Avery v. City of Lyons

331 P.2d 906, 183 Kan. 611, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 407
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 8, 1958
Docket41,063
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 331 P.2d 906 (Avery v. City of Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. City of Lyons, 331 P.2d 906, 183 Kan. 611, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 407 (kan 1958).

Opinion

*613 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is the second appearance of this action for appellate review. In the first appeal the judgment of the trial court upon the verdict in the sum of $36,127.59 was reversed and the case remanded for a new trial as a result of erroneous rulings. (Avery v. City of Lyons, 181 Kan. 670, 314 P. 2d 307.) In the second trial the jury returned a verdict in the sum of $28,432.32 upon which the trial court entered judgment. Appeal has been duly perfected from all adverse rulings and the appellant specifies trial errors.

The explosion and fire of the Avery building in the City of Lyons gave rise to a number of claims against the City. Various of the other claimants appeared before this court in Wilson v. Wahl, 182 Kan. 532, 322 P. 2d 804, wherein the right of Edward Wahl to represent the City of Lyons as an attorney was challenged. Ap-pellees herein did not join with the parties in that action nor do they here assert the question raised in that appeal.

The second trial insofar as the record discloses was conducted in accordance with the decision and opinion of this court on appeal from the first trial. The evidence insofar as the facts are concerned is substantially identical with the evidence presented at the first trial, a summary of which is stated in the former opinion. Reference is therefore made to Avery v. City of Lyons, 181 Kan. 670, 314 P. 2d 307, for a statement of facts upon which further discussion of this case will proceed. Any significant variations or modifications concerning the evidence will be dealt with in this opinion upon consideration of the questions presented by the appellant in its brief.

It is specified that the trial court erred in its order overruling the appellant’s demurrer to the plaintiffs’ evidence (a) by reason of plaintiffs’ failure of proof, and (b) by reason of plaintiffs’ contributory negligence. On reviewing the record in the first appeal to this court it was said:

". . . We are of the' opinion the evidence was sufficient to withstand the demurrer and the trial court did not err in its ruling. (Hashman v. Gas Co., 83 Kan. 328, 111 Pac. 468; Richards v. Kansas Electric Power Co., 126 Kan. 521, 524, 525, 268 Pac. 847; Jelf v. Cottonwood Falls Gas Co., 160 Kan. 112, 160 P. 2d 270.)” (p. 672.)

*614 The evidence, as viewed on demurrer, supplemental to that disclosed in the statement of facts of the former opinion, disclosed that there were three gas mains in the alley behind the Avery store. One of these mains, used by the Consolidated Gas Company, had been cut off more than seven weeks prior to the explosion. The other two gas mains, each eight inches in diameter, were city mains. One was a low presure line with eight ounces of pressure from which consumers were served and the other a high pressure main carrying approximately 12 to 15 pounds of pressure that fed the consumer line.

Upon excavation of the City’s mains in the area back of the Avery store a number of leaks were disclosed. The largest hole was 3/8ths of an inch in diameter located in the high pressure line in Main Street which was about 30 feet southeast of the closest corner of the Avery building. There was testimony from an expert that a hole of this size in the high pressure line of from 10 to 30 pounds would permit the escape of at least 500 cubic feet of gas in one hour. The morning after the explosion and fire gas was escaping from a sewer manhole in very close proximity to the large leak. The sewer line in which the manhole was located ran north and south in the alley back of the Avery store and across Main Street at the alley. There were also four or five leaks right back of the Avery store varying in from the size of “lead in a lead pencil to the size of a lead pencil.” The evidence was not clear whether these were in the high presure line. The leak farthest north in' the lines which were excavated was l/8th of an inch in diameter and said to be in the high pressure line about 20 feet from the northeast corner of the Avery store.

From the alley leading under the back ,of the Avery building were three separate lines along which gas could follow — the gas service line to the store, the sewer liné which serviced tire Avery store and a stub sewer line which was not being used. From the 1st day of January, 1954, through the 25th day of April, 1954, the date of the explosion and fire, rainfall in the City of Lyons was only 1.20. inches, the most at one reading was over one-half inch on February 20th. The evidence disclosed a dry condition of the soil would cause voids to open through which gas could travel; that the alley was paved except for 18 to 24 inches from the back of the Avery building; that the 65-year-old foundation would per *615 mit gas to go through where the mortar was used; and that .customarily gas would enter through a wall where lines went through, if gas was escaping in the immediate vicinity.

The evidence concerning knowledge on the part of the City that gas was escaping back of the Avery building was strengthened in the second trial. A line formerly used by the Consolidated Gas Company .which was adjacent to the city main in the alley back of the Avery building was cut off on March 1, 1954, by C. F. Oline, its district manager. He told Hugh Ramage, the superintendent of utilities of the City of Lyons, that the Consolidated Gas Company’s line had been cut off and “that there was a leak back of the Avery store.” Oline further testified that they intended to dig up the line back of the Avery store and repair it as soon as they had finished the one they were working on, but that “Due to the fact that we killed that line, there was no reason for us to do it, so I notified him [Ramage] of the fact, and told him that it was his from now on.” The inference is that if there was still a gas leak back of the Avery store after March 1, 1954, the gas was escaping from the City’s main. At the scene of the fire on April 25, 1954, a fireman had a conversation with Ramage in which Ramage said: “We were going to have to replace some of the lines, but we hoped it wouldn’t be this year.”

Further evidence of leaks in the city line in this vicinity was disclosed by Ramage in his testimony. In the forepart of February, 1954, the City did some work one block south of the Avery area to ascertain the location of a gas leak in the Safeway Store. Testimony disclosed that the City’s lines were installed new in 1935 but that they had become scaled and pitted.

Various tenants in the Avery store and also Mr. Avery had called the City on numerous occasions concerning the odor of gas in the back part of the Avery building. Ramage testified that on March 4, 1954, the beauty shop operator called the city office about a stink or smell in the beauty shop at the rear of the Avery store. Garrison Yoder, the assistant to Ramage, responded but detected no odor. Both Ramage and Yoder returned to the beauty shop the next morning, March 5, 1954. Upon inspection Ramage informed Roy Avery that a sewer odor was present which emanated from the lavatory and hot water tank area, and requested that Mr. Avery get a plumber.

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Bluebook (online)
331 P.2d 906, 183 Kan. 611, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-city-of-lyons-kan-1958.