Chouteau v. St. Louis Gaslight Co.

47 Mo. App. 326, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 471
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 Mo. App. 326 (Chouteau v. St. Louis Gaslight Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chouteau v. St. Louis Gaslight Co., 47 Mo. App. 326, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 471 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

This action is brought to recover certain moneys, alleged to have bee,n paid by the plaintiff to the defendant as gas bills through mistake, and wrongfully collected from the plaintiff by the defendant. The petition sets up that the defendant is a [327]*327corporation engaged in furnishing illuminating gas to customers in the city of St. Louis; that amongst its customers to whom it furnished gas from the year 1885 to the year. 1889, inclusive, was plaintiff, who obtained gas from defendant for illuminating the Olympic theater ; that from, to-wit, the twenty-ninth day of August, 1885, to the first day of January, 1890, the plaintiff was presented by defendant with a series of bills for gas, alleged to have been furnished by •defendant and consumed in lighting said theater ; that the quantity of gas consumed is estimated and measured by meters, being machines for measuring the consumption of gas belonging to defendant and placed in the buildings wherein such gas is consumed; that defendant presented to the plaintiff, during and between the dates aforesaid, a series of bills, aggregating a very large sum of money, which plaintiff duly paid to the defendant; that the defendant, wrongfully and without the knowledge of this plaintiff, embraced in said bills the quantity of gas indicated by a meter placed on plaintiff’s premises, but through which the gas supplied to the plaintiff did not pass, but which measured the supply of gas consumed by another and different customer than the plaintiff; that thereby the plaintiff paid this defendant the following amounts, at the dates hereinafter stated, for gas charged between said •dates, for which the plaintiff was not liable to this ■defendant, and for which the plaintiff received no consideration from the defendant, and which in equity and good conscience defendant is obligated to return unto plaintiff (setting out certain sums with, the dates of payment), being in all the sum of eleven hundred ■and twenty-four dollars and thirty cents ($1,124.30), by mistake paid by the plaintiff to the defendant, and wrongfully collected by the defendant from the plaintiff. Plaintiff avers that, upon learning the facts herein stated, to-wit, in December, 1889, he informed the defendant and made demand for said amount, which [328]*328the defendant refused and still refuses to pay the plaintiff. The answer, so far as it raised an issue which remains in the case, was a general denial. There was a stipulation admitting’ the correctness of the amount of the payments claimed to be recovered back, but not admitting the right of recovery.

The case was tried before the court sitting as a j ury and the evidence disclosed substantially the following state of facts : The Olympic theater building, situated on the west side of Broadway between Walnut and Elm streets in the city of St. Louis, was erected in 1882 by O. A. Spaulding, as owner and proprietor. It was so constructed as to have five floors fronting on Broadway, while the theater proper occupied the rear or western portion of the building. The first floor on Broadway was fitted up for stores ; the second-floor rooms, fronting on Broadway, were reserved by Mr. Spaulding for various purposes in connection with his theater; the third, fourth and fifth floors were leased to Mr. Miller, proprietor of the St. James Hotel, which adjoined the theater building on the north ; and these upper floors were connected by doors and passages with the hotel. When the building was ready for occupancy in the year 1882, Mr. Spaulding applied to the defendant for four gas meters to be placed in the basement of the building: Two for the theater proper, one for the second floor, and one for the third, fourth and fifth floors. Defendant was requested to collect for gas passing through this latter meter from the proprietor of the St. James Hotel, which was done. There were four separate bills made out for this building on each pay day, one for each meter, three in the name of the Olympic theater, and one in the name of Mr. Miller. This was and remained the situation from 1882, when the building was completed, up to September, 1885, when Mr. Spaulding concluded to give up the rooms on the second floor, hitherto used in connection with the theater; and in that month he leased these rooms also to Mr. Miller of the St. James [329]*329Hotel, so that Mr. Miller now occupied all the upper floors from the second to the fifth, both inclusive. No notice of tliis change of occupancy was given to defendant, and defendant was not: requested to make any change either in the meters, connections or accounts ; the defendant continued to present its three bills in the name of the Olympic theater as theretofore, and Mr. Short, the manager and treasurer of the theater, went on pa\ Ing these bills, thus accruing on these three meters, just as he had done before; while Mr. Miller paid the bills accruing on the fourth or “hotel meter,” just as he had done before. So it seems that Mr. Spaulding, the landlord, was now paying his tenant’s gas bills for the gas consumed on the second floor, and which passed through one of the three meters known as “ theater meters.” The number of this second ** mr meter was originally 59,452, but in October, 1888i new meter had to be substituted; this new meter was number 173,170 and simply took the place of the old one and performed the same function — that is, it registered the gas consumed on the second floor of this building. The upper floor or “hotel meter” as it was sometimes called, which registered the gas consumed on the third, fourth and fifth floors, was numbered 40,216. The numbers of the other two “theater meters” are immaterial.

This new state of affairs continued up to about October or November, 1888, when a fraud was perpetrated by some one in the building, — the testimony does not disclose by whom. It appears that meter number 40,216 (the upper floor meter), was disconnected from the pipe leading to the third, fourth and fifth floors and meter number 173,170 (the second floor meter) was made to connect with those upper floors. The result was that the gas consumed on all the upper floors was drawn through the meter heretofore known as the second-floor meter (number 173,170).

It appears that changes may be made, and are constantly being made, in the arrangement and connection [330]*330of gas pipes in the interior of buildings without notifying the gas company. So long as the service-pipes are not interfered with, the gas company exercises no supervision. The service-pipes lead from the street mam into the building and connect with the meters. Beyond that point the gas company assumes no control. The men, who come from time to time to take the registration of meters, merely determine how much gas has passed through a meter,but do not concern themselves about the connections beyond the meter, or where the gas is led to and actually consumed. This is under the control of the owner or occupant of the building, who may arrange it to suit himself, employing private gas fitters for that purpose. But when the meter man finds a meter wholly disconnected from the interior house pipes and serving no further use on the premises, he reports it at headquarters, and the meter is ordered in, or “ returned,” as they call it.

When the meter man called around in October, 1888, he found meter number 40,216 detached from the “riser,” which is the pipe leading up into the building, and the.

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Related

Hanson v. City Light & Traction Co.
173 S.W.2d 804 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1944)
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48 Pa. Super. 84 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)
Laclede Gas Light Co. v. Gas Consumers Ass'n
106 S.W. 91 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Mo. App. 326, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chouteau-v-st-louis-gaslight-co-moctapp-1891.