174 Iowa 23 | Iowa | 1916
The plaintiff is, and during the time mentioned in his petition was, the owner of two lots with buildings
In his petition, plaintiff alleges that the blasting by a series of violent explosions was continued throughout a period of two years or more, and was of such powerful character that the concussion or jar thereof broke the glass in the windows of his buildings, cracked the walls, loosened and injured the plastering and otherwise injured those structures, and that the damage suffered therefrom was $3,000. He characterizes the acts of defendant as wrongful and negligent, and demands judgment for the recovery of his alleged damages. The defendant’s answer is a denial of all the allegations of the petition.
The evidence introduced in the case is not presented by the abstract, except by way of a brief general recital of the matters we have already stated and the further statement that both plaintiff and defendant introduced evidence tending
The issues having been submitted to a jury, a verdict was returned for the plaintiff for damages assessed at $500. A motion by defendant to set aside the verdict and for new trial having been overruled, judgment was entered for plaintiff for $500 and costs, and defendant appeals.
This question has had the attention of the courts in several other jurisdictions, but thus far, we have had no occasion to pass upon it in the direct and concrete form presented by the record in the present case. An examination of the precedents develops a divergence of judicial opinion. There is a class of cases which, according to appellant’s contention, hold that, without allegation and proof of negligence, damages of the -kind suffered by the appellee herein cannot be recovered; while others adhere to the doctrine that a showing of negligence is not essential to the liability of a party who uses the dangerous agency of powerful explosives in such place or in such manner that the natural and proximate result thereof is injury to the person or property of another. Some of the cases cited by appellant appear to go to the full extent of the rule which appellant asks us to approve. For example, the Alabama court, in Bessemer v. Doak, 44 So. 627 (12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 389), after some discussion of the authorities, indicates its approval of the rule that:
“If one, in blasting upon his own lands, invades the premises of his neighbor, by throwing stones and debris thereon, he is liable for the resulting injury; but for any other injury, such as may result from the mere concussion of the •atmosphere, sound, or otherwise, there is no liability, unless it is shown that the work was done negligently and that the injury was the result of negligence, and not the result of blasting according to the usual methods and with reasonable care.”
It will be noted, upon reading the cases to which we have referred and others of their class, that, with few exceptions, they refer to the effect of the use of explosives under the authority of or contract with the general government, or in the construction of railways or canals by corporations endowed by the state with the power of eminent domain, or in excavating streets or highways under the authority of the state or local municipality; and without conceding what is claimed by way of exemption from liability even in such cases, it may well be admitted that the effect of such circumstances is a question upon which there is room for plausible argument in support of the theory. The appellant herein, though clothed with license or consent from the Federal government to dam the Mississippi River, a navigable stream, is not in position to claim the immunities, if any, of a government contractor; and although it proposes to supply electricity to the public within the territory which its lines may cover, it is, to all intents and purposes, a strictly private enterprise for private profit. And even though it be clothed with power of eminent domain, that does not include authority to take or to destroy private property without compensation.
That what we may call the New York rule is not in harmony with the greater weight of authority is, we think, clearly demonstrable. The following are illustrative eases. In a recent Ohio case, the city of Cincinnati had let a contract to excavate a tunnel under its streets for use in supplying the city with water. A lot owner brought action against the city
“There are, of course, two very important considerations to be kept in mind in the disposition of a question of this character: First, to give to the owner the largest liberty possible, in the occupation, use and improvement of his own property, consistent with the rights of others, and the right to employ modern methods and machinery in accomplishing the improvements desired; second, that, one may not use his own property to the injury of any legal right of another. This maxim of. the common law, ‘Sic utere tuo ut aUenum non laedas’, is so well established and so universally recognized that it needs neither argument nor citation of authority in its support. But it must be conceded that this is no longer the law, if the owner of a lot may employ such means in the improvement in the use of his property as will naturally and necessarily result in the destruction of adjoining property. ... If the means employed will, in the very nature of things, injure and destroy his neighbor’s property, notwithstanding the highest possible care is used in the handling of the destructive agency, the result to the adjoining property is just as disastrous as if negligence had intervened. If one may knowingly destroy his neighbor’s property in the improvement of his own, it is little consolation to the neighbor*30 to know that his property was destroyed with due care and in a scientific manner.” Louden v. Cincinnati, (Ohio) 106 N. E. 970.
