Davis v. Kansas Electric Power Co.

152 P.2d 806, 159 Kan. 97
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 4, 1944
DocketNo. 36,022
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 152 P.2d 806 (Davis v. Kansas Electric Power 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
Davis v. Kansas Electric Power Co., 152 P.2d 806, 159 Kan. 97 (kan 1944).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

This was an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff and for property destroyed or damaged as a result of an explosion and fire in his undertaking establishment in Leavenworth, alleged to have been caused by defendant’s negligence in permitting natural gas to escape from its mains and get into the basement of his building. The jury answered special questions and returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $13,695, upon which judgment was rendered. Defendant has appealed and contends that the court [98]*98erred, (1) in overruling its demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence; (2) in refusing to set aside answers to certain special questions; (3) in overruling its motion for judgment on- the answers to the special questions notwithstanding the general verdict, and (4) in the admission of testimony and in giving and refusing certain instructions. Defendant also questions whether plaintiff was entitled to recover for property damages for which he had been reimbursed by insurance, and whether he was entitled to recover damages for personal injuries in the amount awarded by the jury.

Many of the facts are not seriously controverted, and these may be "summarized as follows: Plaintiff had lived in Leavenworth about seventy years, and for the last thirty-five years had been engaged in the undertaking business on his own account, prior to that time having worked with his father, who was an undez’taker. At the time in question he was conducting his undertaking business in the building which he had owned about thirty years, located at the southeast corner of Sixth and Shawnee streets in Leavenworth. This was a two-story brick building, with a tin roof, situated on two lots, and faced north on Shawnee street. The first floor contained office rooms, the mortuary, a chapel for conducting funerals, and rooms for the friends of the deceased, and for other purposes common to an undertaking business; was well furnished, and otherwise equipped for a modern undertaking establishment. Plaintiff spoke of it as a funeral church. There was a basement under the building divided into two roozns, each approximately twenty-four feet wide by ninety feet long, separated by a solid stone wall, with the exception of an opening about eight feet wide, for which there was no door. This basement was reached by a stairway from the office. In part of the south end of the west room was a space for a coal furnace, with which the building was heated, and this was separated from the other part of the basement by a solid brick wall. One of these basement rooms was used as a display' room for caskets and other material used in the business, and the other as a storage place for caskets and other undertaking paraphernalia. The north end of each room had been partitioned off as a closet for the storing of some of the equipment, and a part of each of these closets extended out under the sidewalk. To the south, or rear of the main building, was a building spoken of as the annex. This was constructed with brick walls, independent of the walls of the main building. This building was used for compounding embalming fluid and for other purposes in connection with the business. The defendant company [99]*99furnishes natural gas for use of the inhabitants of Leavenworth, having a total of about sixty-five miles of pipe of various sizes. It had a three-inch gas main which ran east and west about the center of Shawnee street, which -was connected with supply lines at Third, Fifth and Sixth streets. This pipe was made of cast iron, with nine- and twelve-foot sections, making about forty-five joints in a block. Plaintiff used natural gas for water-heating purposes. Defendant supplied that gas from its gas main in Shawnee street by a pipe directly from the gas main to plaintiff’s building, the meter being set in the areaway of the closet of the east room to the basement, from which there was a pipe to the ceiling of the basement near the stone partition wall back to the rear of the main building and the annex. Plaintiff obtained water for his use from a water main which was laid north and south in Shawnee street several feet north of defendant’s gas main. This water main was about four feet under the pavement, perhaps a little deeper than defendant’s gas main. The water service pipe came from the water main into the west basement room of plaintiff’s building, the meter being set in the areaway of the closet of that room, with the cut-off under the sidewalk. Originally this service pipe was a two-inch pipe. At some time prior to the explosion a leak had developed in the service pipe and the leak was stopped by putting a one-inch pipe inside the two-inch pipe which was already in the ground, and the one-inch pipe was connected to the water main at one end and to the meter at the other. From the meter water was piped to the parts of the building or annex where plaintiff desired to use it. Apparently plaintiff did an extensive business. He seems to have had as many as three men working in’ his employ, and there were two bodies in the mortuary at the time of the explosion. On the morning of January 1, 1941, plaintiff went to his office about nine o’clock, or a little earlier. At least two of his employees were there. One of them started to the basement and turned on the electric switch at the head of the stairs, which would light the basement. This was followed immediately by an explosion — the central force of which appears to have been at the north end of the west basement room — so severe that it raised the floor of the office perhaps six inches, broke glass in the windows, threw a plate glass window across the street, and' did serious damage to the building. Plaintiff was thrown down in such a way that he sustained personal injuries. A fire followed immediately. Plaintiff, or his employees, got the two bodies out of the building and called the fire department, which was several hours extinguishing [100]*100the fire. The result was serious damage to the building and loss or damage to its contents. We need not recite these property damages, for aside from the amount allowed by the jury for plaintiff’s personal injuries there is no controversy over the amount of the verdict if plaintiff is entitled to recover.

In plaintiff’s petition the defendant’s negligence alleged may be summarized as follows: That on January 1, 1941, and for three months prior thereto, defendant, its officers, agents, servants and employees negligently, carelessly and knowingly permitted gas to escape from the gas main along Shawnee street in front of plaintiff’s property, and knew, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence could and should have known, that the gas main was old, defective beyond repair, and that natural gas was leaking therefrom in large quantities; but notwithstanding the same the -defendant, its officers, agents, servants and employees negligently, carelessly and knowingly permitted the natural gas to escape from the mains, and negligently omitted to exercise diligent efforts to repair the main or to safeguard the property of persons along Shawnee street, and that the defendant, its officers, agents, servants and employees knew that the natural gas was highly explosive and dangerous and would explode or burn when coming in contact with any flame or spark. It was further alleged that without fault on plaintiff’s part the explosion and resulting fire occurred because of defendant’s negligence; that the actual cost to repair the buildings was $10,876.66; that the damage to the contents thereof was $8,074.70, and that plaintiff suffered personal injuries to his damage in the sum of $2,500. The prayer was for judgment for $21,451.36.

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Bluebook (online)
152 P.2d 806, 159 Kan. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-kansas-electric-power-co-kan-1944.