18 N.Y.S. 170 | New York City Court | 1892
The plaintiff, on November 1, 1887, was the owner and occupant of a house on Montague street, near the Academy of Music in this city, and on that evening there was a display of fire-works at the corner of Clinton and Montague streets. A political meeting was held at the academy, and the fire-works, consisting of bombs, rockets, and Roman candles, were exhibited for that reason. A permit was given by the mayor, in writing, to the person who received the contract, and such permit named the place where the fire-works should be set off. It is undisputed that the display was extensive and “unusual to have at all.” The evidence discloses that a rocket entered an upper window in the house of the plaintiff, and in a few minutes fire broke out, and the house, furniture, and other property of the plaintiff were damaged by fire.and water. No authority has been cited by the learned counsel for the city tending to show that it has ever been held that it is lawful to set off fire-works in a public street. On the contrary, there are several authorities holding that the discharge of fire-works on a public street is a nuisance per se. In Conklin v. Thompson, 29 Barb. 218, Judge John W. Brown said: “The streets of a city and highways everywhere are not unfrequently appropriated to the uses of exploding fire-crackers and similar contrivances. Such acts are nevertheless wrongful. They are tolerated, and not authorized; and those engaged in committing them assume the responsibility of all the bad consequences which ensue. Any injury to the persons of individuals, any injury to property, animate or inanimate, which results thereby, creates a liability on the part of the wrong-doer to compensate the sufferer.” In the ease of Jenne v. Sutton, 43 N. J. Law, 257, the plaintiff was injured by the bursting of a bomb set off on a street at a political meeting in Jersey City, and Chief Justice Beasley held as follows: “As the use of a public highway as a place in which to fire such an explosive was illegal, and per se constituted a public nuisance, there can be no question with respect to the legal liability of all persons concerned in the doing of such an act, or who caused or procured it to be done, for all the damage proximately resulting.” See, also, Wood, Nuis. § 51; Scott v. Shepherd, 2 Wm. Bl. 892; Fisk v. Wait, 104 Mass. 71; Bradley v: Andrews, 51 Vt. 530; section 385, Pen. Code; Flynn v. Taylor, 127 N. Y. 599, 28 N. E. Rep. 418; Heeg v. Licht, 80 N. Y. 579; Robinson v. Greenville, 42 Ohio St. 625; Town of
I have shown that a city is not liable for failure to abate a police nuisance where no license has been issued, because the police are not agents of the city. A different question is presented when" a permit has been given, and such nuisance would not have existed without the permit. The streets are under the care of the authorities of the city. In the case of Cain v. Syracuse, 95 N. Y. 83, 89, Judge Finch held that, under a certain ordinance, the city had power to enter upon private property to abate a nuisance, and used these words: “In this respect, the power, and therefore the resultant duty, of the corporation is. very different from that relating to the city streets, parks, avenues, and buildings, which are within the corporate possession and control, which involve no invasion of private property or private right, and for the negligent care of which the city is alone responsible. ” In Danaher v. City of Brooklyn, 119 N. Y. 241, 250, 23 N. E. Rep. 745, Judge Earl said the city “owned this well, as it owned its other property kept for public use, such as streets, parks, and public buildings; and it owed the duty of reasonable diligence to care for it as it was bound to care for such other property.” If the streets are in the possession and control of the city, then I think that the corporation has no more right to license or maintain a nuisance on such streets than an individual would have on his own property. Haag v. Commissioners, 60 Ind. 511, and cases cited. Thé city should be held liable for licensing a police nuisance on a street, because the streets are under the control of the corporation. In Little v. Madison, 42 Wis. 643, explained in the same case, 49 Wis. 605, 6 N. W. Rep. 249, it was held that the city was liable under a similar state of facts. In the case of Robinson v. Greenville, supra, where cannon were discharged in a highway, the corporation was held not to be liable, but in the opinion is to be found the following suggestion: