Gralka v. Worth Bros.

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bbown,

Worth Brothers Company is a corporation owning and operating blast furnaces and rolling mills at Coatesville, this State. On January 18,1913, several boys went into a shanty owned by the company and found a box of dynamite in it. They took a portion of this up to the side of a hill, where they built a fire, and one of them threw some of the dynamite into it. As a result of the explosion that followed Emil Gralka, one of the boys— then seven years of age — lost an eye. From the judgments recovered by him and his father against the defendant company — found by the jury to have negligently left the dynamite in the shanty — it has appealed.

The burden was upon the plaintiff below, who sued for himself and his injured son, to show by competent testimony that the defendant had been guilty of the negli*470gence with which he charged it. The averment upon which he relied in asking for the recovery of damages was that it had negligently permitted dynamite to be in its shanty on January 18,1913, and for a long time prior thereto, and that the injuries sustained by his son had resulted from this negligence. The shanty was open and accessible to the boys, and if the dynamite which they found in it had been put or left there by the defendant, or by one of its employees in the course of his employment, or had been allowed to remain in the building by the defendant after knowledge that it was there, the charge of negligence would have been sufficiently proved. In passing upon the contention of learned counsel for appellant, that a verdict ought to have been directed in its favor, the first inquiry must be as to the sufficiency of the proof submitted by the plaintiff in support ,of his averment of the negligence of the defendant, without regard to what it may have shown by way of defense.

In the spring of 1912 the defendant company constructed a road through a part of its property, and, in the construction of the same, it was necessary to use dynamite for blasting purposes. George Shamonski, called by the plaintiff, testified that he had acted as a labor boss for the defendant in the construction of the road; that he left its employment in June, 1912; that all of the blasting was over at that time, and that seven or eight days before he left he saw a little wooden box in the shanty containing dynamite. Another witness, a former employee of the defendant, called by the plaintiff, testified that all of the blasting had been done in the spring of 1912. There is no testimony that any dynamite was ever seen in the shanty from June, 1912, down to January 18, 1913, nor was there any testimony that, during that interval, the defendant company had used dynamite for any purpose whatever. The boy who found the dynamite in the shanty on January 18, 1913, testified that it was in a paper box, and the case went to the jury under the following instruction: “How will you *471reconcile the dynamite that was found in the paper box with the dynamite that was left there in June, 1912, if you believe the latter was in a wooden box? That, to the mind of the court, is one of the important questions for you to consider in this case; and unless you can reconcile it, and unless you can find from the testimony, not outside of the testimony, but from the testimony, as to the difference in the receptacles these two boxes of dynamite were in, some way to account for the transfer of this dynamite from a wooden box into a paper box, your verdict must be in favor of the defendant, and that would be an end of the case and it would be unnecessary for you to further consider the case in any aspect whatsoever.” The jury were thus given to understand that the only evidence of the defendant’s negligence was the testimony of Shamonski as to the presence of dynamite in the shanty in June, 1912, and were permitted to find that what he then saw there in a little wooden box was what the boys found seven months later in a paper box. A license was thus given the jury to guess that the defendant had been negligent, and that this was error is most manifest in view of other testimony submitted by the plaintiff. For six or seven months prior to January 18,1913, the shanty, which was unfenced, along a public road, had been empty at all times. Children, in playing around it, went in and out of it, using it as a playhouse. Others went to it as a loafing or resting place, and negroes frequented it in shooting crap. The testimony as to this is thus correctly summed up by the learned trial judge in his charge: “It appears from the very testimony on the part of the plaintiffs in this case, that this shanty was open; that it was used as a common resort by children, playing there, by men taking their lunches there, and by negroes and others going into it as a place for loafing or resting; and that it was in that condition for a period of from six to seven months, from the time Shamonski said he saw the dynamite there to the time this accident happened to these boys. Besides, *472it was along a public road, as we remember it, at about the intersection of two roads called Ercildon Road and Modena Road.”

The mere finding of the dynamite in the shanty on January 18, 1913, was not in itself, under the circumstances stated, evidence that the defendant was responsible for its being there. Indeed, we do not understand that learned counsel for appellee so contend. How it got into the shanty does not appear, but it does appear that for months that building, with its doors and windows at all times open, had been frequented by all sorts of people. Some of them may have carried the dynamite into it; but whether this be so or not is not the question in the case. It was upon the plaintiff to show that the defendant had put or left it there, and the only evidence in support of this material fact was that, in the preceding spring, the appellant had used dynamite for blasting purposes in the vicinity of the shanty, and that seven months before the boys went into it one of its employees had seen in it a little wooden box containing dynamite. The dynamite which the boys found long afterwards — on January 18, 1913 — was in a paper box, and the boy who found it — fifteen years of age when he testified, less than a year afterwards — admitted that he had never seen it before that day, though he had been in the shanty only the day before; and he further said, in reply to a question put to him by the court, that if it had been in the shanty on the previous day he would have seen it.

After the most careful review of all the testimony submitted by the plaintiff, we can find nothing in it which justified the finding that the dynamite which was in a little wooden box in the shanty in June, 1912, was the same that was found by the boys in a paper box in the following January. In this connection it may be proper to say that it nowhere appears, as counsel for appellee state in their printed argument, that after the accident the appellant claimed as its own the dynamite left in the *473shanty by the boys. The first assignment of error is sustained, the judgment is reversed and is here entered for the defendant.