In a very similar ease in Illinois, where the use of dynamite in constructing a tunnel caused vibrations and jars from which the plaintiff’s building was injured, the court distinctly declines to follow the New York rule and adopts the rule of the Ohio cases. Fitzsimons v. Braun, (Ill.) 59 L. R. A. 421. To the same effect, see Colton v. Onderdonk, 69 Cal. 155; Mickey v. McCabe, (R. I.) 75 Atl. 404; Carman v. Steubenville & I. R. Co., 4 O. St. 399; Gossett v. Southern R. Co., 115 Tenn. 376; Chicago v. Murdock, 212 Ill. 9; Longtin v. Persell, 30 Mont. 306; Bradford v. St. Mary’s Co., 60 O. St. 560; City of Tiffin v. McCormack, 34 O. St. 638; Cahill v. Eastman, 18 Minn. 324.
The rule as deduced by Thompson, in his work on Negligence, Section 764, is stated to be that recovery may be had for injuries done by blasting: (1) Where dirt and stones are thrown by the blast upon the property, irrespective of the question of negligence; (2) where the work of blasting is done in a situation where it is necessarily dangerous to persons or property, whether the injury proceeds from the impact of rocks thrown or from atmospheric concussion, irrespective of the care or skill used; (3) in all other cases, liability will attach to the person or corporation carrying on the dangerous employment where the work has been negligently done. Even the court of New York has said that it is “an elementary principle in reference to private rights, that every individual is entitled to the undisturbed possession and lawful enjoyment of his own property. The mode of enjoyment is necessarily Ji-iQttgd by the rights of others”. This rule the court applied to a recovery of damages for injuries resulting from blasting done in the construction of a canal. Hay v. Cohoes Co., 2 N. Y. 159. In so doing, the court says:
“The use of land by the proprietor is not an absolute right, but qualified and limited by the higher right of others*31 to the lawful possession of their property. To this possession, the law prohibits all direct injury, without regard to its extent or the. motives of the aggressor. A man may prosecute such business as he chooses upon his premises, but he cannot erect a nuisance to the annoyance of the adjoining proprietor, even for the purpose of a lawful trade. He may excavate a canal, but he cannot cast the dirt or stones upon the land of his neighbor, either by human agency or by the force of gunpowder. If he cannot construct the work without the adoption of such means, he must abandon that mode of using his property, or be held responsible for all damages resulting therefrom. He will not be permitted to accomplish a legal object in an unlaw fid manner.”
The same court has distinctly and repeatedly held that one who by blasting casts rock or other substances upon the property of another is liable for the injury so done, without regard to the question of negligence, and that the plea that blasting is a necessary operation or that the work is being done under contract with the state is no defense. Sullivan v. Dunham, 161 N. Y. 290; St. Peter v. Denison, 58 N. Y. 416. These decisions that court has often re-affirmed and still declares its adherence thereto, but seeks to distinguish them from the line of its other decisions above cited by pointing out that, in the Cohoes ease and in others following it, the injury was done by casting debris upon the plaintiff’s premises; while in eases of the kind we have now before us, the injury com* plained of results from concussion of the atmosphere, or from vibrations of the earth. The former, it is said, constitutes a physical invasion, a trespass, upon the plaintiff’s property, while the latter does not. The deduction is neither obvious nor convincing. Physical invasion of the property of another does not necessarily imply an actual breaking or entering of the plaintiff’s close by the wrongdoer in person, or casting upon his premises any particular kind of missile or other particular thing or substance. The employment of force of any kind which, when so put in operation, extends its energy
“ ‘An act which in many cases is,in itself lawful, becomes unlawful when by it damage has accrued to the property of another. And it would make no material difference whether that damage, resulting proximately and naturally from the act of blasting by the defendant, was caused by rocks thrown against plaintiff’s dwelling house or by a concussion of the*33 air around it’. . . . In such case, one who thus causes dangerous forces to pass through another’s property should be held liable for the damage resulting directly therefrom. And there is no more reason for requiring that negligence be shown in one ease than in the other.” Hickey v. McCabe, (R. I.) 75 Atl. 404.
Speaking of the attempted distinction to which we have referred, the court, in Louden v. Cincinnati, supra, says:
“We are unable to distinguish between a case where a fragment of rock or a portion of the soil is thrown onto an adjoining property and a case where the force of an explosion is transmitted through the soil and substratum, jarring, cracking and breaking it, destroying the . . . foundation of the building, and wrecking the building itself by a concussion of the air around it, thereby doing far more injury than a fragment of rock could do. It is a distinction without a difference. If this terrific force may be set in motion by the owner of one parcel of ground, with full knowledge upon his part that such force will invade, damage and destroy the property of the adjoining, proprietor, what difference does it make how this force accomplishes the result that, in the very nature of things, must have been anticipated? Is not a concussion of the air, and jarring, breaking and cracking the' ground with such force as to wreck the buildings thereon, as much an invasion of the rights of the owner as the hurling of a missile thereon? If there is any difference whatever, it is purely technical, and ought to find no favor with the courts. Certainly, the application of a force sufficient to crack the surface of the land, ... to destroy the foundations of buildings, to break windows and throw down chimneys, is a direct invasion of property rights.”
