Gas Service Co. v. London & Lancashire Ins. Co., Limited

188 F.2d 404
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 1951
Docket14216
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 188 F.2d 404 (Gas Service Co. v. London & Lancashire Ins. Co., Limited) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gas Service Co. v. London & Lancashire Ins. Co., Limited, 188 F.2d 404 (8th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

RIDDICK, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought by appellee insurance company against appellant gas company to recover a loss due to damage to a residence caused by an explosion of gas. The appellee insured the owners of the residence against loss or damage to the insured premises from fire or explosion, and following the explosion paid to the owners the sum of $3,794.77 in settlement of their loss and was subrogated to all their rights and claims against the gas company. The case was tried to the court, which at the conclusion of the evidence found that the explosion was caused by the negligence of the gas company in failing to properly inspect the service line connecting the damaged residence with the gas company’s distribution line. Judgment was entered accordingly, and the gas company appeals.

The explosion occurred on October 28, 1948, a few minutes after the gas company had connected its distribution line with the service line of a newly-constructed residence, the property of Houston Morris and his wife, Nina Morris, in Joplin, Missouri.

The gas pipe in the house and the line from the house to the gas company’s *406 main in the street were installed, by a plumber employed by the owners. The evidence shows that the explosion wás caused by gas which escaped from a break in the service line from the gas company’s distribution line in the street adjacent to the property, to the gas company’s pressure regulator and meter connected with the service line on the outside of the residence, at a point where the service line passed through the wall of the basement. The escaping gás permeated the loosely packed earth in which the service line was laid and, following the service line, escaped into the basement of the house where it was ignited by a spark from an electric light fixture.

In the complaint the gas company was charged with negligence causing the explosion: (1) in failing to detect a break in the service line connecting the gas company’s distribution line with the gas meter; (2) in failing to test the service line before delivery of gas to the customer through the meter, when ' by the exercise of reasonable care it should have known that the pipe was open at both ends when the gas was turned on; and (3) in negligently failing to place the gas pressure regulator farther from the house, thereby negligently permitting high pressure gas “to come close to the dwelling and close to the entrance into the basement.” The last charge of negligence was explicitly withdrawn by the plaintiff during the 'course of the trial.

The answer was a denial of the charges of negligence and a plea of contributory negligence.

Section 626 of the Code of the City of Joplin provides that: “ * * * Every job of gas piping must be reported to the Chief Plumbing Inspector as soon as roughed in, and it must show "no leakage under a ten-pound pressure on a spring or mercury gauge at the discretion of the Chief • Plumbing Inspector, ' for ' fifteen minutes. This test must be made by the Chief Plumbing Inspector, and no job of gas fitting shall be concealed ’ nor ' connected . to- a gas .supply system until a certificate of inspection has, been issued for ■ the same by the Chief Plumbing Inspector. * * * ”

Section 637 of the same article of the Code of Joplin provides that: “All gas services shall be placed in separate ditches from water services or sewers, unless at the same elevation, when such service pipes may be placed in the same ditch, provided they are twelve (12) inches apart.”

The chief plumbing inspector in office in Joplin at the time of the explosion and for three years prior thereto, C. O. Baggerly, a plumber of approximately SO years experience interpreted the City Code to provide for the pressure test on the gas lines and pipes within a building and for only a visual inspection of service lines outside of the building. Following this interpretation he made the pressure test on the gas line leading from the meter into the house as required by the ordinance. The test showed no leaks. He examined the service line leading from' the meter to the distribution line jn the street before the ditch in which it was laid was filled, but made no pressure test. This examination showed that the pipe in the service line-was in good condition, properly laid and joined, with one exception. The line-leading. from the distribution main in the street to approximately five or six feet from the basement wall was one and one-quarter inch pipe. From that point on, one-inch pipe was used. The connection between the two sizes of pipe was made by a bpshing and coupler which is not as. safe as a reducer for such connections,, but which the inspector passed because at that time correct reducers were unavailable.

The evidence does not show that the-gas company knew of the type of construction used by the plumber and passed by the city inspector for this connection. The inspector had never, during his service as chief inspector, had any understanding or agreement with the gás company concerning the character of .inspections made by him before issuing a certificate of approval. In his opinion the-break in the service line which occurred, at the coupling .was caused by some heavy-vehicle driving across it.

*407 Baggerly was succeeded in the office of ■chief inspector on September 16, 1949, by A. L. Moore. Moore testified that he had held the office of chief inspector in Joplin from 1942 until March 1945, when Baggerly took over the work of the office. Testifying for the plaintiff from his ex-perience as chief inspector, Moore said that the pressure tests made on behalf of the City were only of the gas pipes in ,a building; that this had been the -custom and practice in Joplin since about 1918; that in the year 1942 an official of the .gas company in charge of the service connections had said to him, “You check the inside, you check from the meter in the house lines, we will take care of the rest.” On two or three occasions he had seen ■the gas company testing service lines between the gas meter and the distribution main.

Testifying as an expert this witness said that in his opinion gas under a pres-are of ten pounds to the square inch ■could be heard escaping from the break in the service line on the Morris premises by a man working at the gas meter. After the explosion, this witness then in office .as chief inspector, required the gas meter and pressure regulator to be removed from the house to the property line near the street. No other change was required in the service line. Thereafter, Inspector Moore issued a permit to the gas company to connect the property with its service main. The gas company does not connect its mains with service lines until after the issue of the permit by the chief inspector.

Olin Staley, a plumber of 17 years experience, testified that in his opinion gas escaping from the break in the Morris’ -service line at ten pounds pressure a ■square inch could be heard and its odor detected by a person working near the meter.

On October 27, 1948, Inspector Baggerly issued over his signature the permit of the Department of Public Safety of Joplin which read as follows: “Permission is hereby granted to Nina Morris located at 2020 E. 15th to connect for gas.”

This permit was presented to the gas company which at the request of Mrs. Morris at about 9:30 A.M.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F.2d 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gas-service-co-v-london-lancashire-ins-co-limited-ca8-1951.