Glens Falls Gaslight Co. v. Van Vranken

42 N.Y.S. 339
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 2, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 N.Y.S. 339 (Glens Falls Gaslight Co. v. Van Vranken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glens Falls Gaslight Co. v. Van Vranken, 42 N.Y.S. 339 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

MERWIN, J.

In June, 1854, the plaintiff was duly incorporated under the provisions of chapter 37 of the Laws of 1848, entitled “An act to authorize the formation of gaslight companies.” Its object was the manufacture and sale of gas for the purpose of lighting the streets and public and private buildings in the village of Glens Falls, and the term of its existence was 50 years. Soon after its incorporation, and with the consent of the municipal authorities of the village, it laid down a system of gas pipes in the streets of the village, and since that time it has been engaged in manufacturing gas, and supplying it to its customers through such system. On the 4th day of August, 1892, the village, through its duly-constituted authorities, entered into a written contract with the defendants, by which the defendants, for the considerations therein stated, agreed to construct in the village a system of sewers, as specified in the contract, and a portion of the sewers so to be constructed passed through streets in which the gas pipes of the plaintiff had been laid. The sewers called for by the contract were constructed in 1892 and 1893, and in such [340]*340■construction, as the plaintiff claims, its pipes were greatly injured by the defendants, and the plaintiff suffered great damage in the injury ■or destruction of pipes, in the cost of repair, and in loss of gas. These damages the plaintiff in this action seeks to recover.

It was found by the trial court that the defendants, in the construction of the work, employed for such purposes the proper means and appliances, and used reasonable care to avoid doing any injury • to the plaintiff’s gas pipes and business; that “nevertheless the gas pipes of the plaintiff lying within the sides of the trenches which the defendants dug in the performance of their said contract, or lying near thereto, were broken and injured in many places in the course •of said construction, and in some, places following the construction -and because of it, and the plaintiff’s gas leaked and escaped from such breaks and injured places, thereby causing the plaintiff damage.” The court also found that “for such breaking, injuries, and damage the defendants are in no wise liable to the plaintiff,” and thereupon dismissed the complaint. In effect, it was held that the defendants were not negligent, and therefore not liable. On the part of the plaintiff, it is claimed that the finding that the defendants were not negligent is against the weight of the evidence, and that also, even if the defendants were not negligent, still they are liable, because (1) the rights of the plaintiff were actually invaded, and its property destroyed, by the defendants, and their contract with the village furnishes them no justification therefor; and (2) the defendants were liable to the plaintiff directly under the provisions of their contract with the village.

By the contract it is, among other things, provided as follows:

“The contractor is * * * to make all provisions necessary to maintain and protect buildings, lands, fences, water pipes, gas pipes, sewers, drains, culverts, railways, and other structures, and to repair all damages done to substructures.”
“In digging about water service and gas pipes, the contractor must exercise special care, and, if injury is caused, the cost of repairing must be paid by the contractor.”
“The contractor shall be responsible for all damages to landowners for loss of crops or cattle, or injury thereto, if occasioned or effected by the construction of the work, or through the negligence of any of his agents or workmen; and he shall be held responsible for all damage which may be done to property or persons in the blasting of rock, or other operations carried on by him; and he must assume all risks and contingencies, whether from fire, water, or any other cause, which may arise during the prosecution of the work.”

It may, I think, be assumed that the defendants would be liable for such injuries to plaintiff's property as were attributable to the ■construction' by defendants of the work, unless the defendants are protected by their contract with the village. The defendants had no right to dig up the street except as authorized by the contract. The plaintiff’s property was lawfully in the street. Can the defendants shield themselves under this contract, and injure plaintiff’s property, and still say that they are not liable under its provisions, which were evidently made for the benefit of the plaintiff and those in a like position? Can they do acts which,' without the contract, would be wrongful, and with it are authorized only on condition that they compensate the parties injured? Is their justification complete and available as a defense until they perform as the instrument of justifi[341]*341cation requires? The plaintiff was not a party to this contract, and the defendants claim, and the court below held, that there was no such relation or privity between plaintiff and the village as would give the plaintiff the benefit of the promise of defendants. The defendants argue that in no event would the village have been liable to the plaintiff. “Municipal corporations engaged in the performance of works of a public nature authorized by law are not liable for consequential damages occasioned thereby to others, where private property is not directly encroached upon, unless such damages are caused by misconduct, negligence, or unskillfulness.” Atwater v. Trustees, 124 N. Y. 602, 27 N. E. 385. A like principle was applied in Benner v. Dredging Co., 134 N. Y. 156, 31 N. E. 328, and Booth v. Railroad Co., 140 N. Y. 267, 35 N. E. 592. In neither of those cases was there deemed to have been an actual invasion of the plaintiff’s rights. In the Benner Case it is said (page 161, 134 N. Y., and page 329, 31 N. E.): “But this is not a case of taking private property, or of direct,, but is of consequential, injury.” In the Booth Case it is said (page 280, 140 N. Y., and page 596, 35 N. E.): “There was no technical trespass.” Both of these cases were for injuries from jarring the ground by blasting on other property. It is not entirely clear that in the present case there was no such direct invasion of plaintiff’s rights that the village, if it had itself done the work, would not have-been bound to have made compensation. If so, and the contract authorized such invasion, then the city was interested in the performance by defendants of their promise, for the benefit of plaintiff, to compensate for such invasion. If the contract did not authorize such invasion, then the defendants would not to that extent be protected by it against an appropriate action by plaintiff. In Re Johnson, 103 N. Y. 260, 8 N. E. 399, which was a proceeding to vacate an assessment for constructing a sewer in the city of New York, there was, among the items of expenditure included in the assessment, a sum awarded to a gaslight company for the expense of removing and relaying the gas pipes of the company, rendered necessary by the construction of the work. This was held to be proper, as by the city ordinance it was made the duty of the company in such case to remove its pipes; and the same ordinance declared that all expenses or damage incurred or sustained by the company should form a portion of the expenses of the sewer, and be assessed and collected in the same manner as the other expenses. In Re Deering, 93 N. Y. 361, a similar item was disallowed, the assessment in that case being-for regulating and grading a street, and there being no ordinance of the city applicable to the case.

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Related

Van Vranken v. Village of Glens Falls
45 N.Y.S. 1150 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.Y.S. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glens-falls-gaslight-co-v-van-vranken-nyappdiv-1896.