284 Mass. 550 | Mass. | 1933
The defendant is an Illinois corporation, established and maintained by the National Board of Fire Underwriters for the purpose of examining, testing and classifying devices and materials used in buildings, with respect to the degree of danger of bodily injury or of fire resulting from their use, and of reporting the results to fire insurance companies and to the manufacturers and producers of such devices and materials. The classification made by the defendant has become of importance to manufacturers and producers of many kinds of devices and materials, because public authorities frequently require the use of a particular class of goods, according to the defendant’s classification, and architects, builders and other buyers frequently specify goods of such a class. The insurance companies who maintain the defendant do not expect or receive any direct profit from it. It has never paid a dividend. Its charges to manufacturers and producers for its services are intended merely to defray the cost of operation. Yet there is nothing to show that the function of the defendant is charitable, or that it acts solely in the public service. If through its efforts fire losses are reduced, as is hoped, the insurance companies save money, and there is nothing to show that premiums are reduced to such a degree as to cancel the saving.
One service offered by the defendant is called the label service. Devices and materials which meet the tests of the defendant for a certain class may be marked by means of labels purchased from the defendant so that they may be recognized as of that class wherever found. The manufacturer or producer must buy labels to a certain amount each year. Early in 1917 the defendant adopted and published classifications of electric switches which as modified in 1918 read as follows: “Classification A. Switches enclosed in metal cases, operable without opening cases, and so designed
Shortly after the plaintiff began to take the label service in 1917, it became involved in a controversy with the defendant over the inclusion in classification A of competing switches made by other manufacturers, which the plaintiff contended were not entitled to such inclusion. A compromise was effected in 1918, by which the defendant created a new third class, called classification AA, consisting of “Switches enclosed in metal cases, operable without opening cases, and so designed and constructed that they cannot be installed or used so as to expose normally current carrying parts to contact by persons replacing or inspecting fuses.” When this classification was adopted and published, switches made by the plaintiff were the only type eligible for classification and labelling under it. Classification" AA was intended to provide for a safer switch than either of the other classifications.
The plaintiff contends that the defendant subsequently allowed a competing manufacturer to use the AA classification and label for switches that did not comply with the defendant’s specification of that classification. The period in controversy is from April 1,1924, until November 1,1928, when the competing switches clearly became entitled to that classification. The competition was felt only in the cities of Cambridge, Providence, Philadelphia and Havana, in each of which, for the whole or a part of the period in question, electric light companies required the use of AA switches.
The plaintiff, on February 7, 1928, brought this bill for an injunction and damages. It concedes that the classification AA was properly ended at the end of the year 1928, and now seeks only damages. The case was heard, upon
In the competing switches the blades, which engage in jaws to make the connection which permits electric current to flow through the switch into the building, were mounted in a porcelain part called a “rotor,” which turned in an arc > of ninety degrees from the left, the “on” position, to the right, the “off” position. In the rotor were two “terminals” or receptacles for fuses, through which the electricity passed in going through the switch. The rotor and the switch jaws were enclosed in a metal case, the front of which dropped down, exposing the entire switch. Ordinarily the front of the case was up, and was sealed to the top, preventing access to the switch, except in the manner to be described, so long as the seal remained unbroken. Attached to the outside of the front of the metal case was a metal disc, which could be operated by a handle through the same arc as the rotor. When the case was properly sealed, the disc had a means of engagement with the rotor, so that both turned together. When the handle was turned to the left, the switch blades engaged the jaws, the electric current passed through the switch, and no opening appeared in the metal case through which the fuse receptacles or any other part of the switch could be reached or seen. But when the handle was turned to the right, the switch blades were disengaged from the jaws, the current ceased to flow, holes in the disc appeared opposite holes in the metal case and also opposite the fuse receptacles in the rotor, and through these holes the fuses could be inspected or replaced with safety. This access, in our opinion, did not prevent such a switch from being “operable without opening cases” within the meaning of classifications AA, A and B. Neither do we perceive error in the denial by the trial judge of liability for permitting too little space between live parts and the enclosing case or cover, in the competing switches, in alleged violation of other parts of the defendant’s requirements for all enclosed switches. As this involves no
A defect was found in these competing switches, with respect to the exposure of five parts to contact by persons replacing or inspecting fuses. Sometimes the front of the metal case did not close tightly enough to cause the disc to engage the rotor. In some switches this might result from sealing through a hole provided for a padlock and not through the hole intended for sealing. Where this defect existed the turning of the handle would not move the rotor. If the rotor should be in the “on” position, and the disc should be turned into the “off” position, the holes in the disc and the metal case would permit access to the interior of the switch, though not to the fuse receptacles. The switches were intended for the use of ordinary householders, many of whom were not familiar with switches or fuses. In the language of classification AA, “normally current carrying parts” would be exposed to contact “by persons replacing or inspecting fuses,” even though no fuse or fuse receptacle would be visible in such a case. An ignorant householder, seeing no fuse or fuse receptacle, might explore the interior of the switch to the depth of about three inches with the finger or some tool, and thereby get an electric shock. It is true that the defect just described could not exist while the switch was operating as a switch, turning the current on and off. But it seems to us undue refinement to say that when the defect existed the switch was not “installed or used.” Notwithstanding the defect, the switch was capable of being “installed or used” as far as appearances and the belief of the persons involved were concerned. The defect might be produced in some switches by faulty resealing after a perfectly proper installation. If the protection afforded by classification AA were not to attach unless the switch actually operated as a switch, an AA switch would be no safer than an A switch, for an A switch was perfectly safe “when properly connected.” An AA switch was to be one that “cannot” be “installed or used” so as to be unsafe.
We think, for reasons already stated, that the judge was wrong in ruling, as apparently he did rule, that the competing switches were entitled to the AA classification because, notwithstanding the defect stated, they could not be “installed or used” as switches so as to expose live parts to contact. We think, further, as the judge found after his preliminary hearing on the question of liability, that there was “at least an implied obligation resting upon the defendant to use reasonable care and diligence ... to secure and maintain a substantial compliance with its own standards applicable to classification AA and to confine the use of AA labels, so far as it may reasonably do so, to devices which do comply with such standards.” This implied contract was broken, for during the whole period in question the plaintiff unreasonably was subjected to the competition of substandard switches, bearing the defendant’s AA label. The plaintiff, in our opinion, is entitled to damages.
What are the damages? Although the competition did not cause a reduction in price, it caused loss of profits on sales which the plaintiff would have made had the defendant not permitted competition by makers of substandard switches. Manufacturing Co. v. Cowing, 105 U. S. 253. True, the master finds that if the defendant had done its duty by withdrawing the AA label from the competing switches, the
Ordered accordingly.