Sroka v. Halliday

97 A. 965, 39 R.I. 119, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 23, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 97 A. 965 (Sroka v. Halliday) 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
Sroka v. Halliday, 97 A. 965, 39 R.I. 119, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 40 (R.I. 1916).

Opinion

Parkhurst, J.

These two actions were tried together before a justice of the Superior Court, sitting with a jury. They are actions of trespass on the case for negligence-brought against the members of a committee on the celebration of the Fourth of July held in the city of Pawtucketin the year 1912. The first action is brought by a minor for personal injuries by his next friend, his father: the second action is brought by the father for the loss of services-of said minor child.

It appears that the plaintiff, John Sroka, at the time of the-injury, was a child of about seven years of age and lived with his parents at 321 North Main Street, in the City of *122 Pawtucket, North Main Street being on the west side of the Blackstone River some six hundred feet distant from Goff’s Lot, so-called, which is on the east side of said river, and upon which lot fireworks of varied character; including numerous aerial bombs, were set off during the day and evening of July 4, 1912. The plaintiff, John Sroka, received the injuries complained of on July 12, 1912, while at play in. his own yard at 321 North Main Street, with two other boys, one of them about seven years old, the other four or five years old. The youngest child found there an unexploded bomb and brought it to the others and they played with it; they found a match in the yard which was applied to this bomb while it was in the hands of the plaintiff, it then and there exploded most severely injuring the plaintiff, blowing off the palms of both hands and all the fingers except the index finger of the right hand and the little finger and the next finger on the left hand, breaking both arms, and causing a severe injury to the right knee, a slighter injury to the left knee, and causing severe powder burns of the face and body. The evidence shows that the fireworks program which was carried out on said July 4, 1912, included three salutes of twenty-one aerial bombs each at six o’clock A. M., twelve o’clock noon, and six o’clock P. M.; it also appears from the evidence of Damiani himself who fired these salutes, and also the evening display, including a large number of aerial bombs, that one of the bombs fired at the noon salute failed to explode in the air and came down unexploded near him on Goff’s Lot, and that Joseph Ricci (the agent of the Fireworks Company whose name appears as Ritchie in the transcript) was there at the time and recovered this bomb, and that later Damiani fixed it and fired it when it exploded in the air as it was intended.

The evidence further shows by several witnesses that at the six o’clock P. M. salute not less than three of these aerial bombs were seen to fall unexploded; one of them was seen to fall into the river, and two were seen to fall on the west side of the river, some 500 or 600 feet away from the *123 place of their discharge and upon or in the immediate vicinity of the premises of the plaintiffs at 321 North Main Street. One of these latter bombs was found in the lot next north of plaintiffs’ by some young men who were watching the display and saw these bombs fall, and was afterwards exploded by them; they searched for the other, but did not find it. There is no evidence that other bombs of this nature were discharged by anyone else in the city of Pawtucket during the day or evening of July 4, 1912. Damiani also testified that all the saluting bombs sent up by him at six o’clock P. M. exploded in the air as intended; but in this he is opposed by several witnesses who were in the vicinity of 321 North Main Street and who testified that the bombs fired at the six o’clock P. M. salute, — many of them exploded over the heads of the witnesses some 500 or 600 feet away from the place of firing, and at least three were seen to fall unexploded as above stated. Damiani in speaking of these bombs said he knew that they exploded because he kept watch to see where they were going, viz.: “Well, of course, when you shoot a bomb from the ground and it goes up, you don’t shoot any more until you see where the other one goes because I watch out for myself and a fireworks man has to look out, otherwise it will fall on his head and kill him.” (Tr. p. 258). This piece of testimony is quite significant in that it shows that Damiani, who fired all these bombs, haying had notice at noon that some of them were likely to fall unexploded near him, to the great danger of his life, had so placed his mortars that the bombs would fall outside the lot where he was and some five hundred feet away on the other side of the river, and in watching them must have seen that this was so; so that it is quite manifest that he was more concerned for his own safety than for that of others and was not so much interested in seeing that they exploded in the air as intended, as in being assured that if unexploded they would not come down and hurt him. It also shows that he fully appreciated the danger to others of what he was doing, and this must also have been manifest to Ricci who was *124 present with him and who was the active agent of the Providence Fireworks Company in procuring the contract and in seeing that it was fulfilled and who afterwards received the money paid for the display and took his commission, turning over the balance to the company.

It appears in evidence that the City Council of the City of Pawtucket, acting under authority of Pub. Laws, R. I. Chap. 658, January, 1911, had appropriated the sum of $2,000 for the celebration of July 4, 1912, that on March 6, 1912, the city council by joint resolution appointed a joint special committee consisting of two members of the board of aldermen and four members of the common council to make arrangements for the proper observation of Fourth of July and to have charge of the appropriation made for that purpose; this committee consisted of Fred F. Halliday, Jr., and Charles W. Hughes, aldermen, and John T. Kirk, Andrew Cochran, John H. Worthington and Joseph B. Hunt, councilmen. The Pawtucket Board of Trade sent through its clerk to the clerk of this committee the names of Fred Mullen, Arthur T. Smith, Willard L. Wood, John J, Hayes and John J. Beard, all apparently members of the Board of Trade or of a Business Men’s Association, or of a Merchants’ Association, as it is variously mentioned in the testimony; and all of them were admitted by the joint special committee of the city council to act with them in the matter of the celebration. They all organized as one general committee on April 23, 1912, all meeting together, and appointed Fred F. Halliday, Jr., as chairman, Henry W. Taylor as secretary,, and Willard L. Wood as treasurer (Wood being a member of the board of trade and not a member of the city council). This general committee then proceeded to appoint several sub-committees, to wit, a committee on fireworks consisting of Messrs. Hunt, Kirk and Wood (two members from the city council, one member from the board of trade), and Messrs. Cochran, Mullen and Smith “sub-committee for the whole matter” (one member from the city council, two members from the board of trade). These gentlemen from the board *125 of trade also raised by private subscription about $1,200, in addition to the city appropriation, to be used for expenses, but the evidence does not disclose what it was used for or whether it was in fact used at all.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A. 965, 39 R.I. 119, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sroka-v-halliday-ri-1916.