Farrell v. New Jersey Power & Light Co.

170 A. 25, 111 N.J.L. 526, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 A. 25 (Farrell v. New Jersey Power & Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farrell v. New Jersey Power & Light Co., 170 A. 25, 111 N.J.L. 526, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 393 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

*527 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Campbell, ChajtoklIiO'r.

The respondent John J. Farrell was the owner of lands on Washington avenue, in Washington, Warren comity. The buildings upon the lands were used as a hotel, conducted by him and his wife, the other respondent, and known as the Farrel Arms Plaza Hotel.

The appellant owned, used and controlled gas mains in Washington avenue, for the purpose of conducting, transmitting and purveying, as a public utility, gas for lighting and heating purposes.

In the latter part of 1929 and the early part of 1930 the American Telephone and Telegraph Company constructed conduits through Washington avenue, together with manholes, for the purposes of carrying its wires under the surface of the highway. In this plan or system of underground construction was included a manhole which was built in the highway in front of the property of the respondents.

On July 4th, 1930, there was an explosion in this manhole of such force and violence as to do considerable damage to the hotel building.

Suit to recover for such damages was brought by the respondent against the appellant and a trial of the cause resulted in a verdict in favor of the former against the latter for $18,000, which, upon a rule to show cause obtained by the appellant-defendant, heard by the trial judge, resulted in a reduction to the sum of $14,000, which was accepted by the respondents and a judgment for that amount entered against the appellant, from which it appeals and assigns thirty-one grounds for reversal based upon exceptions to trial errors reserved under the aforesaid rule to show cause which was directed solely to the alleged excessiveuess of the verdict. Such of the grounds for reversal as are argued before this court are presented under three general points.

Point 1. That it was error to refuse to nonsuit and direct a verdict in favor of the defendant-appellant.

Hereunder it is urged that there was no proof of the following essential matters :

1. That the explosion was caused by gas.

*528 2. That if gas was the cause it was the gas from the pipes and mains of the appellant.

3. That the appellant was shown in any specific way to have failed to perform any duty owing from it.

In the argument -presented under this ground, and these points, much stress is laid upon the asserted fact that the proofs do not show that the gas which was noticed as escaping and testified to by the several witnesses was illuminating gas such as was being conducted and sent through the mains of the appellant. This appears to us to be unsound. All the witnesses referred to it as gas and throughout the trial of the cause no one questioned, or suggested, that it was not what is commonly known as illuminating gas, such as was being convejred by the appellant but on the contrary it is apparent that it was universally considered and accepted as being such gas.

Under this point it appears to be further urged that the duty resting upon the plaintiffs-respondents was to produce definite, affirmative proof of some particular and specific leak or defective pipe, main, or apparatus from which the gas escaped and to which defect and condition the appellant’s attention had been particularly called and under such facts and conditions it had failed to remedy the defect or condition of disrepair; in other words, that there must have been proof definitely and accurately tracing the leakage of gas from the pipes and mains of the appellant to the manhole in question, with like definite and positive proof that such gas exploded in the manhole, causing the damage in question.

In the state of the proofs in this case this argument is unsound.

In support thereof there are cited National Sheet Metal Roofing Co. v. Public Service, &c., and New York Telephone Co., 5 N. J. Mis. R. 503; McCombe v. Public Service, 95 N. J. L. 187; Price v. New York Central, 92 Id. 429; Bien v. Unger, 64 Id. 596; Adriance v. Schenck Bros., 95 Id. 185.

From these cases certain fundamental principles are to be gathered:

1. Negligence must be proved; it will not be presumed.

*529 2. Negligence may be inferred, and that such inference must be based upon facts established from which the inference may reasonably be made.

Now it is argued that while a duty of using reasonable care rests upon a utility making use of a public street to convey and transport its illuminating gas, the doctrine, res ipsa loquiiur, is not applicable in this case as against and toward the appellant.

As to this it must be said that the cause was not tried upon this theory nor did the trial court submit it to the jury with any such suggestion or instruction.

While appellant does not seriously deny that negligence may be inferred from established facts, circumstances and conditions, it is argued that the jury were allowed to “base an inference upon an inference, or a presumption upon a presumption, which is universally condemned in the law,” and specifically that there was a mere inference (a) that there was a leakage of gas; (b) that it was illuminating gas; (c) that it came from appellant’s mains; (d) that it found its way into the manhole in question and that it there exploded. But we do not find this to be the situation. There is an abundance of proof, by various witnesses, of the odor of escaping gas, in and about the place and time, proximately, of the explosion and that illuminating gas had been present in this manhole in question, and others nearby, to such an extent throughout its and their entire construction including the rodding or drawing the cables through, and as late as March preceding the happening when the construction work was completed, as to require workmen of the telephone company to use masks and blower fans to remove it; that the appellant was the only person, or company, having mains in the highway for the purpose of conveying gas, and that the driver of the car that passed over the manhole as the explosion took place testified that he smelled gas and “was alive with it, full of it.”

From the testimony it was inferable therefore that the explosion was due to gas; that such gas was the ordinary illuminating gas; that the only assignable source of such gas was the pipes of the appellant; that the escape of gas *530 meant leaky pipes; that the continuance of that condition meant failure to maintain and repair them; and in fine, that the explosion resulted from the leakage from the pipes. All these things were inferences, but inferences that were entirely legitimate as based on the testimony above noted. Each the jury was entitled to find as a fact.

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Bluebook (online)
170 A. 25, 111 N.J.L. 526, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrell-v-new-jersey-power-light-co-nj-1933.