Bradford Glycerine Co. v. St. Marys Woolen Mfg. Co.
Bradford Glycerine Co. v. St. Marys Woolen Mfg. Co.
Opinion of the Court
The cause was submitted to the court of common pleas on the following agreed statement of facts:
“It is hereby stipulated that this case will be submitted to the court upon the following statement of facts as the evidence in this case:
“Plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of Ohio, and the owner of real estate whereon buildings are erected in the village of St. Marys,. Auglaize county, Ohio, and was such at all times, stated in the petition filed in this action.
“The defendant is a partnership organized for the purpose of doing business in the state of Ohio and owning property therein.
“On or about January 25, A. D. 1896, the defendant was the owner of a magazine and contents con*566 taining about fifty quarts of nitroglycerine used by tbe defendant in its business of manufacturing, storing and vending nitroglycerine, which magazine was situated on a tract of land belonging to one W. G. Kishler, and situated something over a mile west of the buildings so owned by the plaintiff in St. Marys, Ohio, and situated about one-fourth (i) of a mile distant from the corporation line of the village of St. Marys, Auglaize county, Ohio.
“That on or about said twenty-fifth day of January, A. D., 1896, while one of the defendant’s servants was upon the premises upon which said maga zine was located engaged in transferring about seven hundred and fifty (750) quarts of nitroglycerine from a wagon loaded with same to said magazine, the said nitroglycerine stored therein, and also the same upon the wagon aforesaid, from some cause unknown to said defendant, exploded with great force and concussion causing vibrations in the atmosphere sufficient in power and violence to break, shatter and destroy three (3) plate glass and three (3) common glass in the buildings owned by the plaintiffs aforesaid of the value of two hundred and forty-four dollars and ten cents ($244.10) by reason of which explosion and the breakage of said glass the plaintiffs were injured and damaged to the extent aforesaid.
“That nitroglycerine is a dangerous substance and likely to explode. That demand of payment ■of said sum has been made by the plaintiff to the defendant and payment thereof has been refused.”
This agreed statement of facts does not show •that the plaintiff in error violated any statute of the state or was in any degree negligent in handling or storing the explosive substance involved. It was nitroglycerine, a well known and highly
Counsel for plaintiff in error contend that in respect of the matter under consideration the analogy between the act of blasting rock on one’s premises and storing a dangerous explosive thereon is not close. In the one case the damage is caused by fragments of rock being hurled upon or against the property injured, while in the other case the damage is caused by violent atmospheric vibrations from the explosion. If, however, the explosion caused fragments of thebuilding wherein the explosive material was stored, or other solid substance, to be thrown against the property injured, thereby producing damage, the analogy might be more easily perceived. True it might be said that in the one case the party to be charged was actively engaged in the work that caused the injury, while in the other case he was simply using the premises to store the dangerous substance, not intending that it should explode. These distinctions, however, do not seem to be material. The right of the owner of a stone quarry to blast rock therefrom where that is necessary to a profitable use of his property, or the right of one to make an excavation of any kind on his own property where blasting is a proper and usual mode to
In this ease the premises on which the explosive substance was stored and the premises on which the building stood that was injured do not appear to have been adjacent. They were a mile apart, and for anything that appears in the record, many
The liability of one who for his own purpose brings upon his own premises substances dangerous to others, if not kept under control, was exhaustively discussed by the judges of England in the case of Fletcher v. Rylands, 1 Exch. L. R., 265, and afterwards on a review of the case in the House of Lords, L. R., 3, H. L., 330.
■ — -Iruth^ Exchequer Chamber Justice Blackburn in giving judgment employed the following language: “ We think that the true rule of law is, that the person who for his own purposes brings on his lands and collects and keeps there anything likely to do mischief if it escapes, must keep it in at his peril, and, if he does not do so, is prima facie answerable for all the damage which is the natural consequence of its escape. He can excuse himself by showing that the escape was owing to the plaintiff’s default; or perhaps that the escape was the ■consequence of vis mayor, or the act of God; but as nothing of this sort exists here, it is unnecessary ■to inquire what excuse would be sufficient. The general rule, as above stated, seems on principle
This language was approved in the House of Lords when the cause came up for consideration there, Lord Cranworth saying: “My Lords, I concur with my noble and learned friend in thinking that the rule of law was correctly stated by Mr. Justice Blackburn in delivering the opinion of the Exchequer Chamber. If a person brings, or accumulates, on his land anything which, if it should escape, may cause damage to his neighbor, he does so at his peril. If it does escape, and cause damage, he is responsible, however careful he may have been, and whatever precautions he may have taken to prevent the damage.”
In the case above cited from. New York, Losee v. Buchanan, 51 N. Y., 476, and that from New Jersey, Marshall v. Welwood, 38 N. J. L., 339, a!, casualty occurred from an explosion of steam ^ boilers. "■
To my mind the analogy between the act of storing so highly explosive and dangerous an agency as nitroglycerine on one’s premises and that of conducting a business thereon, which requires for its successful operation the use of steam, is not complete, although each is an explosive. Doubtless both are dangerous agencies, when control over them is lost. The use of steam has, however, so generally been employed in every productive industry that every owner of real property may reasonably be held to contemplate the contingency of its being employed upon adjacent premises, and to enjoy his property subject to that risk. In a great city like New York or Chicago, where numerous and varied industries are conducted, there are doubtless many thousands of places where steam is employed. The entire population of such a city is interested and most of them directly or indirectly benefited by these industries. Large numbers of them labor by day in factories where steam furnishes the motive power, and many of them sleep at night in buildings con
Whether upon such grounds or for any other reasons such a modification of the rule should •obtain in the case for the use of steam is not, of course, before the court, and the question is only considered in this brief way to show that there may be no irreconcilable conflict between the cases that have absolved the owners of boilers from liability for the consequences of an explosion occurring without their fault, and the conclusions reached by us in the case under consideration. Doubtless gunpowder, nitroglycerine and other dangerous explosives are useful agencies in many industries, as well as steam, but conceding that in the case of steam boilers the extensive and varied uses to which steam is devoted, the comparatively slight danger arising from its use, require on
The existence of a manufacturing establishment^ although it employ steam as a motive power, may and doubtless is in many instances a positive benefit to real property in its vicinity, and instead of diminishing- may enhance its value, while on the contrary, the erection and use of a nitroglycerine magazine could have no other than a disastrous effect on the value of all real property in its vicinity. We think, therefore, the right to-maintain the former may be placed upon grounds that cannot apply to the latter. The general doctrine upon the subject stated in Fletcher v. Rylands, supra, seems to be just and fair in its-general operation. The syllabus of that case, as announced by the House of Lords, L. R. 3, H. L.,. 330, seems to recognize a distinction in this respect between an ordinary and an extraordinary use of his premises by their owner, and had that learned tribunal then had before it a case where-damages were sought on account of injuries resulting from an explosion of a steam boiler in a. manufacturing establishment, it might have denied the liability in the absence of proof of negligence, on the ground that the owner was using his premises in an ordinary manner.
But whatever might have been done by the-House of Lords in the case supposed, we are of the
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.