Court Opinion

ID: 3986611
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:42:45.289192+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:18:19.485026
License: Public Domain

I concur. If actual tangible matter is projected by the blast on the property of another, it is held to be a trespass. One can sympathize with the view that if property is immediately injured by a force caused by a blast transmitted by concussion of air it is still a trespass. As stated in the opinion, there is a division of authority on that matter.
In the case of O'Neill v. San Pedro, Los Angeles  SaltLake Railroad Company, 38 Utah 475, 114 P. 127, it was held that damage due to repeated vibrations over a long period of time must be chargeable in case, and negligence proved. Unless distinction can be made between a result caused by a series of recurring similar events and a result caused by one event, it would seem that the O'Neill case has committed this court to the view that a vibration transmitted through a solid medium acting on a building is not a trespass but calls for an action of trespass on the case. It would follow, therefore, that a force transmitted by a rarer medium would also call for action of trespass on the case. Realistically, there is a difference between a damage caused by continued vibrations of trains which are performing a necessary public service, and a damage caused by a single blast set off on the private property of another. It is such differences which make law not mainly the product of logic, but of experience, social necessity and distribution of the cost of consequences. Our common existence may require the law to hold that damage to property caused by unavoidable vibrations of passing trains is damnum absque injuria whilst to permit one owner, by a blast on his own property to shake down the house of another, requires a rule which recognizes that however free from negligence the first may be the second innocent person should not suffer. The very essence of fairness seems to suggest that if one, in order to obtain a certain type of use or enjoyment of his own *Page 557 
property, is compelled to blast, he must, as part of the cost of such use or enjoyment, pay the damages he causes to his innocent neighbor. Logically a series of imperceptible injuries to a dwelling due to the periodic vibiration of trains over a long period of time is but the accumulated injuries inflicted by each of a series of trespasses. Law not following logic may say:
"The vibration of a train in itself is not dangerous like a blast from an explosion. Its single influence is imperceptible but the accumulated results may be injurious, but only if it can be shown that the accumulated results were the result of negligent construction or operation can we give damages. Otherwise, the property owner must submit to the greater needs of society."
Be that as it may, jurisdictions which hold that trespass lies where damage is directly and immediately caused by concussion arising from a blast on neighboring property cannot be said to hold that trespass lies for ultimate damage caused by an animal or a human who is affected by the concussions.
Scott v. Shephard, 1 Smith Leading Cases 337, 2 W. Bl. 892, 3 Wils. 403 (Squib Case), is not to the contrary. That was treated as a ricochetting Squib, the transfer by human hands being automatic. Distinctions based on the nature of the mental reaction may, in some cases, be too refined to be of practical use. We may say at least that where the reaction is purely reflex and automatic according to the Squib case the person so acting is as if an inanimate link in the chain of causation and the action lies in trespass. Where the animal or person commits an injury concededly acting in response to certain stimuli, but not purely automatically, which were the result of forces set in motion by the defendant, the action, if any, lies in case.
Being an action in case, negligence must be alleged and proved. We do not need to determine whether if negligence had been alleged a cause of action would have been stated under the circumstances of this case. A discussion of the "range of apprehension" as expressed in Palsgraf v. Long *Page 558 Island R. Co., 248 N.Y. 339, 162, N.E. 99, 100, 59 A.L.R. 1253, is contained in Barrus v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,90 Utah 391, 62 P.2d 113. I conceive of the intermediation of the reflexes of the mother mink as serving in legal concept a dual purpose. Even where it is held that injury due to concussion transmitted by air is a trespass where the injury is direct or immediate, a result arrived at through the concussion action on the mind of the mother mink would not be trespass; hence, negligence would have to be alleged. If alleged it would then be time to determine whether it was within the range of apprehensibility.