Enterprise Garnetting Co. v. Forcier

23 A.2d 761, 67 R.I. 336, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 23, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 761 (Enterprise Garnetting Co. v. Forcier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Enterprise Garnetting Co. v. Forcier, 23 A.2d 761, 67 R.I. 336, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 108 (R.I. 1941).

Opinion

*337 Condon, J.

These are actions of the case for nuisance. The real defendant is the city of Woonsocket. The cases were tried together in the superior court and a verdict for the plaintiff was returned by the jury in each case. Defendant thereupon moved for a new trial which was granted. Each plaintiff excepted to that ruling by the trial justice and the cases are now here on such exceptions. We shall hereinafter treat these as a single exception by one .plaintiff, except in our consideration of the damages.

Plaintiff contends that the trial justice misconceived some of the evidence, and also that he failed, in weighing the evidence, to distinguish between that which was positive and that which was merely negative. Defendant on the other hand contends that the trial justice did not err in those respects but, on the contrary, properly exercised his independent judgment in setting aside the jury’s verdicts, and that his decision should not be disturbed unless it is clearly wrong.

On August 18, 1935 plaintiff’s property was’damaged by fire. This property consisted of two buildings containing valuable machinery and stock. The buildings belonged to plaintiff Fealhaber and the machinery and stock to plaintiff Enterprise Garnetting Company, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff company. These buildings were situated in the city of Woonsocket, off Cumberland Hill road, approximately 250 feet distant from a public dump which, according'to the undisputed testimony, was frequently afire, and on several occasions previous to August 18, 1935 required the attention of the fire department. One such occasion was August 17, 1935 when the fire department was called to the dump at *338 2:15 a. m. and was there one hour and a half extinguishing a fire. Later at 8:10 a. m. on the same day it was again called and the firemen spent over eight hours extinguishing a fire there.

Plaintiff alleged that the fire which destroyed his property originated in this dump, spread to combustible rubbish littered over the area between his buildings and the dump, and ignited his buildings. He further alleged that this was a public dump, maintained by the city of Woonsocket, which the city was obligated to supervise in such a manner that it would not become dangerous to his property. This, he alleged, the city failed to do but permitted the dump to remain for a long time in such a dangerous condition that it became a peril and a hazard amounting to a nuisance for which the city was liable.

The trial in the superior court proceeded on the theory of a nuisance and evidence was presented in support of the allegation that the city created and maintained the dump in a dangerous condition. Defendant raised several issues seeking to avoid responsibility on that ground but the only issue with which we are concerned, on the question of liability, is whether or not a fire started in the dump on August 18, 1935 and ignited the plaintiff’s buildings. This was the only issue, on defendant’s liability for the fire, which was briefed and argued at the hearing in this court, and it is the only issue which the trial justice discusses in his rescript as not having been proved by the weight of the credible evidence. On that view he granted defendant a new trial.

The trial justice found, in effect, that twenty, firemen had testified there was no fire between the dump and plaintiff’s buildings. He also found, in effect, that the testimony of four witnesses for the plaintiff that the fire spread from the dump to plaintiff’s buildings did not outweigh the testimony of the firemen in favor of the defendant and that, therefore, “the jury did not give careful and conscientious consideration to this evidence.”

*339 Plaintiff argues that the testimony of the firemen amounted only to evidence that they did not see any fire between plaintiff’s buildings and the dump when they arrived on the scene. On this point each fireman was asked by defendant’s counsel, in direct examination, the following question, only slightly varied in minor particulars in each case: “Now, when you arrived there, when you got to the scene of the fire or at any time before you left the scene of the fire, before you returned to fire headquarters, did you observe or did you see any fire between the building that was in flames when you arrived there and the dump we are talking about?” The answer in each instance was “No”. Counsel did not inquire as to whether the witness looked for any fire between the building and the dump or for any sign that there had been fire in that area. Plaintiff’s counsel in cross-examination did ask several of the firemen if they had looked, and in each instance received a negative answer.

Defendant’s counsel argues that the testimony of the twenty firemen is not merely negative testimony, because the circumstances here are different from the ordinary case. Here he urges, in effect, that the very purpose of the firemen in responding to an alarm is to look for fire, and if a fireman who so responds says he did not see any fire at a particular place at the scene, then it is tantamount to an answer that there was no fire unless it appears he actually did not look. And in this connection defendant’s counsel argues in his brief that it was incumbent upon plaintiff’s counsel to develop such fact by cross-examination of the other firemen on this point if he would claim that the testimony of all of them was merely negative and not positive.

With this argument we cannot agree. It is not the cross-examination which established the negative character of the testimony of these firemen. The form of the question propounded to them by defendant’s counsel in direct examination did that. It was not the obligation of plaintiff’s counsel to develop by cross-examination of each witness whether or not there was a sufficient foundation for transforming the *340 merely negative answer of the witness into one having some of the character of positive testimony.

We have carefully read all of the testimony of the firemen and we are forced to conclude that in no instance does the testimony of any one of them, on the existence or nonexistence of fire in the area between the dump and plaintiff’s buildings, apiount to positive evidence that there was no fire and that there had been no fire there. Indeed, standing alone it is difficult to see wherein a negative answer to such a question as above quoted amounts to evidence at all in the face of positive testimony that there was fire in that area. In the ordinary case where a witness is interrogated in this manner it would seem that his negative answer is of no probative value without establishing the fact that the witness did actually look; and even then the character of the testimony would' not be transformed into positive testimony, but would be merely negative testimony subject to all of the infirmities of such testimony if opposed by any quantum of positive testimony. See Bennett v. Robertson, 107 Vt. 202; 10 R. C. L. 1010.

In the instant case there was positive testimony from at least three witnesses that this fire started in the dump, ignited the litter covering the area between the dump and' the buildings and was carried by the wind to the buildings of the plaintiff.

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Related

Enterprise Garnetting Co. v. Forcier
31 A.2d 472 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 761, 67 R.I. 336, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enterprise-garnetting-co-v-forcier-ri-1941.