Lawton v. . Giles

90 N.C. 374
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 90 N.C. 374 (Lawton v. . Giles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawton v. . Giles, 90 N.C. 374 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

SMITH, C. J.

Late in the' afternoon on March 13th, 1881, the plaintiffs’ house, constructed of wood and with shingle roof, some hundred yards distant from the rice mill of the defendants, operated by steam power in the city of Wilmington, was set on fire and badly burned, as alleged, from sparks issuing out of the smoke-stack of the mill, attributable to the negligent management of them and their servants, and the want of due precaution in providing against their escape. On the day of the *376 occurrence the wind was blowing with a velocity of from fourteen to sixteen miles an hour in the direction of the plaintiffs’ house.

There was much testimony offered in reference to the emission of sparks of considerable size from the pipe at different times before the fire, of the excellent construction of the furnace and arrangement and working of the engine, to guard against injury to the inroperty 0f others, and to secure safety to the owners. There had been upon the top of the pipe a spark-arrester, or covering cap with wire gauze or net-work to prevent the passing-of large burning cinders, but this, not being deemed necessary and greatly obstructing the draught and the efficient working of the machinery, had been removed and was not in use.

Experts who had examined the mill testified to its being supplied with modern improvements and appliances that greatly contributed to its safety, and that the escaping smoke, when it left the furnace, passed through a flue of twenty-six feet, and then up the smoke-stack some sixty-seven feet more, before being poured out into the open air, and that this arrangement afforded protection against the communication of fire, greater than that derived from spark-arresters placed on short pipes, such as were in use on steamboats and locomotives, and rendered them unnecessary.

The testimony is given in detail, but so far as it relates to the defence, the above general statement -will suffice to render intelligible the objections here made to the charge, for no exceptions appear in the record to have been taken to any part of it.

The issues submitted to the jury, and the responses to each, were:

. 1. Was the plaintiff’s house burned by the emission of sparks or other inflammable matter from defendants’ mill? Yes.

, 2. Was the injury to the plaintiff’s house caused by the negligence of the defendants? Yes.

3. What damages, if any, did the plaintiff sustain? Five hundred dollars.

*377 The testimony was mainly directed to the second issue involving the question of negligence on the part of the defendants.

. The entire charge of the court is set out in the case, as well as in the special instructions given at the instance of the plaintiffs, which, under a recent change in the law, are “deemed to be excepted to without any forma! objections,” and consequently are brought up for consideration by an appeal. The Code, -.§412, par. 3.

The charge, the correctness of several portions of which is •denied in the argument for the appellant in this court, is as folllows: .

“As a general principle, the plaintiffs, owning a house in the •city of Wilmington, were entitled to enjoy it freed from injury ■caused through another’s negligence, and the defendants, owning and operating a rice mill in the same city, had the right to do so, if they so conducted and managed their mill and machinery as not to injure others. The defendants having chosen steam to •operate their mill, -this being recognized as a dangerous element in itself, are held by the law to a very high degree of care and skill, as railroad and steamboat companies, &c., and if in such business as they were engaged in, there was known and in use any apparatus which, applied to their engine, would enable it to •consume its own sparks, and thus prevent their emission to the consequent ignition of combustible matter of others, it was negligence in them if they did not avail themselves of such apparatus.”

“ But they were not bound to use every possible precaution which the highest scientific skill might have suggested, nor to adopt an untried machine or mode of construction. While the law does-not require absolute scientific perfection in the construction of such works as the defendants used, it does require the ■exercise of a high degree of care and skill to ascertain, as near as may be, the best plan for their structure.”

If the defendants, at the time of the fire, had availed themselves of all the discoveries which science and experience had put in their reach, and had constructed their machinery so per- *378 feet' as to prevent the emission of sparks or other inflammable material calculated to ignite adjoining property, then they have done all the' law requires, and would not be guilty of negligence. But if you find the machinery of the defendants used on the day of the fire not so perfect as to prevent the emission of sparks or other inflammable matter calculated to ignite adjoining or neighboring property, they would be guilty of negligence; and the fact that they had in use such machinery, &c., as was in common and general use and had been approved by experience,, would not relieve them.”

In response to the request of the plaintiffs’ counsel, the jury were further directed:

1. “If the defendants’ mill, situated in the heart of the city,, frequently emitted live sparks, which, blown by the wind, fell on neighboring property in a condition likely to ignite, it was negligence in them to operate the mill without curing the defect,, and if the mill could not be operated without the emission of sparks likely to ignite, they had no right to operate it at all.”

2. “It was their duty to use sufficient appliances, such as spark-arresters, to prevent the emission of sparks, and if, previous to the fire, they had used such precautions and thereby secured safety to adjacent property, and they afterwards removed them, and the fire would not have occurred, but for the removal,, this was negligence.”

3. “ If the plaintiffs’ house was covered with old shingles when defendants erected their mill, and the house was endangered thereby, the law did not require the plaintiffs to remove the shingles, and in not removing them they were not chargeable with contributing negligence.”

4. “If the plaintiffs’ house was burned by the defendants, the burden is on them to exonerate themselves by showing that they exercised diligence to prevent mischief.”

5. “ If the running of the mill on this occasion was not such as to endanger adjacent property under ordinary circumstances,, yet if at the time a gale at the speed of fifteen miles an hour was blowing and had been so blowing during the day, and thus such *379 property was exposed to greater peril from, sparks or other inflammable matter, it was the defendants’ duty to use additional, and, as compared with other times, extraordinary precautions, to the extent of stopping their niill for the day, or until the gale was over.”

6. “If

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.C. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawton-v-giles-nc-1884.