Hogle v. H. H. Franklin Manufacturing Co.

92 N.E. 794, 199 N.Y. 388, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1250
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 794 (Hogle v. H. H. Franklin Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogle v. H. H. Franklin Manufacturing Co., 92 N.E. 794, 199 N.Y. 388, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1250 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The theory upon which the case was sent to the jury upon the second trial is shown by the following extracts from the charge of the trial justice: “I do not intend to talk to you about negligence or about a nuisance or about any other subject with a technical name. I want you to consider simply, in the light of common sense, what is due from one man to another, from one neighbor to another. * * * If my servant repeatedly, with my knowledge, even *392 if lie is not engaged in my business, throws stones at you and injures you, I should do what I reasonably can to prevent that act on his part. In the first place, the servant is subject to my control. In the second place, he is occupying my land and from it he is committing a trespass upon yours; he is using my personal property to help along in' that trespass and he is where he is and is able to commit that trespass because of my act in putting him there and keeping him there. * * * If you find that the plaintiff was injured as she claims, and if you find that these trespasses were repeatedly and continuously committed by persons upon the defendant’s property, the defendant concededly having notice that these trespasses were being committed, I say it is a question for you to determine whether or not the defendant used such reasonable efforts as it should have used to prevent their recurrence and' so is liable because their recurrence was not prevented and because as a result the plaintiff received this injury of which she complains.”

As the Appellate Division held, and as we think, the evidence warranted the jury in finding that the piece of iron which injured the plaintiff was maliciously thrown from a window of the defendant’s factory by one of its workmen and that for more than a year it had been the practice of its workmen, maliciously, or in a spirit of mischief, to throw similar objects from the windows of its factory upon the premises adjoining where plaintiff lived, with the knowledge of the defendant, but without its consent and in violation of its orders.

The defendant contends, and its motion for a nonsuit was based on the ground, that there can be no recovery in this case unless the jury should find that this piece of iron was thrown upon plaintiff’s premises as a necessary consequence of the work being carried on there or as an incident to it.” The refusal to so hold is the main assignment of error on this appeal.

While we all think that the recovery should be sustained, we differ somewhat as to the exact theory upon which it should be based. Ho request that the plaintiff should elect between *393 the theory of nuisance and that of negligence was made at the trial, and the complaint was adapted to either. The trial judge did not name the action, but treated it as an action on the case. If the evidence established a cause of action for negligence in failing to take reasonable precautions to suppress the evil practice, such as closing the windows or screening them with wire netting or setting a watch upon the men or some other of like character, the defendant cannot complain. Such negligence would rest not on the throwing of the missiles, as they were not thrown in furtherance of the master’s business, but on not using reasonable care to prevent them from being thrown. In other words, it would rest oh a relative and not on an absolute duty. If, on the other hand, the evidence^ established an action for nuisance, the rulings of the court ( were more favorable to the defendant than it was entitled to, ^ because the liability for injury from a nuisance is not relative |j but absolute, and proof of negligence on the one hand and the t absence thereof on the other is not required. ^

The line between protracted and habitual negligence and nuisance is not easily drawn, and facts may exist which call for damages on either theory when the pleadings are appropriate, as in this case, to either kind of relief. High authority is not wanting to sustain the judgment below on the ground of negligence pure and simple. Thus, in an important case, the plaintiff was a workman employed by the defendant railroad at its workshop in the city of Washington. When returning from his day’s labor he stopped at the intersection of two streets to enable a repair train to pass him. For a long time prior it had been the custom of the defendant to allow its workmen, who went out on a repair train in the morning to bring back with them on their return in the evening sticks of refuse timber for their individual use as firewood, and these men were in the habit of throwing the sticks off the train while in motion at the points nearest their own homes, but they had been cautioned by the company not to injure any one in doing so. As the defendant’s train passed the plaintiff such a piece of refuse wood was thrown from it *394 by one of the men and striking the ground rebounded, struck the 'plaintiff and in jured him seriously. Upon the trial of an action to recover damages, after proving these facts, the plaintiff rested and defendant moved for a verdict in its favor and the motion was granted. Upon appeal to the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia the judgment was affirmed, but upon further appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States it was reversed, on the ground that the jury could have found the defendant guilty of negligence. (Fletcher v. Baltimore & Potomac R. R. Co., 168 U. S. 135.)

Mr. Justice Peokham, writing for all the judges, said: Negligence on the part of the company is the basis of its liability, and the mere failure to prevent a single and dangerous act, as above stated, would not prove its existence. * * * If the act on the car were such as to permit the jury to find that it was one from which, as a result, injury to a person on the street might reasonably be feared, and if acts of a like nature had been and were habitually performed by those upon the car to the knowledge of the agents or servants of the defendant, who with such knowledge permitted their continuance, then in such case the jury might find the defendant guilty of negligence in having permitted the act and liable for the injury resulting therefrom, notwithstanding the act was that of an employee and beyond the scope of his employment and totally disconnected therewith. * * * It is not a question of scope of employment or that the act of the individual is performed by one who has ceased for the time being to be in the employment of the company. The question is, does the company owe any duty whatever to the general public, or, in other words, to individuals who may be in the streets through which its railroad tracks are laid, to use reasonable diligence to see to it that those who are on its trains shall not be guilty of any act which might reasonably be called dangerous and liable to result in injuries to persons on the street, where such act could by the exercise of reasonable diligence on the part of the company have been prevented? We think the company does owe such a duty, and *395

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 794, 199 N.Y. 388, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogle-v-h-h-franklin-manufacturing-co-ny-1910.