Strasburger v. Vogel

63 A. 202, 103 Md. 85, 1906 Md. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 63 A. 202 (Strasburger v. Vogel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strasburger v. Vogel, 63 A. 202, 103 Md. 85, 1906 Md. LEXIS 99 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the Superior Court of Baltimore City. There are two bills of exception in the record, but, under the ruling in Barabas v. Rabat, 91 ■ Md. 53, we need deal only with the questions.raised by the second one. The declaration sets forth that the defendant, who is the appellant in this Court, was the owner and was in *87 possession of certain premises situated on the northeast corner of Fayette and Eutaw streets in Baltimore City, and that whilst the plaintiff, an infant then about four years of age, was stand-, ing on the pavement in front of the premises, a brick vas caused and procured, through the negligence and carelessness of the defendant, to fall from the roof or top of the defendant’s building, and that the brick struck the infant on the head and seriously and permanently injured him. The declaration then avers “that the injuries aforesaid were all caused through the negligence and want of due and ordinary care upon the part of the defendant, and through no fault of the plaintiff.”

Under the issue joined on the plea that the defendant did not commit the wrong alleged the following, among other, undisputed facts appeared in evidence: On July 22nd, 1903, there was a parade of the Order of Elks in Baltimore. Large crowds of people assembled on the sidewalks along the route of the parade. Amongst the persons who stood on the pavement in front of the premises of the defendant on Eutaw street was the infant plaintiff with his grandmother. Whilst standing there some bricks fell from a chimney of the defendant’s premises, and one of them struck the infant plaintiff on the head and fractured his skull. His injuries were serious and are perhaps permanent. He was taken to a hospital for treatment and remained there for more than five months. The premises occupied by the defendant was a four-story building which was situated on the northeast corner of Fayette and Eutaw streets. It was adjoined on the north, that is on Eutaw street, by a two-story structure, the roof of which, was twenty-two feet lower than the roof of th,e defendant’s house. The house which we are calling the ' defendant’s house does not belong to, but is leased by him, and for the purposes of this case he will be treated as the owner of it, because under his lease his liability to the plaintiff, if any exists at all, is precisely the same that it would be if he were the owner in fee of the premises. The lower floor of the building is occupied by the defendant in carrying on the business of a druggist. The second floor was vacant. The third floor is sublet to the *88 firm of Eiseman Brothers, tailors. The fourth floor was vacant. Entrance to the upper floors of the building was gained from the street through a door separate from the drug store, and which opened into a stairway. There was no trap-door in the roof of the defendant’s building, and to reach that roof from the” roof of the house immediately north on Eutaw street, a ladder at least twenty-two feet long would have been required. Quite a number of persons appear to have ascended the stairway of the defendant’s building to the third floor and then to have stepped out of a window to the roof of the adjoining house on the north, to view the parade on the day in question. The position they occupied was therefore twenty-two feet below the level of the defendant’s roof. There is not a particle .of evidence in the record to show that there was a ladder on the adjoining roof, or that there were any other means to enable the persons who went up the defendant’s stairway and out upon the adjoining roof, to get from that roof to the roof of the defendant’s building. It was therefore physically impossible, so far as the record discloses, for any of those persons to have been on the roof of the defendant’s building; and consequently equally impossible for any of them to have had any connection with the falling of the bricks from a chimney on the defendant’s roof situated twenty-two feet higher than the place those persons occupied. But bricks did fall from the defendant’s chimney and one of them did strike the infant plaintiff For the injury thus sustained this suit was brought. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiff and upon that verdict a judgment was entered against the defendant and he has taken this appeal.

Negligence is the gravamen of the action, and the negligence relied on is the alleged failure of the defendant to keep in proper repair the chimney of his house from which the brick which caused the injury fell. There is no evidence whatever in the record that in point of fact the chimney was in a condition of disrepair. No witness was called to show that it needed pointing, or that it was out of plumb, or that the mortar which fell with the bricks gave any indication of *89 deterioration or decay. The single, isolated fact relied on to establish negligence was the fact that the bricks fell. The argument is, the bricks could not have fallen if the chimney had not been out of repair; they did fall, therefore, the chimney was out of repair; and if out of repair the defendant was guilty of negligence in permitting it to be out of repair, because it was his duty to keep it in repair and hence that his negligence caused the injury. This argument embodies the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur and the first instruction given at the instance of the plaintiff assumes that the doctrine.js applicable to this case. Now, what is that doctrine? It is merely a short way of saying that the circumstances attendant upon an accident are themselves of such a character as to justify a jury in inferring negligence as the cause of that accident; .and it is applicable to two classes of cases, viz, “when the relation of carrier and, passenger exists and the accident arises from some abnormal condition in the department of actual transportation; second, where the injury arises from some condition or event that is in its very nature so obviously destructive of the safety of persons or property and is so tortious in its quality as, in the first instance at least, to permit no inference save that of negligence on the part of the person in control of the injurious agency.” Benedick v. Potts, 88 Md. 55. With the first of those two classes we are not here concerned. In the instances falling within the second of those classes an inference of negligence in lieu of direct proof of negligence, may be deduced from all the circumstances attendant upon and surrounding an accident, if the injury results from a condition or event not only in its very nature destructive of the safety of persons or property but also so wrongful in its quality as to permit, at least primarily, no inference except that of negligence on the part of the person controlling the injurious agency. To draw an inference of negligence from only a part of the attendant circumstances would be both illogical and erroneous, since the sum total of them must constitute the basis of the inference; and to exclude, in the mental process of deduction, a consideration of intervening, independent and *90

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Bluebook (online)
63 A. 202, 103 Md. 85, 1906 Md. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strasburger-v-vogel-md-1906.