Engle v. Luzerne County Gas Co.

36 Pa. Super. 311, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 161
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1908
DocketAppeal, No. 8
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 Pa. Super. 311 (Engle v. Luzerne County Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engle v. Luzerne County Gas Co., 36 Pa. Super. 311, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 161 (Pa. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beaver, J.,

Two suits were tried before the same jury, one brought by the wife' of the plaintiff against the defendant, for damages done to her house and lot; the other, which we have for consideration on appeal, brought by the plaintiff against the defendant, for damages to personal property contained in and about the house. Whatever the result of the suit by the wife may have been, it is not before us.

There is no exception to the charge of the court relating to the measure of damages alleged to have been sustained by the parties to these two suits respectively.

The locus in quo, so far as its general features are concerned, is the same as that referred to in Keats v. Gas Co. of Luzerne County, 29 Pa. Superior Ct. 480. The main facts of that case are similar to those upon which the present case rests, at least so far as the flood of 1901 is concerned. The claim here, however, is based upon the conditions which prevailed not only in the flood of 1901, but also a similar one of 1903.

The appellant fails to furnish us, in its paper-book, with a copy of the draft which was in evidence. This is a very serious omission, as it is essential to a proper understanding of the case. In our study of the case, however, we have constructed a crude map of our own and think we have reached a proper understanding of the facts.

[313]*313A stream, known as Solomon’s Creek, rising in the mountains east of Wilkes-Barre, flows westward to the north branch of the Susquehanna. In its course, it crosses certain streets of the city of Wilkes-Barre practically at right angles. The street upon which the Engle house and lot front is Barney street. East of that and nearer the mountains is Regent street, and farther east Franklin street. West, and next below, is Waller street. Bridges cross the stream at all of these streets. At Franklin street, farthest east, is a bridge with an opening thirty-two feet between the abutments and 8.4 feet from the bed of the stream to the girders of the bridge. At Regent street, the abutments are thirty-six feet apart and the height from bed to bridge 8.7 feet. At Barney street bridge, the abutments are twenty-eight feet apart and the distance from bed to bridge is 10.4 feet. At Waller street, the distance between the abutments is not given, but the height from bed to bridge is 8.9 feet. It will thus be seen that the area for the vent of the water of this stream, under all circumstances, was greater at Barney street than at either Regent or Franklin streets next above it on the stream. At Barney street, however, at a distance of four feet and four inches below the bottom of the bridge, and three feet and six inches above the ordinary water line, was a six-inch gas pipe, belonging to the defendant company, which crossed the stream.

On both occasions, of which the plaintiff complains, the water and debris which came down the stream were carried under the bridges at Franklin and Regent streets without difficulty, but the debris was caught against the gas pipe of the defendant, which was braced from the bridge so as to resist pressure from above. This created a dam which prevented the flow of the water, caused it to back up beyond the Engle house and turned it through their lot and through other lots on the other side of the stream. The water thus carried outside of the stream was returned to it before the bridge at Waller street was reached, and through it was vented in the ordinary way. There was some testimony of water overflowing the banks in the neighborhood of Regent street, but the amount was apparently inconsiderable.

[314]*314The damage to the Engle house and lot, including fences and personalty, was evidently occasioned by the backing of the water from the dam, caused by the collection of debris— trees, ties, doors, barrels, brush and whatever was brought down the stream — which found a lodgment against the gas pipe. It is very clear, therefore, that not only was the damage to house and lot and their contents occasioned by the backing of the water from the dam under the Barney street bridge., but that there was sufficient capacity to vent everything which came'down the stream through that bridge, as through the bridges above it, but for the maintenance of the defendant’s gas pipe practically midway between the floor of the bridge and the bottom of the stream.

Was the construction and maintenance of this pipe, under the circumstances, negligence? As to that question, the court below said:

“Now, the first inquiry that you will have to make, gentlemen of the jury, is what was the cause of this flow of water over and out of the banks of Solomon’s Creek, and down upon the Engle property. Was it because of the lack of ordinary care on the part of the defendant here in the construction and location of the gas pipe across the creek under the Barney street bridge? You will recall, gentlemen of the jury, that the gas pipe was three feet six inches above the water; that it was four feet four inches below the girder of the bridge. Was that a reasonable construction, was it carefully constructed, was it such a construction under the circumstances as would be proper there at that locality? Negligence is want of care according to the circumstances. You have the circumstances, and I have endeavored to give you the rule, and you must reach a conclusion, gentlemen of the jury, as to whether or not there was any negligence there at that time by this defendant company, at either of the times, in December, 1901, and in October, 1903.” This is not assigned for error and was, we think, a clear and fair statement of the question of the negligence of defendant.

This record raises none of the questions which were passed upon in Keats v. Gas Co., 29 Pa. Superior Ct. 480. That case [315]*315was reversed, first, on the ground that relevant testimony, as to the conditions of weather, rainfall, etc., which- existed at the time, had been excluded, and that the instruction of the court in regard to the measure of damages was inadequate. It was recognized there, however, as we think it must be here, that there were questions of fact to be submitted to the jury, and in that case we granted a new venire.

Out of the twelve assignments of error, ten are based upon negative answers by the court, in which, for various reasons, the court was asked to instruct the jury that the verdict must be for the defendant. The twelfth relates to the overruling of defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v., and the eighth is “Under all the evidence, the flood of December, 1901, was an extraordinary flood and the plaintiffs cannqt recover for any damages done at that time,” which was also negatived.

The case was clearly for the jury. The verdict was reasonable and no assignments, based upon exceptions to the admission of testimony or to the general charge of the court, are presented. We might well content ourselves, therefore, with a. general dismissal of the remaining assignments, in all of which the court was asked to take the case from the jury, but a brief review of the two questions which the appellant presents for consideration, as raised by points for charge and the answers thereto, of which it complains, will not be out of place. They are as follows:

First. Was there established on the trial of the cause such negligent construction and maintenance, for which the appellant was responsible, as of itself to be sufficient to cause the damage complained of?

Second.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Pa. Super. 311, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engle-v-luzerne-county-gas-co-pasuperct-1908.