Gilbert v. Evens & Howard Fire Brick Co.

260 S.W. 790, 214 Mo. App. 207, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 12
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 790 (Gilbert v. Evens & Howard Fire Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Evens & Howard Fire Brick Co., 260 S.W. 790, 214 Mo. App. 207, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 12 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*211 BECKER, J.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment in the sum of $1750 against the defendant in an action for injury done to her property alleged to have been caused by blasting of the defendant, which is a corporation and was engaged in the business of mining clay under the surface of the ground in the proximity of plaintiff’s real estate.

Defendant, who in due course brings this appeal, urges as its first point that the trial court erred in not sustaining defendant’s demurrer to the evidence at the close of the case because, (a) the injury to plaintiff’s property, according to the evidence, could by reasonable inference, have resulted from two or more causes, for one of which the defendant would not be liable, and (b) that plaintiff failed to prove that the defendant was guilty of negligence.

We address ourselves to the question of whether the plaintiff, though her petition alleges negligence on the part of the defendant, was required in an action such as this to prove negligence.

Irrespective of what the rule may be in other jurisdictions the rule approved by the Kansas City and Springfield Courts of Appeal of this State, is that blasting is an absolute necessity in excavating through beds of rock, in mining, in digging wells, in excavating foundations for buildings, in improving roads and streets, in digging canals, in building railways and in doing many other things and is not under all circumstances to .be regarded as a nuisance per se and condemned as being negligent as a matter of law. On the other hand it must be regarded as a work which one proprietor may lawfully do upon his own land, provided he takes due care to avoid injuring persons or property in the vicinity and subject to his obligation to pay damages for any injury which he does in case his blasting involves a direct invasion of the premises of an adjacent' proprietor. [Hoffman v. Walsh, 117 Mo. App. 278, 93 S. W. 853; Faust v. Pope, 132 Mo. App. 287, 111 S. W. 878; Scalpino v. Smith, 154 Mo. App. 524, 135 S. W. 1000; Johnson v. Railroad, 182 *212 Mo. App. 349, 170 S. W. 456; Taylor v. Walsh, 193 Mo. App. 516, 186 S. W. 527.]

In the Scalpino case, supra, which was an action to recover damages for personal injuries inflicted by an explosion of dynamite, the point was directly raised that since plaintiff’s petition, by specific allegations, based her right to recover on the negligence of the defendant, and since plaintiff failed to establish by proof the specific acts of negligence charged in her petition, the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained.' The court, in its opinion, held that the action was one ex delicto wherein the real cause is not negligence “but a different tort of which negligence may be an ingredient but is not an essential element, the averment of negligence should be regarded as immaterial and the pleader should not be held to proof of that which forms no essential part of his cause of action. Such is the view we expressed in Hoffman v. Walsh, 117 Mo. App. 287, 93 S. W. 853, where we said: “The case does not fall within the rule that where specific acts of negligence are alleged the plaintiff is restricted to his allegations in making out his case. It comes under the different rule that, where it is not necessary to allege negligence, it is not necessary to prove it.”

The above doctrine appeals to us as sound and we rule that the defendant must answer in damages for the consequences, if any, to plaintiff’s property which may have been caused by the blasting on the part of the defendant, and that regardless of the question of the degree of care which it exercised in so doing.

As to the contention that defendant’s demurrer should have been sustained in that the injury to the property under the evidence adduced could by reasonable inference have resulted from two or more causes, for ‘one of which the defendant would not be liable, the point is without merit.

Plaintiff adduced testimony that she was the owner, since 1907, of three contiguous lots facing north on the Creve Coeur Lake Railroad;’ that she owned a seven- *213 room house, built of concrete blocks, which was built upon the middle lot; that at the rear of the house she had built a garage with a loft and shingled gable roof; that the defendant' company held a large tract of land immediately south of plaintiff’s property under lease which it used for mining clay; that during the years 1918,1919 and 1920 the defendant company was operating its mine for fire clay immediately south of plaintiff’s premises; that the north tunnel of this mine or entrance, was fifty-seven feet from the south line of plaintiff’s property; that the method of mining the clay by- the defendant was to drill holes into the clay into which the miners inserted charges of black blasting powder; that each charge consisted of about one and one-half pounds of powder. The holes were tamped and the charge exploded. Each blast, if successful, loosened about four tons of clay. Blasting was done at the noon hour and again at the close of the work in the afternoon. Many blasts were shot each day and an effort was made to time the fuses so that successive blasts would result. The testimony further showed that during the years 1918, 1919 and 1920 there were no earthquakes or like disturbances of the earth’s surface in that locality; that various shocks preceded by explosions were felt by the tenants living on the plaintiff’s property during the years 1918, 1919 and 1920; that prior to the time these exifiosions were heard and the shocks felt, the house and the garage on plaintiff’s property were in good condition and the walls thereof free from cracks, but that during the period of time adverted to above, the north wall of plaintiff’s garage bulged out and fell down and the roof thereof slid to the ground and the east wall cracked from top to bottom; that cracks also developed on the outside and inside walls of plaintiff ’s house.

A witness named Mallow, who was a tenant on plaintiff’s property, testified that at times when he was repairing his automobile in plaintiff’s garage and was lying on his back underneath his machine he felt as if he was being lifted off of the floor by the force of the explosions. *214

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 790, 214 Mo. App. 207, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-evens-howard-fire-brick-co-moctapp-1924.