DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 43
Judges: Brown, Elkin, Frazer, Moschzisker, Potter
Filed Date: 3/1/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
This case grows out of the same state of facts as Windish v. Peoples Natural Gas Company, in which the opinion has just been handed down. It will therefore be unnecessary to repeat what was there said. The facts are practically the same and there is no essential difference in the application of the law. In the opinion of the learned court below in refusing the motion to take off the nonsuit, it was said:
“At the trial no attempt was made to prove any defect in the mains, regulator or meter, or to prove the negligent admission of a dangerous and unusual flow of gas into the pipes, but the negligence relied on consisted in the company’s failure to detect and repair a leak or number of leaks in the service line which Windish had expressly agreed should be kept in good repair by himself.
“That the gas which caused the explosion came from the service pipe which ran along the wall of the Windish house, and which was shown by the testimony to be full of holes and beyond question in a condition which would and did permit gas to escape into the surrounding soil, and thence through crevices in the wall into the cellar, admits of no doubt.
*244 “The interior pipes, meters and connections did not leak, the testimony being that they were tested thoroughly with lighted‘matches, not long before the explosion, and no leak discovered.” '! . '
These findings disposed of every question in the case with one exception; they mean that the evidence produced at the trial failed' to make out a case under the pleadings as to the negligent acts charged.
Appellants, however, rely upon the charge of negligence set out in one of the paragraphs of the statement of claim, which reads as follows:
“And the plaintiffs further say that the said defendant company, its-agents and'employees, knew or ought to have known of the defective condition of the meter, gas regulator, service lines and main line in and along Second avenue, through and from which said gas was supplied to the tenants of the house known as No. 36, Kenmawr avenue, on the day and date aforesaid.”
In discussing this charge of negligence the learned court below said:
“This general allegation, which can well be read with inference solely to defendant’s own “street service line” which it was its- duty to keep in good repair, cannot be construed to charge the negligence now complained of: (T) Of not discovering the leak; • (2) of not repairing the leak; (3) of lulling plaintiff by a statement that there was no leak; and (4) by not shutting off the supply of gas until the actual'point of leakage had been determined: Especially cannot the general averment quoted above be held to mean one or all of the things not specified therein, in view of the fact that upon trial no attempt was made to prove defective regulator, defective main, defective street service pipe, excessive and dangerous flow of gas, or defective meter. In other words, the specific negligence now relied on for recovery was not pleaded.”
We see no escape from the conclusion reached by the learned court below. The evidence failed to show that
If it appeared from the testimony that the defendant company had knowledge of leaks in the service pipe, although it did not have the duty to repair, we would be strongly impressed with the argument of learned counsel for appellants, that it would at least have been its duty to shut off the gas at the curb until the repairs were made;, but the evidence fails to show that the defendant company had such notice, and no such ground of recovery is set out in the statement of claim. ■. Under these cir
Judgment affirmed.