Gibson v. Denton , 38 N.Y.S. 554 ( 1896 )


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  • Putnam, J.:

    On the 18th day of November, 1892, the plaintiff was, and for several years prior thereto had been, the owner of a house and lot in Sandy Hill, N. Y. The defendant during the same period was the owner of the adjoining lot, on which stood — twenty-one inches from the plaintiff’s line and twenty-nine feet from his house — a pine tree, twenty-two inches in diameter near the ground and seventy-five feet high. This tree, during a heavy gale on the day above mentioned, was blown down, falling on plaintiff’s house. For the damage occasioned thereby this action was brought. Plaintiff recovered a judgment and the defendant'appeals.

    As no order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial on the minutes is contained in the case, we are unable to consider the question of fact discussed in the brief of the learned counsel for the appellant. We can pass only upon the exceptions taken by the defendant on the trial. (Passey v. Craighead, 89 Hun, 76.) Hence' under the evidence produced by the plaintiff on the trial, the verdict of the jury-must be deemed to have established the following state of facts:

    The pine tree had been cut into near the ground, and at that place was only about eighteen inches in diameter; it had also been blazed, and on that part there was no bayk. About one-half of the trunk, eight feet up and down, was without bark, and the wood appeared dead. The lower limbs were decayed, and other limbs did not appear like those of other pine trees — not as bright as they ought to have been. The trunk was one-third or more decayed. It stood *200fully exposed to the wind.. This condition had existed several years before the tree fell, and its unsound condition was apparent.

    Plaintiff twice, in. 1891 and also once in August,. 1892, requested the defendant to, remove the tree. He informed her- of its condition, told her it had been blazed, cut into, was rotten, and that the occupants of his house were afraid of it. The defendant promised to attend to it,, but ..neglected to do. so; During a heavy gale the tree was blown down, damaging the plaintiff’s house to the amount for- which he recovered judgment.

    The defendant on. the trial, at the close of -the evidence, moved for a nonsuit, claiming that, as a matter of law,” oñ the undisputed facts, the evidence was insufficient to justify the submission of the case to the jury! We are called upon to consider her exception to the denial of this motion by the trial court.

    If, instead of a pine tree, there had been on defendant’s premises ■at the same place a. building which had become dilapidated and unsafe, to the knowledge of the defendant; and which had fallen Upon and damaged.plaintiff’s house, no doubt could be entertained •of her liability for the injury occasioned thereby., (The Rector, etc., of the Church of the Ascension v. Buckhart, 3 Hill, 193; Mullen v. St. John et al., 57 N. Y. 567; Jarvis v. Baxter, 52 N. Y. Super. Ct. 109.)

    In Regina v. Watts (1 Salk. 357) such an unsafe building is held to be a nuisance. (And see Simmons et al. v. Everson et al., 124 N. Y. 319.) ' ' .

    So if the defendant had had a pole erected on her lot at the place .where the tree stood, which had become decayed to her knowledge, and had fallen on-plaintiff’s premises, clearly she would have been liable for Ms damages sustained thereby.

    . In Ward v. Atlantic & Pacific Tel. Co. (71 N. Y. 81-33), which was an action to recover for injuries caused by the fall of a telegraph pole placed oU the street, it is said-in the opinion : “ If the post which broke. and fell was. originally not reasonably sufficient, or if it was permitted carelessly to become and be insufficient "by decay, then responsibility attaches to the defendant for the accident-.”

    If the defendant would, have been liable for the fall of an unsafe pole or structure, we can see no good reason why she should not be responsible for the fall of. a decayed tree which she allowed to *201remain on her premises. It is true that, in the supposed case, the pole or structure would have been placed on defendant’s premises by lier, her grantor or ancestor, while the tree grew there. But the tree was on her lot and was her property. It was as much under her control as a pole or building in the same position would have been. This decayed tree standing where it did, near the plaintiff’s house, and on which it was liable to fall during any of the gales which were liable to occur from time to time, we think was a nuisance, which the defendant, at the request of the plaintiff, should have abated. The defendant had no more right to keep, maintain er suffer to remain on her premises an unsound tree near the house, of her neighbor, on which in any of the frequently occurring high winds it was liable to fall, than she would have had to keep a dilapidated and unsafe building in the same position. It was her duty to maintain her premises in such a condition as that they should not become a cause of injury to her neighbor’s property in a way that common prudence should foresee.

    It is urged by the appellant that the fall of the tree was caused by an extraordinary wind or gale which could not have been anticipated, and, hence, the defendant was not liable. On the testimony in the case the jury were not compelled to find that the gale which caused the fall of the tree was extraordinary. As far as the evidence shows, it was one of those gales that frequently occur, and which might be looked for at any time. We may infer that it was in anticipation of such a wind that the plaintiff requested the defendant to remove the tree.

    Our attention is called to a dictum of Hunt, J., in Sheldon v. Sherman (42 N. Y. 484), that “ if a tree growing upon the land of one is blown down upon the premises of another, and in its fall injures his shrubbery, or his house, or his person, he has no redress against him upon whose land the tree grew.” But it does not appear that the learned judge was speaking of an unsound tree standing on premises of a party near the house of his neighbor, liable in any high wind to fall down upon it, and which the owner of the tree, after notice of its condition, neglected to remove.

    The trial court did not err in sustaining the objection to the letter written ■ by Hr. Ingalsbe, who was the defendant’s attorney, to the defendant. She was allowed to show the conversation between plain*202■.tiff ancl Ingalsbee. It is difficult to see on what grounds the letter the latter afterwards wrote to his client at the request of the plaintiff Was competent. It might-.have been received as a memorandum had the- proper .preliminary proof been made. ; Bat Ingalsbe, as.a Witness, was unable to remember his conversation with plaintiff. The letter was not offered as a .memorandum. It was competent .for the defendant to show what the plaintiff said to her attorney, and this she was allowed to do. What her attorney said or wrote to her thereafter, at the request of the plaintiff, was not competent evidence, especially as it was not claimed that the defendant took' any action in consequence of the letter.

    We conclude that the case was properly submitted to the. jury, and can discover no error requiring a reversal of the judgment'

    Judgment affirmed,, with costs.

    All concurred.

    Judgment affirmed, with costs.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 4 A.D. 198, 38 N.Y.S. 554, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 197

Judges: Putnam

Filed Date: 4/15/1896

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024