45 N.H. 214 | N.H. | 1864
The 1st and 2d sections of the act of July 15, 1854, entitled " An Act making cities and towns liable for damages caused by mobs or riots,” Laws 1854, ch. 1519, are as follows :
Section 1. Be it enacted, &c. That whenever persons unlawfully,
Sec. 2. No person or persons shall be entitled to the benefits of this act, if it shall appear that the destruction of his or their property was caused by his or their illegal or improper conduct, nor unless it be made to appear that he or they, upon the knowledge had of the intention or attempt to destroy his or their property, or to collect a mob for such purpose, and sufficient time intervening, gave notice thereof to the mayor of the city, selectmen of the town, or a justice of the peace of the city or town in which such property may be situated.
A question presented by the case is, whether the destruction of the plaintiff’s property was caused by his illegal or improper conduct, within the meaning of those terms as used in the statute. He kept a saloon, in the front room of which spirituous liquors were illegally and openly sold with his knowledge, from which traffic he received certain profits, and the back room was openly used for gambling with his knowledge, he receiving pay for such use. A bank bill was offered to be passed at a gambling table in the back room, the bill was alleged to be counterfeit," a dispute arose, the dispute grew into an assault, and the assault into a riot, in which his property in the saloon was destroyed. It is to be inferred that the bill was offered to satisfy a loss incurred in gambling at the time the dispute arose. What part the plaintiff personally took in selling liquor, or in gambling, does not definitely appear, but, so far as this case is concerned, he is clearly responsible for everything which can, in law, be regarded as a consequence of the selling or gambling in the saloon which he kept. By openly keeping a saloon for such purposes, he invited such company as usually frequent such places, solicited them to gamble, and offered them a stimulus highly promotive of brawls, affrays, riots and all other crimes. Both branches of his business were entirely criminal.
The rioters are liable to the plaintiff for the damage done by them. His property, though solely used in violation of law, could not be lawfully destroyed except under process of law. Brown v. Perkins, 22 Law Reporter, 98; Woodman v. Hubbard, 25 N. H. 67. But he seeks compensation from the city, not at common law for a trespass committed by the city upon his goods or estate, but under a statute passed for a special purpose.
The plaintiff’s conduct was illegal and improper. Was the destruction of his property caused by his conduct ? The proximate, not the remote, cause is regarded, but, with no standard of measure, it is often difficult to determine what is proximate and what remote. Upon claims for general, as well as for special, damages, in tort and in contract at common law, and in actions under statutes, the question often arises whether a loss or injury sustained by the plaintiff was caused by an act or neglect, for which it is admitted that the defendant is responsible. In Powell v. Salisbury, 2 Y. & J. 391, the plaintiff recovered for the loss
Where, in statutes giving rights of action, as against hundreds for robberies and damage done by mobs, against towns for defective roads, against counties or sheriffs for insufficient jails, against persons flowing land under mill acts, against proprietors or occupants of land for deficient fences, against owners or keepers of dogs, such terms have been used as " caused by,” " occasioned by,” " arising from,” " by means of,” " happening by reason of,” "in consequence of,” and the like, — the principles of the common law, relating to remoteness of cause, have been adopted. Sedgwick on Damages, 84. In such cases, and in tort and contract at common law, such terms as "efficient and producing cause,” "immediate direct and necessary result,” and " legal, natural and proximate consequence,” are used as expressions indicating the rule, but they have evidently been interpreted strictly or liberally according to the nature of particular cases. Where the act or omission complained of is greatly to be censured and of evil example, the law does not attempt nicely to limit the amount of reparation, but pursues the wrong-doer with severity, and extends the line of relief so as to embrace consequences some
In this case, there is no remoteness of time or place. The riot was one continuous transaction commencing and ending in the plaintiff’s saloon, and originating in, and terminating with, his illegal business. It was begun by persons who were invited by him, through his open course of dealing and the public character of his rooms, to meet for the sole purpose of giving him profits from violations of law there to be committed.
If they had extended the destruction to property of innocent persons, not in pursuance and furtherance of a design entertained in common by the plaintiff and themselves, he might not, under some circumstances, be liable for damages so remote and consequential. Vicars v. Wilcocks, 8 East, 1; Crain v. Petrie, 6 Hill, 522; 1 Hawk. P. C. ch. 31, sec. 46, note 3; Wharton Cr. Law, 379; 1 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 749; 2 Gr. Ev. sec. 621. Even in such case, however, if the usual circumstances appeared, it might deserve consideration whether he could not reasonably have expected that such a result would follow his convoking disorderly and lawless people and inciting them to gamble, especially if he abetted them in drinking excessive quantities of modern intoxicating liquor. Upon such conditions it might be difficult to set a limit to the consequences which a person of ordinary care and prudence would anticipate as likely to ensue, or to determine what calamitous events would not be according to the order of nature. Notwithstanding the dearth of exact precedent which there has been so frequent opportunity to establish, it might not be futile to enquire why one held liable for damage done by dangerous animals belonging to, or kept by,himself, or carelessly conducted by him into a populous town, should not also be liable for damage done by men whom he has drawn together in the same place, and aided in making irrational, uncontrollable, and dangerous; why one who knowingly aids in depriving others of reason should be allowed to shield himself from responsibility for their acts with any rule of agency founded upon a distinction between soundness and unsoundness of mind, or between the human and the brute creation; why the principle upon which one is accountable civilly for his own acts committed in a state of intoxication, and also accountable criminally when the intoxication is voluntary, would not render others equally amenable who had negligently contributed to such intoxication-; why the keeper of a drinking and gambling house should not be regarded as one who negligently sets mechanical forces .in operation beyond his power to stop or safely direct, or carelessly putsffestructive implements or materials in-situations where they are likely to produce mischief; and why such keeper would not cokne even within the criminal law applicable to those engaged in the wilful commission of unlawful acts which necessarily tend to raise tumults and quarrels, and consequently cannot but be attended with the danger of personal hurt to some one or other. It might be found that the salutary general principles,which provide redress and penalties for negligence and illegal transactions, have not been resorted to in very many instances in which they were available, whereby a misapprehension has prevailed
