Cline v. Evans and Tallman

31 S.E.2d 681, 127 W. Va. 113, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 75
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1944
Docket9553
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 31 S.E.2d 681 (Cline v. Evans and Tallman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cline v. Evans and Tallman, 31 S.E.2d 681, 127 W. Va. 113, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 75 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinions

Fox, Judge:

Audra Cline, an infant, who sues by her next friend, instituted her action in the Circuit Court of Wyoming County against J. C. Evans and C. C. Tallman, partners *115 doing business as Pineville Gas Company, seeking to recover damages for injuries to her right leg immediately above the ankle when she stepped into an open tile originally placed in a public highway in the Town of Pineville by the defendants,.to cover a valve connected with their gas lines laid therein. The case was tried, resulting in a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff for seven thousand five hundred dollars, on which, after overruling a motion to set it aside, the trial court entered judgment, to which judgment the defendants below prosecute this writ of error.

The defendants operate a natural gas distributing system in Pineville, under a franchise granted them therefor in 1940. The declaration alleges this fact, and avers that the gas line was laid under the surface of the streets, roads and alleys of said town from fifteen to twenty-four inches, and that it was necessary to provide valves so that gas could be piped from the main lines to the premises of individuals, firms and corporations; and that such valves were inclosed in a short piece of sewer pipe about six inches in diameter, the top of which was flush with the ground around it. The declaration then avers that “it became and was the duty of the defendants in the installation of said pipes and other equipment for the transportation of gas into said town and for supplying the same to its customers, to so construct and maintain said gas pipes and other equipment, laid upon and along the ground, as well as that part buried within the ground, to so construct, maintain, lay and bury it in a prudent and careful manner and to insert the short sewer pipe leading from the surface to the buried valves, hereinbefore described, in a prudent and careful manner, so as to not leave any opening into which pedestrians might step or fall, thereby causing physical injury to such pedestrians; or, if said pipes are left open, to enclose same with barriers, or place signs or something to indicate the danger to pedestrians.” The declaration then avers the breach of this duty in the following language: “But the said defendants, wholly dis *116 regarding their duty in this respect, wrongfully, negligently, carelessly, recklessly, and unlawfully did sink a small sewer pipe, six inches in diameter, a length or depth of twenty inches, leading to a valve at the connection of the gas pipe leading from the main pipe into the premises and on the premises of the Logan Planing Mill Company, which said Planing Mill Company has its local plant upon one-fourth acre of land lying between the track of the Virginian Railway Company, on the south, and the public highway on the north, and immediately opposite the Pine-ville High School Building, and, after sinking or installing said pipe leading to said valve, which pipe was flush with the surrounding ground, which was covered with cinders, there being no excavated dirt at or near said sunken pipe, to indicate its presence, which said pipe was left unfilled and uncovered, without barriers around it or any sign or other warning of its existence.” The declaration further avers that on June 3, 1941, plaintiff stepped into this open sewer pipe from which she suffered the injuries complained of.

It will be obsérved that while the declaration may be fairly construed to allege the duty of the defendants to maintain in a safe condition their gas distributing system in the Town of Pineville, the breach alleged is not that it failed to maintain such line in a safe condition, but that when the pipe was installed it was left unfilled -and uncovered, and without any barriers around it, or any sign or warning of its existence.

The evidence fails to sustain this allegation of breach. The uncontroverted evidence is that the particular sewer pipe, out of which plaintiff’s injuries arose, was installed in a public highway running in front of the property of Logan Planing Mill Company, probably in April, 1941; but that the pipe, six inches in diameter, was covered by placing over it a flat stone from fourteen to sixteen inches square, and that the ground was tamped around it, and the situation made safe for pedestrians who might travel that portion of the highway. It further appears, that some *117 time' afterwards, in the same month, the Logan Planing Mill Company, desiring to connect with the main gas line from this particular valve, employed a plumbing company to perform the mechanical work, and that the sewer pipe was removed and the connection made, and the sewer pipe was replaced and again covered in the same manner in which it had been originally placed. As stated above, this was in April, 1941. The plaintiff was injured on June 3,1941, so a considerable time elapsed. There is, therefore, no evidence whatever sustaining the allegation of the declaration that the sewer pipe was left uncovered when first installed by the defendants; and none that it was left uncovered when the Planing Mill Company made its connection at the valve. For this reason alone, instructions Nos. 1 and 2, offered by defendants, should have been given, as the plaintiff clearly failed to make out any case upon the allegations of her declaration, and the law is that a verdict, even if there is proof to justify it, cannot be sustained upon grounds not alleged in the declaration.

But the declaration, in effect, alleges a duty on the part of the defendants to maintain their distributing system in a safe condition, and undoubtedly the duty to take proper care in that respect rested upon the defendants. The mere fact that they may have covered the sewer pipe in question, and left it in a safe condition, did not relieve them of the duty to take proper care to maintain the same in that condition. However, the defendants cannot be held responsible for the acts of third parties in connection therewith, making the situation unsafe, until it is shown either that they had notice of that condition, or a sufficient time had elapsed when it could be said that they should, in the exercise of ordinary care, have known that their distributing system was in an unsafe condition. We think the law on this point is rather clearly stated in one of our decisions. In Rathbone v. Fort Pitt Bridge Works, 118 W. Va. 479, 191 S. E. 578, we held: “The rule seems quite well established that where a person charged with the duty of warning the travelling public of a defective or unsafe condition *118 of a highway or bridge places or erects suitable barriers at or near the place where the dangerous condition exists, and after the erection thereof such barriers, through no act of the party erecting the same, become destroyed or knocked down, the party upon whom is cast the duty of erecting such barriers will not be liable to the person injured, unless it appears that he had actual knowledge of the destruction of such barriers', or that the same had been down for a sufficient length of time that a person in the exercise of ordinary care should have discovered their destruction.” That was a case where a barrier had been erected on a highway, and there was evidence tending to show that some party, other than the person whose duty it was to maintain the barrier, had removed the same, and by this removal plaintiff in that case sustained injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.E.2d 681, 127 W. Va. 113, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cline-v-evans-and-tallman-wva-1944.