Cooper v. Tri-State Gas Co.

3 Ohio App. 77, 26 Ohio C.C. Dec. 308, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 481, 19 Ohio C.A. 481, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 193
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 Ohio App. 77 (Cooper v. Tri-State Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Tri-State Gas Co., 3 Ohio App. 77, 26 Ohio C.C. Dec. 308, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 481, 19 Ohio C.A. 481, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 193 (Ohio Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Norris, J.;

Metcalfe and Pollock, JJ., concurring.

Plaintiff in error, Marian Cooper, was plaintiff below and filed an amended petition in the lower court, to which the defendant demurred on the ground that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The court sustained the demurrer, and, the plaintiff not desiring to plead further, entered judgment dismissing the case. Error is assigned in this court to the sustaining of that demurrer.

The petition, in substance, states that the defendant is a corporation engaged in the business of supplying natural gas to the citizens of the city of Wellsville and other cities for heating and lighting purposes, and has gas pipes laid in the streets of said city from which gas is supplied to the individual houses by service lines extending from such pipes in the street to the houses of the inhabitants; that the plaintiff was the owner of a lot or tract of land upon which her dwelling house was situated in the city of Wellsville, and that the defendant had been supplying her with’ natural gas for use in such dwelling house for a number of years; that the gas was conducted from the lines in [79]*79the street over her land to her house, and her house was about eight feet from the line of the street, she paying for the gas a certain rate per thousand feet; that the defendant maintained and owned such of the pipe lines as were constructed in the street up to the curb in front' of plaintiff’s property, and the plaintiff installed, maintained and owned the service pipe line leading from the curb to and upon the lot upon which her dwelling was located, and through said lot into her said dwelling house; that on or about the 17th day of January, 1912, owing either to natural decay or other faulty condition, said service pipe so installed by plaintiff began to leak at a point on plaintiff’s said lot, about one foot from her said dwelling house and between the meter and her said dwelling house, and the gas escaping therefrom percolated through the ground into plaintiff’s dwelling house, where it exploded and caused the damages complained of.

The plaintiff further says that as far as she knows the defendant had no actual knowledge of the faulty condition of said service pipe or that said gas was escaping from the same, but alleges that it was the duty of said defendants to have inspected said service pipe at the time the same was installed on her said premises, and to have inspected the same from time to time thereafter; that by the exercise of ordinary care in inspecting said service pipe said defendant would have discovered the faulty condition of the same in time to replace said service pipe and prevent said explosion. And she says that the defendant negligently and carelessly failed and neglected to so inspect said service pipe on said plaintiff’s said premises at any time, and [80]*80negligently and carelessly continued to deliver its gas through the same to plaintiff’s said premises; that by reason of the said negligence the gas was permitted to escape through said pipe and caused the damages aforesaid.

It will be observed that there are no facts alleged in this petition from which the duty of the defendant company to inspect these lines arises. Plaintiff alleges that the company did not inspect, but alleges no facts by way of contract or custom or other facts from which it might be said that a duty arose to inspect the service lines in her dwelling house or other dwelling houses in the city of Wellsville. Then the question arises whether, from the situation and from the facts set out in this petition, it can be said that a duty arose on the part of the gas company to inspect the lines in the dwelling house and on the private premises of the owners of these lines inside the curb.

We have been cited to a number of cases, which we have examined, and there is no reported case in this state, so far as we have been able to find or have been referred to, upon this question. The first case upon which counsel for plaintiff in error rely is the case of Washington Gas Light Co. v. District of Columbia, 161 U. S., 316. The first proposition of the syllabus in that case holds that it is the duty of a gas company to supervise and keep in repair a gas box which is part of the apparatus of the company, and is placed in a sidewalk to afford means for turning on or off the gas from a house, when it has entire control of the box to the exclusion of the property owner, although the lat[81]*81ter is required to pay for the gas box and connection.

In this case it appears that a deep and dangerous hole was at the place where the gas box was, and that a resident of the District of Columbia fell into this hole, through its not being properly guarded or covered, and recovered damages against the city of Washington. Then the city, under its arrangement (the franchise under which the gas company had a right in the city), brought suit to recover over the amount that had been allowed to the plaintiff in the first case.

Justice White, in stating the opinion, says:

“It was proved on the trial of the case to have been an open gas box, placed and maintained in the sidewalk by the gas company for its own use and benefit, and which it-was its duty to repair; that this duty had been grossly neglected by allowing the box to remain unrepaired, thus causing the injury for which the city had been held liable. The declaration, moreover, averred notice to the gas company, and the fact that adequate opportunity was given it to defend, and the failure of the gas company to act in defense of the suit * *

It seems to us there is a vast difference between that case and the one we have set forth in this petition. The court1 says in the opinion:

“It would be unreasonable to infer that congress, when it authorized the use of the streets or sidewalks for the purposes of the gas company’s business, contemplated that the city of Washington or its successor, the District of Columbia, should keep in repair such apparatus, the continued location of [82]*82which in the sidewalks of the city was permitted, not only as an incident to the right to make and sell gas, but also for the pecuniary benefit of the gas company.”

The next case referred to is the case of Memphis Consol. Gas & Elec. Co. v. Creighton, 183 Fed. Rep., 552, and the point in that is stated in the first proposition of the syllabus:

“A gas company, which through its pipes supplies gas to a house and has control of the apparatus for cutting it off, when notified that gas is escaping in the house and informed of injury and danger to the inmates therefrom, owes a duty to the occupants of the house to exercise reasonable diligence in shutting off the gas therefrom, and it is immaterial that the pipes where the leak occurred were owned by the owner of the house.”

And that rule would apply here if the gas company had been notified by the owner of the house of this defective pipe and that gas was escaping therefrom, but it does not seem to us to touch the question of the duty of the gas company, in the first instance, to inspect it from time to time for the purpose of ascertaining the condition of the pipes without any information from the property owner. Another case cited is that of Schmeer v. The Gas Light Co., 147 N. Y., 529, 42 N. E. Rep., 202.

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3 Ohio App. 77, 26 Ohio C.C. Dec. 308, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 481, 19 Ohio C.A. 481, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-tri-state-gas-co-ohioctapp-1914.