But, whether it could, or could not, be said that the keeper of a drinking or gambling house, caused damage done, under ordinary or extraordinary circumstances, by his customers to third persons, the facts in the present case tend to show negligence on the part of the plaintiff in exposing his own property to the action of dangerous elements. The tools of his occupation and the articles of his trade were evidently involved in more immediate danger than the property of his neighbors. His negligence would not justify his visitors in the destruction which they wrought, Davies v. Mann, 10 M. & W. 546; but he stands in the position of one who claims, from a town, under a statute, damages for an injury resulting from a defect in a highway, to this extent, certainly, that he cannot recover if, by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, he would have avoided the injury. Winship v. Enfield, 42 N. H. 197, 213, 214. There may be reasons for not extending to towns, in cases of this character, the defence which they have in highway cases— that there was no negligence on their part, Palmer v. Portsmouth, 43 N. H. 265; but there can be no reason for not requiring such care of the plaintiff as is generally necessary in other cases. Our statute relating to highways does not contain an express exception as to damage caused by a traveller’s illegal or improper conduct, but, its object being to impose duties of diligence upon towns, and not to provide a remedy for damages sustained by any man through his own wrong, it has been construed accordingly. Wood v. Waterville, 4 Mass. 422; Farnum
If a traveller knows, or is in fault for not knowing, the viciousness of a horse or the defect in a carriage or harness which he is using, he cannot recover for an injury which he would not have received if there had. been no such viciousness or defect. Negligence, on his part, in anything which directly conduces to a detriment which, without such negligence, would not have happened, is so far regarded as the cause as to bar him from alleging that there was any other cause. Such negligence may be in manner of loading freight or passengers, or in the quality or condition of freight or passengers conveyed by a carrier. If one had engaged in the business of transporting the plaintiff’s customers from his saloon to another of similar character, and, during a passage, his vehicle had been overturned by such an outbreak among the passengers, as that which occurred in the plaintiff’s saloon, combined with a defect in the highway, and if, without such outbreak or defect, the vehicle would have gone safely, the carrier, in an action brought by himself for the defect, would doubtless meet the objection that he was negligent in taking such a load.
It is a part of the general system of the law, that remedy is not given for a loss caused by want of ordinary care in the loser. In Fero v. B. & S. L. R. R., 22 N. Y. 209, 214, the plaintiff’s house was burned by sparks driven by the wind, from the defendant’s locomotive, through an open door of the house, and it was, of course, held that the plaintiff was bound to use such care in protecting his premises as a person of ordinary prudence would have employed under the circumstances, and that, if through his neglect, in not causing the door tobe shut, his house was consumed, he could not recover. In that case the plaintiff did not open the door for the purpose of allowing the sparks to enter.
There is another consideration entitled to great weight. The natural custom always pursued of looking to the object of a statute, in determining the meaning and application of its language, finally grew into a settled and formal rule of construction. In Dillon v. Fraine, Popham, 70, 79, S. C. 1 Rep. 114, 123, 138, Popham, C. J., after enumerating the defects in the law prior to a certain statute, said: " These were the great mischiefs that were before the making of the statute, and these were the things for which the statute intended to provide remedy, and if the exposition shall he as hath been on the other side, these mischiefs shall be on every part more mischievous by much than it was before the making of the statute, and that in such a manner, that it shall be impossible to help any of them but by Parliainent; whereas always the good
The principle of making all the members of a territorial or numerical division, sureties for each other in criminal matters, which has been a basis of legislation in many nations from very early times, comes down to us through the decennaries of Alfred, .the statutes of hue and cry, and all the acts of Parliament making the hundred liable for offences committed in its district. 1 Bl. Comm. 114, 115, 116;3 id 161; 4 id. 245, 293, 294; Ratcliffe v. Eden, Cowp. 485, 488; 2 Hawk. P. C. ch. 12, secs. 2, 3, 7; Pinkney v. Rutland, 2 Saund. (Wm’s ed.) 374, and cases cited; 1 Kemble’s Saxons in England, ch. IX.
The object of the statute of 1854, evident in itself, as well as shown by the history of similar laws, is, to prevent and suppress riots. The course taken is, first and chiefly, punitive, in making the loss of property destroyed by mobs, a charge upon the town treasuries, thereby joining the personal interest of tax payers with the official duty of the local authorities, and arraying both against rioters, with a new motive to discover, discourage, overawe, and overpower all riotous proceedings and tendencies; secondly, remunerative, in encouraging every one to oppose mobs by giving indemnity for property destroyed in consequence of efforts to preserve order. The act is not founded solely upon the theory of insurance, with taxes as premiums. The end to be accomplished is not merely compensation for loss, but prevention of loss, with compulsory compensation as the incentive means.
Riots being the mischief to be remedied, the statute is to be construed, if possible, so as to suppress the mischief. The business in which the plaintiff was engaged is a fruitful source of riots, and all disturbances of the peace, likely to expand into riots, and, to relieve persons so employed from risks incident to their calling, would tend to foster riots rather than to prevent them.
That the destruction of the plaintiff’s property was caused by his own illegal conduct, is a conclusion, partly perhaps of fact, but justified by law, and not easily avoided. The action cannot be maintained, and there must be a
Nonsuit.