a dog, unmuzzled, is a common or public nuisance.
For a stronger reasón the dangerous storing of 1,600 pounds of dynamite in an old shanty near the public road and a railroad track, without notice or guard, would make such storing a public nuisance and the owner liable for any injury arising from an act done “on account of such negligence,” even though (as does not appear here) the dangerous instru
In a late case from California (Kleebauer v. Fuse Co., 69 Pac., 246) the Court reviews the cases as to storing powder and other dangerous explosives, and says: “The principle is correctly stated by Mr. Jtistice Blackburn in Fletcher v. Rylands, 1 Exch., 265 : 'We think the true rule of law is that the person who, for his own purposes, brings on his lands and collects and keeps there anything likely to do mischief if it escapes must keep it at his peril, and, if he does do so, he is prima facie answerable for all the damage which is the natural consequence of its escape. But for his bringing it there no mischief could have occurred.’ This language was approved by Lord Gramo orth on appeal. 3 II. L. Cas., 330.” 1 Wood Nuisance (3d Ed.), 183, says that, when the storing of explosives on one’s own premises is under such circumstances as to be dangerous, it is a nuisance, “and if actual injury results therefrom, the owner is liable therefor, even though the act occasioning the explosion is due to other persons and is not chargeable to his personal negligence.”
The California Court, supra, cites many cases where the owner of the powder, etc., was held liable when the explosion was caused by lightning, on the ground that the cause was the negligently storing, giving opportunity for the explosion. Such was the cause here.
In Wilson v. Powder Co. (W. Va.), 52 Am. St., 890, the Court said: “Was the defendant maintaining a public nuisance ? If it was, it was engaged in the commission of a public wrong, and for injury resulting therefrom” the defendant is liable.
That this immense amount of dynamite stored in a dilapidated shanty near a public road, without guard or notice, was
The cases which hold that one injured by a public, nuisance can recover of the owner without showing negligence, and even when the injured party is himself a trespasser or negligent, are very numerous. Besides those above quoted, and among those where an explosion results, are Kennedy v. Koopman, 67 Am. St., 134; 37 L. R. A., 489; Glycerine Co. v. Manufacturing Co., 45 L. R. A., 658; 71 Am. St., 740, and the numerous cases collected, 69 Pac., 249. The facts set out in the complaint and the very manner of this explosion demonstrate the imminent danger of explosion from such manner of storing dynamite, and of injury to those passing along the public road. These made it a public nuisance. Besides, the complaint specifically alleges that it was a public nuisance, and the demurrer admits the fact. Had it been a vicious dog on the owner’s premises, and he had bitten one treading on his toes, the owner would have been liable, if knowing the character of the dog. Here the owner did know the dangerous quality of the dynamite. Yet he left it at large, near a public road and near a railroad track, without guard ox notice, in a house where no one would suspect its presence. On all the authorities, this was a public nuisance, and the owner is liable for injury from an explosion, however caused, whether by man or the lightning, and whether by the plaintiff or another.
Lead Opinion
CLARK, C.J., dissenting, arguendo. HOKE, J., concurring in the dissenting opinion. After stating the facts: Taking the averments in the complaint to be true, as admitted by the demurrer, two questions are presented:
1. Was there a breach of duty to the plaintiff on the part of the defendants
2. Was it the proximate cause of the injury?
It is said that the demurrer admits negligence. The demurrer admits the facts set out, with such inferences to be drawn from them as are most favorable to plaintiff. The law prescribes the measure of duty which defendants owe to plaintiff upon the facts and the inferences to be drawn from them. A defendant cannot by demurring change the law. Stripped of immaterial verbiage, the plaintiff says defendants were engaged in constructing a railroad between the points named; they permitted about 1,600 pounds of dynamite to be kept in a small wooden (145) building along the line of their track and near one of the public roads in Craven County, about 1 mile from the city of New Bern, without any notice or warning to the public that the building contained dynamite. The building was in a public place, where trains were passing. The house appeared to be an old abandoned shanty. Plaintiff was an employee of the Western Union Telegraph Company, was engaged in constructing a telegraph line, and was living in a camp near the shanty in which the dynamite was stored, of which he had no knowledge. On the morning of 14 May, 1907, the plaintiff, with a companion, while engaged in shooting at a target, shot at a knot-hole in the weatherboarding of the shanty, causing a terrific explosion, whereby he was injured, etc. *Page 108
Actionable negligence consists in a breach of duty to plaintiff. A public nuisance is actionable only when a private injury is sustained by plaintiff. "In order to sustain an action, the plaintiff must state and prove facts sufficient to show what the duty is, and that the defendant owes it to him." Shepherd, J., in Emry v. Nav. Co.,
It is a mistake to say that the defendants are driven to the defense of contributory negligence. The plaintiff fails to make a case of actionable negligence, because, in respect to the conditions existing and the manner in which he sustained damage, he shows no breach of a legal duty to him. It is by no means clear that the dynamite stored as described in the complaint was, in the ordinary acceptation of the term, a public nuisance. While we do not conceive that it is material to the decision of this appeal, we note an interesting discussion upon the question in Kleebour v. WestFuse, etc., Co.,
In Allison p. R. R.,
We had occasion to consider the doctrine of proximate cause as an element in actionable negligence involving the intervention of an intelligent independent agent in Horton v. Tel. Co.,
Error.