Likewise, in the cited Illinois case, Fitzsimons v. Braun, supra, the court, referring to another case, said:
“It is true that, in that ease, there was an actual invasion of the property . . . but liability for injuries caused by*34 actual invasion of the property, or by the concussion or vibration of the earth or air, are within the doctrine there announced. If one who,, for his own purposes and profit, undertakes to perform a work, by means of explosives inherently dangerous to the property of another, should be held liable for an injury occasioned by any substance cast by the explosives on the property of such other, it is only by the merest subtlety of reasoning he should be held not liable to respond for equal or greater damage caused by the concussion of the air or of the earth.”
The rule thus affirmed seems to be the rule of reason and to have the support of the better considered precedents.
The consideration urged upon us in oral argument, that appellant is engaged in the construction of a great work of general utility, and that the laws should be liberally construed to promote its purpose, is not without weight, where it can be indulged without sacrifice of principle. But, important as it may be that business progress and that development shall not be fettered by over-technical interpretation of the laws affecting them, it is, to say the least, of equal importance that the courts maintain unimpaired all our constitutional and legal guaranties of personal and property rights. The individual citizen may be deprived of his home or other property by the proper exercise of the power of eminent domain; but it ought not to be said that it can be lawfully destroyed without compensation in the interest of a mere business enterprise, simply because such enterprise is of great magnitude and general public interest.
The Iowa cases cited by appellant are not out of harmony with the views here expressed. Slatten v. Des Moines, 29 Iowa 148, quoted from by counsel, is not at all in point. The act there complained of involved no invasion of or physical injury to the plaintiff’s property: The defendant, acting under grant of authority from the city, had constructed a bridge across the Des Mfoines River, and, in building the necessary approach, had raised the grade of the street in front
“If the contractor does the thing which he is employed to do, the employer is as responsible for the thing as if he had done it himself; but if the act which is the subject of complaint is purely collateral to the matter contracted to be done, and arises indirectly in the course of the performance of the work, the employer is not liable, because he never authorized the work to be done.”
Again, in the same case, it is said that “where the obstruction or defect which occasioned the injury results directly from the acts which the contractor agreed and was authorized to do, the person who employs the contractor and authorizes him to do those acts is equally liable to the injured party”. Indeed, it would be a singular perversion of justice for the court to say that where an act, if done by the owner himself, renders him liable to a person thereby injured, without regard to any question of negligence, he may escape such consequences by the simple expedient of employing a contractor to do it for him. Dealing with a case where a contractor, in doing a public work for a city, necessarily used explosives, exercising therein all reasonable care, the city was held liable for the resulting injury to adjacent property. City of Joliet v. Harwood, 86 Ill. 110. In disposing of the question, the court says:
‘ ‘ The work which the contractor was required by the city to do was intrinsically dangerous, however carefully or skillfully done. The right of recovery in this ease does riot rest upon a charge of negligence on the part of the contractor; it rests upon the fact that the city caused work to be done which was intrinsically dangerous — the natural, (though not the necessary) consequence of which was the injury to plaintiff’s property.”
The same rule was applied in Fitzsimons v. Braun, 199
“The employer cannot relieve himself from liability, by contracting with others for the performance of work, where the necessary or probable effect of the performance of the work will be to injure third persons. ’ ’ •
The trial court correctly held that the rule exempting an owner from libaility for the negligence of an independent contractor is not applicable to the instant case.
The measure of damage for injury to real property is not invariable, and there may be circumstances under which either of the rules stated would be applicable. The rule stated by appellant is more often applied where the damage is permanent, or cannot well be expressed in specific items of injury capable of easy repair or remedy, but does affect in some substantial degree the value of the entire property as a unit. But where the injury is susceptible of remedy at moderate expense, and the cost of restoring it may be shown with reasonable certainty, the rule given the jury by the trial court is entirely proper. Shrieve v. Stokes, 8 B. Mon. 453; Fitzsimons v. Braun, 199 Ill. 390; Graessle v. Carpenter, 70 Iowa 166; McMahon v. Dubuque, 107 Iowa 62.
IY. Exceptions to the court’s instructions are based principally upon appellant’s theory that its liability, if any, is for
There is no error shown calling for a reversal of the judgment appealed from, and it is — Affirmed.