Carlisle ex rel. Carlisle v. Union Public Service Co.

21 P.2d 395, 137 Kan. 636, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 1933
DocketNo. 31,118
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 395 (Carlisle ex rel. Carlisle v. Union Public Service Co.) 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
Carlisle ex rel. Carlisle v. Union Public Service Co., 21 P.2d 395, 137 Kan. 636, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 308 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action for personal injuries due to an explosion of natural gas. Judgment was for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

Defendant is engaged in the business of distributing natural gas for domestic consumption at Jewell City, Kan. The gas is transported across the country under a pressure of from 180 pounds to 230 pounds to the square inch. The distributing company, which is the defendant here, reduces the pressure at the city gates to about 5 pounds to the square inch. Before the gas is piped into the various devices about the city it is necessary to further reduce the pressure to a few ounces to the square inch. This is done by an instrument called a regulator. This is a device shaped something like a saucer. It is always installed somewhere between the point where the service pipe is attached to the supply line and the burner tips. The method of installing it is that the service pipe is laid to the place where the regulator is to be located, and there a pipe is run up and connected onto one side of the regulator. From the other side of the regulator a pipe is then run down to the bottom of the trench and from there into the building. It will be seen that there were two pipes leading into the regulator, one carrying gas under a pressure of about five pounds to the square inch and the other carrying gas under a pressure of a few ounces to the square inch. This regulator supported on these two pipes was about eighteen inches to two feet above the ground.

[638]*638The explosion in question occurred at the rear of a restaurant which was supplied with gas by defendant. The supply line in this case was laid in the alley at the rear of the restaurant. This restaurant building in question does not extend to the alley, but has a space in the rear about seventy feet long and about twenty-five feet wide. The buildings on each side extend to the alley. This alley is a busy one, and it was well known in the city that trucks frequently back into this vacant space to turn around and drive into it to deliver goods to the restaurant. In the rear of this vacant space and about 14 feet north of the southwest corner of it and about five feet from the alley line stood a building used as an outside toilet. This building had been erected over a pit dug in the ground. This toilet was used by the members of the restaurant keeper’s family, his employees and customers.

The service line for the restaurant was attached to the supply line in the alley and laid in a trench just south of the toilet. The regulator was installed, as has been seen, about eighteen inches to two feet above the ground and just to the south and about a foot away from the toilet. About two weeks before the explosion, which is the basis of this action, a young lady started to use the toilet in question between 9 and 10 o’clock at night. Just before she entered the building she struck a match. An explosion occurred and the building caught fire. The fire department was called and succeeded in putting the fire out. An examination disclosed that the pipes leading into the regulator had been hit by a truck backing into it. This broke the connection on the alley side of the line and permitted gas to escape under a pressure of about five pounds to the square inch. The company was immediately notified of what had occurred, and two men were sent to the scene of the explosion. These men discovered what had happened and reported all the circumstances to the manager in charge of all operations and the superintendent of construction. The regulator was replaced in the same location in the same manner as it had been.

The record discloses that about two weeks after this explosion, and about two days before the injury sued on, the regulator was again hit by a truck and the connection broken on the side toward the alley.

• The plaintiff was a minor and was visiting his uncle, who was operating the restaurant in question. About two weeks after the [639]*639fire just described, plaintiff, just about noon, retired to the toilet in question. While sitting on the seat there with his clothing partly removed he struck a match to light a cigarette. An explosion followed which wrecked the building and threw plaintiff through the closed door. He was burned from the hips to the lower ribs, his face and neck -were burned, the flesh on the inside of his lips, his ears and his hands and arms to the elbow were burned.

This action followed. The petition described the situation about as it has been set out here. The negligence pleaded was the manner and place of installing the regulator. The answer of defendant was a general denial. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff and answered a special question, as follows:

“Q. 2. If you find for the plaintiff then state of what the negligence of the defendant consisted. A. Regulator should have been moved, public nuisance.”

Judgment was given accordingly.

The first point urged by defendant is that its motion for judgment on the pleading and opening statement should have been sustained. The argument is that it was admitted that the explosion occurred when plaintiff struck a match to light a cigarette. It is pointed out that it is against the law for a person in control of premises to permit a minor to smoke on premises controlled by him; that the smoking of the cigarette made plaintiff an accessory to the act of permitting the smoking, therefore the plaintiff was injured as the result of his own unlawful act and cannot recover. The trouble with that argument is that the record discloses that the uncle had told the boy not to smoke, and at the stage of the trial when the motion was made neither the pleadings nor the opening statement disclosed that the uncle even knew that the plaintiff smoked.

The other ground upon which defendant argues that the motion for judgment on the pleadings and opening statement should have been sustained is that they disclose that the alleged act of negligence was not the proximate cause of tlm injury.

The train of events is pointed out as follows: Placing the regulator, truck hitting regulator, gas escaping, match struck, injury. Defendant insists that the truck hitting the regulator was the proximate cause of the injury and that defendant had nothing to do with that. It argues that this act of the truck was an independent and inter-[640]*640veiling cause from the act pleaded and found to be negligence, and that this excuses defendant from liability. But can this be said? The defendant was engaged in the business of transporting a highly dangerous and inflammable substance. Its duty was to so handle this substance as to protect the public from injury by an explosion. See Luengene v. Power Co., 86 Kan. 866, 122 Pac. 1032; Hashman v. Gas Co., 83 Kan. 328, 111 Pac. 468; Carlson v. Development Co., 103 Kan. 464, 173 Pac. 910, and House v. Wichita Gas Co., ante, p. 332, 20 P. 2d 479. Was this duty performed when the regulator was placed where it was placed and in the manner in which it was placed there?

Of course, if the truck had not hit the regulator this particular chain of events would not have occurred, but the event in the chain that involved a breach of duty was the placing of the regulator in a spot where it was a target for the trucks that used the alley and came into the area at the rear of the restaurant on business. In Walmsley v. Telephone Association, 102 Kan. 139, 169 Pac. 197, the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 395, 137 Kan. 636, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlisle-ex-rel-carlisle-v-union-public-service-co-kan-1933.