Court Opinion

ID: 6432556
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:09:34.434608+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:15.424993
License: Public Domain

De Courcy, J.
A piece of roofing slate fell and struck the plaintiff on the head as he was walking along the sidewalk of ■ Dorchester Avenue in South Boston, and was opposite the middle of the building numbered 125. This building was a three and a half story structure, and was the southerly one in a block of three, all of them being of the same style, with slate roofs that had a pitch toward the sidewalk, and each constructed out to the line of the street. It is conceded that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. The entire building numbered 125 was in the exclusive control of the defendant as lessee; and hence it was his duty, as between himself and the public, to keep it in such safe condition that travellers on the highway should not suffer injury therefrom. Shipley v. Fifty Associates, 101 Mass. 251. Khron v. Brock, 144 Mass. 516. Green v. Nightingale, 211 Mass. 273.
Whether the falling slate came from the roof of the defendant’s building was a question of fact; and although the evidence on that issue was meagre we cannot say that it was insufficient to warrant the jury in finding as they did. They took a view of the premises, and were not bound to accept the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses as to the condition of the roof on the day after the accident. Nor were they left to mere conjecture to decide where the slate came from. The suggestion that there was no basis in the facts observed for a logical and reasonable inference that the slate fell from the roof of the defendant’s house, rather than from the adjoining building, ignores the fact that the plaintiff was ten feet away from the line of the latter building, and the strong probability that in the absence of any wind a heavy object like a slate in falling would come down in a substantially perpendicular direction by force of gravity. Further, two witnesses for the plaintiff, and the defendant himself testified that they saw the falling slate; and none of them said that it came otherwise than from directly *3overhead. It may be added that there was no evidence to indicate that there was any one on the roof, or that the falling of the slate was due to the act of a third person.
The plaintiff was not bound to exclude the possibility that the slate might have come from another roof, but the burden was on him to satisfy the jury by a fair preponderance of the evidence, including the inferences that legitimately might be drawn from the facts, that it did come from the roof of the defendant’s building. See Lowner v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 175 Mass. 166; McNicholas v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. 196 Mass. 138 ; Woodall v. Boston Elevated Railway, 192 Mass. 308; Kearney v. London, Brighton & South Coast Railway, L. R. 6 Q. B. 759. The case is distinguishable from McGee v. Boston Elevated Railway, 187 Mass. 569, on the facts. In Wadsworth v. Boston Elevated Railway, 182 Mass. 572, it was properly inferred that the sawdust and wood came from the elevated structure, but the plaintiff failed to show that they fell by reason of negligence on the part of the defendant.

Exceptions overruled.