Strasburger v. Vogel

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. Kabat, 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 *Page 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 standing on the pavement in front of the premises, a brick was 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 22d 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 the 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 *Page 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 *Page 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 chimneywas 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 is 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 *Page 90 efficient causes directly occasioning the injury and proven by a plaintiff himself and not attributable to a defendant, would be to predicate actionable negligence of a condition or event which in fact did not produce the injury and thus allow a recovery against a defendant on a ground for which he was in no way answerable. It is obvious, then, when a plaintiff relies on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur it must not appear by his own evidence, or the evidence adduced in his own behalf, that causes for which the defendant was in no way responsible produced the injury for which damages are sought.

It is true as stated by this Court in The State, use ofKeyser, v. Deford, 30 Md. 205, and repeated in Murray v.McShane, 52 Md. 225, that "in all cases where a party is in possession of fixed property, he must take care that it is so used and managed that other persons shall not be injured;" and it follows, of course, that the lack of such care is negligence and if an injury ensues therefrom an action will lie. It was the duty of the defendant to keep the chimney on his house in repair. If he neglected to do so and in consequence of that neglect the bricks fell therefrom and injured the plaintiff the defendant was liable. Now, if the chimney was in a condition of repair and if no independent agency intervened, the bricks would not have fallen; and if no other fact had appeared in the case reflecting upon or accounting for their falling, the mere fact that they fell was a sufficient circumstance from which a jury might have fairly concluded that their fall was due to a failure on the part of the defendant to keep the chimney in proper repair; and such a failure would be negligence. But the plaintiff did not see fit to rely on this inference of negligence. He adduced evidence to show that an intervening and independent cause operated to precipitate the bricks from the chimney to the pavement. In the testimony given by some of the plaintiff's witnesses it appeared that there were six or eight men on the roof of the defendant's house "when the parade was going by, and they leaned on the chimney * * * and in doing so I knew very well," said one of the plaintiff's witnesses, "the chimney would give away and some of the bricks fall, * * * *Page 91 and then the chimney gave away, and then there was some bricks fell and came down through the canvas awning." This testimony was corroborated by several witnesses for the defendant, and nothing appears in the record to question or gainsay it. That several men leaned against the chimney and thereby caused the bricks to fall from it, is a fact proved by both sides and is undisputed and incontrovertible. Despite the testimony which showed what was the immediate and direct cause of the falling of the bricks, the trial Court in the first instruction granted at the instance of the plaintiff told the jury that if they should find that the defendant was in possession and occupancy of the premises, and that the plaintiff whilst standing on Eutaw street in front of that house was struck by a brick falling from the said house, then the verdict must be for the plaintiff, unless the defendant by a preponderance of testimony satisfied the jury that the falling of the brick was not caused by the negligence of the defendant. The instruction deliberately ignored the fact which the plaintiff had proved that an independent agency had intervened and had caused the bricks to fall, and permitted a recovery upon an inference of negligence arising solely from the mere fact that the bricks fell, unless the defendant satisfied the jury that the falling of the bricks was not caused by his negligence. If the plaintiff's case had rested exclusively upon an inference of negligence deduced from the single fact that the bricks fell without an apparent or assigned cause; and if the defendant had, by way of answer to that theory, relied upon the intervention of an independent agency, the instruction would have been correct, because the presumption of negligence arising from an unexplained falling of the bricks would have established aprima facie case which the defendant could only have rebutted by showing a state of facts which destroyed or negatived that presumption. Between the two conflicting theories it would have been the province of the jury to pass. But when the plaintiff himself shows that the injury complained of must have resultedeither from the negligence of the defendant or from an independent cause for the existence of which the *Page 92 defendant is in no way responsible, he cannot be permitted to recover until he excludes the independent cause as the efficient and proximate cause of the injury; and an instruction which allows a recovery without any reference whatever to such efficient and proximate cause is essentially misleading and erroneous. Co. Coms. v. Wise, 75 Md. 38. No attempt was made to show that the bricks would have fallen if the men had not leaned against the chimney; and no inference that they would have fallen had not that agency intervened can be legitimately drawn.

It does not appear that the men who were on the roof and who by leaning against the chimney dislodged the bricks, were in the defendant's employ or were on his roof with his knowledge or consent. If they were there without his knowledge or consent he is obviously not responsible for what they did whilst they were there. We have said that it was, so far as the record discloses, a physical impossibility for the persons who stepped from the third story window of the defendant's premises to the roof of the adjoining building to get from that roof to the roof of defendant's house; and hence it is demonstrably certain that none of those people caused the bricks to fall. There was evidence adduced by the plaintiff, tending to show that when the bricks fell, the men, who by leaning against the chimney caused them to fall, ran across the defendant's roof towards Ford's Opera House and disappeared. Who these men were and where they came from is more or less a matter of conjecture; but there can be no question they did not get upon the defendant's roof through the defendant's premises. It comes, then, to the inquiry, can the defendant be held responsible for the consequences of an act done by unknown persons who were on his roof, who were not shown to be his agents or servants and who got there in some way other than through his premises, and whose momentary presence there the plaintiff failed to show was permitted by or known to the defendant at all? If that inquiry must be answered in the affirmative then every owner of real estate must be held liable for similar torts of a trespasser unless the *Page 93 owner can show affirmatively that he himself has not been guilty of negligence, though a positive essential of the case of the plaintiff is that the plaintiff shall allege and prove that the defendant was guilty of negligence.

The declaration in this case distinctly averred, as it was necessary it should, that the injury sustained by the plaintiff was caused through the negligence and want of due and ordinary care upon the part of the defendant. When, therefore, the evidence adduced to sustain that allegation reveals the fact that the negligence upon which the action is founded is attributable to some one else other than the defendant, or whilst proving the injury, fails to connect the defendant with the cause of it, the plaintiff must be non-suited. It is equally obvious that where the evidence of the plaintiff is evenly balanced as to whether the cause for which a defendant may be responsible, or the cause for which he is not responsible produced the injury, the jury would have no right to disregard arbitrarily the proof which exculpated and to credit only that which inculpated — to adopt the theory which would subject the defendant to damages and to reject that which would exonerate him. Now, it cannot be pretended, in the light of the evidence in this record, that the defendant is answerable for the act of the men who by leaning against the chimney caused the bricks to fall therefrom. It wastheir act which occasioned the injury; and their act was proved by the plaintiff. In addition to the error committed in granting the plaintiff's first instruction the trial Court was wrong in not having non-suited the plaintiff on the ground that the injury resulted, according to the plaintiff's proof, not from the defendant's negligence but from an independent act of strangers for whose conduct the record wholly fails to show that the defendant was in any way responsible. The defendant's first prayer asked such an instruction and it should have been given.

We are not unmindful of the serious injuries the infant plaintiff has sustained. The persons who occasioned them should be held responsible; but we fail to find in the record before us any legally sufficient evidence which fixes that responsibility *Page 94 on the defendant. We are consequently compelled to reverse the judgment, and as no recovery can be had a new trial will not be awarded.

Judgment reversed with costs above and below, without awardinga new trial.

(Decided February 13th, 1906.)