What are the facts?
Defendant Dunham sought to remove a large tree stump located entirely on his private land. To do so, his agents used explosives (dynamite) in a blasting operation that, while conducted for a lawful purpose and allegedly with due care, propelled a substantial piece of wood onto an adjacent public highway. At that moment, the plaintiff's intestate, a traveler lawfully upon the highway, was struck by the flying debris and killed. The plaintiff, as representative of the decedent's estate, brought a wrongful death action. The defense contended that the blasting had been conducted carefully and without negligence, and that therefore no liability should attach. The case proceeded on the premise that negligence had not been established and squarely presented whether the defendants could be held liable as a matter of strict liability for injuries caused by an object projected from their land onto the public way.
What is the legal issue?
Is a landowner liable, without proof of negligence, when blasting on his own land propels debris onto a public highway and causes personal injury to a traveler lawfully upon the highway?
What rule applies?
A landowner who, while lawfully using his land, directly invades a public highway (or another's premises) by projecting material that causes personal injury is liable irrespective of negligence. The public's right to safe passage on highways is paramount, and under the maxim sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas, one must so use his own property as not to injure others. Thus, for ultrahazardous activities such as blasting, strict liability attaches when the activity causes a direct physical invasion that results in personal injury.
What did the court hold?
Yes. The landowner is strictly liable for injuries to a traveler caused by debris propelled onto a public highway by blasting, regardless of the degree of care exercised.
What is the reasoning?
The court framed the dispute as a conflict between two rights: the landowner's privilege to improve his property using lawful means, and the public's paramount right to safe travel upon public highways. While blasting is not unlawful per se, the court emphasized that property rights are qualified by obligations to avoid injuring others—particularly those lawfully on the public way. When a landowner's act causes a direct, physical invasion of a public highway (or another's property) by projecting material across the boundary, the invasion is akin to trespass; liability does not hinge on proof of negligence. In reaching this conclusion, the court invoked well-settled common-law principles: he who sets in motion a force that directly strikes another is answerable for the harm, even if he exercised utmost care. The act of blasting creates foreseeable risks that debris will be cast beyond the land; choosing that method internalizes the risk of harm to innocent travelers. The court contrasted this direct invasion with situations involving only indirect or consequential harms (such as damage caused solely by vibration or concussive force), which earlier cases had sometimes treated as negligence-based. Here, however, because a tangible object was thrown onto the highway and struck a person, the injury was the immediate result of the landowner's act, and strict liability followed. The court underscored that the victim's right to occupy the public highway was superior to the defendant's right to conduct a hazardous activity in a way that projected materials onto that highway. Compliance with reasonable care did not absolve responsibility where the defendant's chosen method created the very risk that materialized. As a matter of policy and principle, the loss should rest on the actor who undertook the dangerous activity rather than on the innocent traveler who bore no fault.
Why is this case significant?
Sullivan v. Dunham is a canonical strict-liability case that illustrates the transition from negligence-dominated tort law to modern doctrines governing ultrahazardous activities. It stands for the proposition that due care is not a defense when blasting causes a direct physical invasion of public space resulting in personal injury. The case draws an important line between direct invasions (strict liability) and purely consequential harms (historically treated under negligence), a line that New York later adjusted in Spano v. Perini by extending strict liability to concussive damage from blasting. For students, Sullivan is essential to understanding how courts balance competing rights, articulate the limits of land-use freedom, and allocate losses to the party best positioned to control ultrahazardous risks.
Does Sullivan v. Dunham impose strict liability for all harms caused by blasting?
Not categorically. Sullivan imposes strict liability when blasting causes a direct physical invasion—such as debris being projected off the land—resulting in personal injury (here, to a traveler on a public highway). Historically, New York did not apply strict liability to harms from blasting caused solely by concussion or vibration unless negligence was shown; that broader strict liability for blasting was later recognized in Spano v. Perini (1969).
Why does Sullivan treat the injury as a strict-liability matter rather than negligence?
Because the injury resulted from a direct invasion of public space by an object propelled from the defendant's land. The court analogized this to trespass: when one's act directly strikes another or crosses a boundary, liability does not depend on care. The public's right to safe travel is paramount, and the actor who chooses a risky method (blasting) must bear the cost of the risks it creates.
Would the result be the same if the injured person had been a trespasser on the defendant's land?
Likely not. Sullivan's rationale hinges on the decedent's lawful presence on a public highway and the public's paramount right to safe passage. If the injured person were a trespasser, the duty would be narrower, and strict liability might not attach on the same reasoning. Liability would then turn on other doctrines (e.g., trespasser status, known dangers, or modern abnormally dangerous activity rules).
Is compliance with all safety regulations or use of utmost care a defense under Sullivan?
No. Strict liability means the defendant's lack of negligence does not defeat liability. Compliance and due care may be relevant to regulatory or negligence claims, but they do not bar recovery where strict liability applies because debris was projected into the public way causing injury.
How does Sullivan relate to Rylands v. Fletcher and modern abnormally dangerous activity doctrine?
Sullivan reflects a similar impulse to Rylands: those who introduce or employ dangerous instrumentalities must internalize the harm when those dangers escape. Sullivan's focus is on direct invasions into public space causing personal injury. Modern doctrine, as in the Restatement's abnormally dangerous activities, generalizes this by imposing strict liability when high risk remains despite utmost care and when the activity is not of common usage—blasting being the classic example.