210 Mass. 364 | Mass. | 1912
The plaintiff is the owner, of mills in North Chelmsford and has the right to draw water for them through a canal from Newfield Pond so called. The defendant owns premises located on the shore of the pond and has the right to cut and take ice from the pond and canal, and the plaintiff’s right to draw water is subject to the defendant’s right to cut and take ice. The plaintiff can regulate at its mills the height and flow of water in the canal and does so as occasion arises. The defendant has no means of regulating the flow, and, so far as appears, has not claimed or exercised, and does not claim or exercise, any such right or privilege. The plaintiff acquired title in 1903. In 1896 or 1897, before the plaintiff acquired title, the defendant, for the purpose of facilitating the cutting and taking of ice, caused a cut to be made in the bank of the canal at a point not far from the pond and built a runway therein so as to enable it to slide the ice down to and load it in the cars without having to lift it over the bank. It is not contended that the defendant had any express license or permission from the plaintiff’s predecessor in title to make and maintain the cut and runway. In December, 1905, about eighty feet of the canal bank was washed away at or near the cut by a sudden rise of water and the plaintiff was put to expense in repairing the bank, and was also compelled to, shut down its mills temporarily for want of water. This action was brought to recover for the damages thus sustained. There are three counts in the declaration. The first count alleges in substance that the plaintiff had a right to use the canal for the purpose of conducting water from Newfield Pond to its premises and had a right to have the banks of the canal remain intact for that purpose, but that the defendant made a cut in the bank for the purpose of constructing a runway therein which caused the bank to give way and the plaintiff was thereby deprived of. the use of the canal and was put to expense to repair the bank and obtain water and sustained other damages by reason thereof. The second count alleged that the defendant negligently constructed the runway,
We do not think it necessary to take up and consider in detail the rulings that were requested and refused. The gist of the plaintiff’s cause of action is negligence. The defendant had the right to make the cut and build the runway, but was bound, at its peril, to see that due care was exercised in so doing, and if the washout was caused by negligence on its part in the construction and maintenance of the cut and runway, and the plaintiff was damaged thereby, while itself in the exercise of due care, then the defendant is liable. Ainsworth v. Lakin, 180 Mass. 397. The jury were instructed in accordance with the law as thus stated. While there may be one or two sentences or expressions in the charge which taken by themselves may seem to import that the defendant was absolutely liable for any damages caused by a washout due to the cut, and had no right to do anything that would interfere in any way with the drawing of water by the plaintiff from the pond through the canal, taking the charge as a whole the jury could not have failed to understand, we think, that the defendant was not liable unless it did not use due care in the construction and maintenance of the cut and runway. At the close of the charge the jury were expressly instructed at the defendant’s request that the plaintiff’s right to the use of the canal was subject to the defendant’s right to cut and take ice and to its right to enter upon the pond, canal and the banks thereof for that purpose, and that if the jury found that the cutting and maintaining of the trench and runway were done by the defendant in “ a reasonable, prudent and proper exercise of the defendant’s right to cut, take, store and convey away ice to and from the canal and its right of way to, from and over the canal and the banks thereof . . . then the jury should find
Even if therefore the first count was, strictly speaking, defective in not alleging negligence and the instruction requested by the defendant to that effect should have been given,
The jury were instructed in a manner not objected to, as we
The defendant has not argued the rulings requested to the effect that the facts found by the auditor did not warrant a finding for the plaintiff generally or on either count and we therefore treat them as waived.
What we have said disposes, we think, of all of the requests except those relating to the auditor’s report and the question of damages. It does not clearly appear whether the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth requests
In regard to damages the general rule is that a wrongdoer is “ liable for any injury which is the natural and probable consequence of his misconduct. He is liable not only for those injuries which are caused directly and immediately by his act, but also for such consequential injuries as, according to the common experience of men, are likely to result from his act.” Derry v. Flitner, 118 Mass. 131, 134. Stock v. Boston, 149 Mass. 410. Applying the rule thus laid down, it is plain that the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the loss of profits due to
Exceptions overruled.
The case was argued at the bar in December, 1910, before Knowlton, C. J., Morton, Loring, Sheldon, & Rugg, JJ., and afterwards was submitted on briefs to all the justices then constituting the court except Loring, J.
Samuel Bennett, Esquire.
Hardy, J.
Among the requests refused were requests for rulings that the jury should find a verdict for the defendant on the first count, and that the first count stated no cause of action.
The twenty-eighth request was for an instruction that, if the jury should find that the plaintiff first acquired title to its mill and water rights several years after the cut in the bank of the canal was made by the defendant, any right of action for the construction of the cut accrued to the then owner of the mill and not to the plaintiff. The twenty-ninth request was for an instruction, that, if the jury should find that the washout was caused by changes in the banks of the canal made by “ other persons not in the employ of the defendant,” the plaintiff could not recover.