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Bassett v. Dodge

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Apr 6, 1915
93 A. 967 (N.H. 1915)

Summary

In Bassett v. Dodge, 77 N.H. 602, the defendant's motion for a nonsuit was held to have been properly denied in an action to recover for the negligent burning of the plaintiff's building in consequence of a fuse being blown onto a roof by explosion of a charge of dynamite a few yards from the building.

Summary of this case from Crocker v. Company

Opinion

Decided April 6, 1915.

CASE, for negligently burning the plaintiff's buildings. Trial by jury and verdict for the plaintiff. The defendants' motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict were denied, and they excepted. Transferred from the May term, 1914, of the superior court on a bill of exceptions allowed by Pike, C. J.

The defendants drilled a shallow hole in a stone which was located a few yards from an old mill, loaded it with dynamite, and exploded the charge with a fuse. The force of the explosion threw the fuse upon the roof of the mill, and the fire which resulted was communicated to the plaintiff's property.

Taggart, Burroughs, Wyman McLane (Mr. Wyman orally), for the plaintiff.

Branch Branch and Nathaniel E. Martin (Frederick W. Branch orally), for the defendants.


The evidence that it is not uncommon for such a blast to throw the fuse as far as this one was thrown, or for the fuse to contain fire, and that it sometimes contains fire enough to ignite inflammable materials, warrants the finding that the defendants ought to have known that if they exploded the blast at the time and in the way they did they might set the mill on fire. Therefore, the question whether they were in fault depends upon whether the ordinary man would have exploded such a blast, in such a place, in such a way, on such a day, without doing anything whatever to protect the plaintiff's buildings; and that was for the jury.

Exceptions overruled.

All concurred.


Summaries of

Bassett v. Dodge

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Apr 6, 1915
93 A. 967 (N.H. 1915)

In Bassett v. Dodge, 77 N.H. 602, the defendant's motion for a nonsuit was held to have been properly denied in an action to recover for the negligent burning of the plaintiff's building in consequence of a fuse being blown onto a roof by explosion of a charge of dynamite a few yards from the building.

Summary of this case from Crocker v. Company
Case details for

Bassett v. Dodge

Case Details

Full title:WILLIAM BASSETT, JR., v. CLARENCE H. DODGE a

Court:Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough

Date published: Apr 6, 1915

Citations

93 A. 967 (N.H. 1915)
93 A. 967

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