Vogel v. McAuliffe

31 A. 1, 18 R.I. 791, 1895 R.I. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 2, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 A. 1 (Vogel v. McAuliffe) 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
Vogel v. McAuliffe, 31 A. 1, 18 R.I. 791, 1895 R.I. LEXIS 9 (R.I. 1895).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

1. We do not think the plaintiff misconceived his form of action. The declara *792 tion does not allege nor does the proof show that the defendant’s servants wrongfully entered the plaintiff’s premises, that is, that they committed any trespass in so doing, hut on the other hand the proof shows that they entered with the implied permission of the plaintiff, he having been present at the time and having asked them as to their purpose ; and upon being informed that they were there to repair his furnace so as to prevent the gas from escaping therefrom into the tenement of one Page who lived in the same house, he made no objection, but went away leaving them at work thereon.

The proof also shows that after the defendant’s servants had taken the furnace apart, they then and there destroyed the same by breaking some parts of it in pieces, and that the defendant wrongfully neglected and refused to replace said furnace although requested by the plaintiff so to do, by reason whereof the plaintiff suffered much inconvenience and injury. It was conceded by the plaintiff at the trial that the defendant, who was a tenant in common with his son Eugene T. McAuliffe, the plaintiff’s landlord, of the house in which the plaintiff lived, had the right to enter said premises for the purpose of making repairs upon said furnace. Moreover, the defendant’s attorney requested the court to charge the jury “that the defendant had a right to take the furnace apart to repair it, or to ascertain if it was leaking gas,” and the court so instructed them.

It appears, then, that the substantial injury of which the plaintiff complains was not the effect of the force direct and intentional, but resulted from the wrongful and fraudulent conduct of the defendant in removing and destroying said .furnace, and neglecting and refusing to replace the same, and hence was consequential in its nature. It is well settled that case and not trespass is the proper form of action where the damages sought to be recovered are consequential. The general principle laid down by Chitty in his exhaustive work on Pleading, Vol. 1, p. *127, is that “an injury is considered as immediate when the act complained of itself, and not merely a consequence oí that act, occasions the injury.” See *793 also Scott v. Bay, 3 Md. 431; Scott v. Shepherd, 1 Smith’s Lead. Cas. 7th Am. ed. *549, and note by the American editors; Brennan v. Carpenter, 1 R. I. 474; Hunt v. Pratt, 7 R. I. 283; Fallon v. O’Brien, 12 R. I. 518. Nor does it matter whether the original act was lawful or unlawful, as this is not the true criterion; but the true distinction is whether the injury is immediate or consequential. See Oliver’s Precedents, 4th ed. p. 444, and cases cited; Howe v. Newmarch, 12 Allen, 49; 26 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 699-707, where most of the leading cases on this subject are collected.

2. We do not think the court erred in admitting the testimony offered by the plaintiff as to the condition of his infant child at the time of, and immediately following the destruction of his furnace. The child was ill with bronchitis, and on account of the destruction of the furnace, had to be taken into the kitchen and cared for there, which according to the testimony, was not so convenient or suitable a place as it had previously occupied. And although it does not appear thahany injury was sustained by the child on account of the change, yet the plaintiff was annoyed and subjected to more or less mental suffering and anxiety by reason thereof.

3. The defendant requested the court to charge the jury ££ That the plaintiff had a right to deduct from his rent any damage resulting from any diminution of his enjoyment of the premises during the month of his tenancy ; and if he kept on living there after the month expired in which the furnace was taken apart he can recover for no discomfort thereafter, as he took the tenement as he found it.” The request was refused and the defendant excepted. We fail to see the pertinency of the first branch of this .request, as the relation of landlord and tenant did not subsist between the plaintiff and the defendant. Eugene T. McAuliffe was the plaintiff’s landlord, and he was not the author of the injury complained of; and it would certainly be a strange doctrine to advance, that rent due to a landlord could be retained by the tenant for damages caused by the tortious acts of a stranger.

As to the second branch of said request, viz., that if the *794 plaintiff continued, to live in said tenement after the expiration of the month in which the furnace was destroyed, he could recover for no discomfort thereafter, as he took the tenement as he found it, it is to be observed, first, that as the plaintiff’s landlord was not in any way responsible for said furnace, nor bound to replace said furnace, the plaintiff could not leave said tenement without becoming liable for future accruing rent, without first giving the statutory notice of his intention to quit. Pub. Stat. E. I. cap. 232, §§ 3, 4. As the furnace was destroyed on the 24th day of November, 1893, it was not possible for the plaintiff to have given a notice which would have had the effect to terminate his tenancy on the first of the following month, or prior to the first day of January, 1894. Second, that while it is doubtless true that the plaintiff had no right to aggravate his damages, by remaining in said tenement for an unreasonable length of time without himself providing proper means for heating the same, yet under the proof submitted as to his efforts to supply the place of the furnace by using stoves and a fireplace, and 'in promptly looking for another tenement, we do not think it can be successfully contended that it was unreasonable to allow him to recover such damages as he was able to show he had suffered up to the time of the bringing of this action, which was on January 4, 1894.

4. The defendant alleges that the verdict was against -the evidence and the weight thereof. An examination of the evidence which was quite voluminous, shows that it was very conflicting, especially upon the vital issues in the case. The plaintiff offered evidence to the effect that the furnace was taken down and destroyed by the defendant’s servants in pursuance of his orders, on the 24th of November, 1893, while the defendant offered evidence to the effect that he was confined at home by illness at that time and had no connection with or knowledge of the acts complained of until some time afterwards. Amongst the witnesses called by the plaintiff was one Abontius B. Lawrent, who testified that he was in the defendant’s employ at the time, and was personally ordered by him at the store on November 24th to go with one *795 Fitzgerald, another servant of the defendant, and take down plaintiff’s furnace, and not put it up again, stating to them at the same time that he didn’t care if they broke it all to pieces, and that they obeyed the order and then reported to him as to what they had done.

Charles A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 A. 1, 18 R.I. 791, 1895 R.I. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogel-v-mcauliffe-ri-1895.