Guzzi v. Jersey Central Power & Light Co.

96 A.2d 387, 12 N.J. 251, 1953 N.J. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 27, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 96 A.2d 387 (Guzzi v. Jersey Central 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
Guzzi v. Jersey Central Power & Light Co., 96 A.2d 387, 12 N.J. 251, 1953 N.J. LEXIS 241 (N.J. 1953).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

The action is in tort for negligence. There was a jury verdict for plaintiff, and the consequent judgment was affirmed by the Appellate Division of the Superior Court. 20 N. J. Super. 296 (1952). •

The complaint is in two counts: the gravamen of the first is the escape and explosion of illuminating gas in plaintiff’s dwelling house at 1002 Broadway in West Long Branch, Dew Jersey, through the faulty maintenance and operation of the house supply line used as a part of defendant’s gas distribu *254 tion system, whereby the house and contents were destroyed; and the second charges want oí due care to avert the danger after notice of the break in the supply line.

This is the situation of fact:

On October 2, 1950, before leaving with his wife for Atlantic City for a stay of several days, plaintiff shut off the flow of gas by turning with a .wrench the stopcock on' the cellar supply line, following, so he said, printed instructions on the water heater to “Turn off gas at the meter first.” When they returned home on October 6, at about 4:25 p. m., plaintiff first switched on the oil burner and then applied the self-same wrench to the stopcock in an endeavor to restore the gas supply, but on the turn the stopcock iCbroke off” and there was a breach in'the gas line which plaintiff could not close. Defendant was given immediate notice of the emergency by telephone, and there was assurance of prompt protective measures. The explosion occurred before the arrival of defendant’s emergency crew. The evidence is in conflict as to the time intérvening between the notice to defendant and the explosion. Of this, more hereafter.

Plaintiff purchased the premises in December 1945, and entered into possession in April 1946. Gas service to the dwelling house had been provided by defendant for more than 20 years, by a medium pressure main in the street through an inch and a half pipe to the house and a three-quarter-inch pipe into the meter and thence into the house piping, controlled by the stopcock placed near the meter. Defendant made the service connection for plaintiff on March 29, 1946. In the application for the service and the necessary meter connection, plaintiff agreed “to use same in accordance with authorized Rate Schedules on file.” Thereafter, there was a continuous supply of gas “without complaint” until the mishap at issue; and during the intervening .period plaintiff, so he testified, on three occasions shut off and restored the gas flow without incident by the very means employed on the occasion in question when the valve “blew out.” Plaintiff said that in each instance the wrench “turned freely and easily.” But defendant insists *255 that “shiny marks” found on the valve itself indicated the application of undue force.

A witness of special experience in the field, Forstall, voiced the opinion that the escaped gas was ignited by a spark from the relay switch.on the refrigerator. There was no evidence contra. And he testified that the stopcock in question “is not the type used by the well-regulated companies with-which I am acquainted.” Again, he said he was “familiar with the kind of equipment” used by well-regulated gas' utility companies; “Whether it is standard or not, I don’t know, but it is the kind that is used by the well-regulated companies,” — a “type in which the core is made solid and then the opening drilled through or else the opening is cast in that it doesn’t leave the core with júst a thin wall. .The core has a heavier wall than the wall on that particular cock.” The witness continued:

“Q. And then I ask you, is this stopcock of that kind? And I refer to the stopcock on Exhibits P-9 and P-8? A. It is not. Q. And has it ever been? A. I never have come across it in any of my work. Q. And that takes you how far back, Mr. Forstall? A. It takes me back to 1890. Q. Did it meet the standard of well-regulated companies in 1931? A. No, I don’t think it did. Q. Did it meet the standard of well-regulated companies in 1926? A. No.”

But on cross-examination the witness qualified his testimony:

“Q. You wouldn’t say, would you, Mr. Forstall, that your well-regulated utility companies did not, back in the 1920’s and 1930’s use this L-S petcock, would you? A. I would say that I haven’t come across any of them in the companies whose properties I valued. Q. But you don’t say, do you, that well-regulated utility companies didn’t use this L-S petcock at that time? A. I don’t know.”

Also, the witness suggested that defendant’s system was designed for “low pressure” rather than the “medium pressure” supplied to the particular premises, as evidenced by the use of a one and a half inch service pipe, and “if it had been designed for a medium pressure, * * * there would be a curb stopcock put on it.” But, so far as appears, these are wholly irrelevant factors. It is not shown that either the pressure or the absence of a curb stopcock was the proximate *256 cause of the mishap, either in the escape of the gas or the ensuing explosion. The curb stopcock would serve only as a more expeditious means of shutting off the flow of the gas from the main, saving the time required for excavation; but here the defendant’s emergency crew did not come upon the scene until sometime after the occurrence of the explosion, although it is urged that there was a failure of duty because a curb stop “would have made it possible” for “any other person with the ability to move a curb cock by one quarter turn” to “shut off the flow of gas which caused the explosion,” in the face of the admission made by defendant’s own superintendent of emergency service that a curb cock could not be “opened or shut” without a “special key.” And the witness Porstall finally conceded that the omission of the curb stop was not a departure from accepted standards and “the causative factor of this explosion * * * is centered at this valve cock, this petcock, Exhibit P-8.” When asked on cross-examination whether it was his opinion that “this petcock deviated in any way from standard petcocks used by well-regulated utility companies in 1926, 1930 or 1935,” he said: “I think it did deviate.” The inquiry then was whether the deviation “is because it is of lighter construction than the petcock you brought here for us today,” and he replied: “No, because it is of the construction — it had gotten corroded to such an extent that it ripped right off.” He conceded that a “visual inspection” of the petcock “in position in the pipe, in its normal position,” would “not reveal the condition of the core within the pipe,” as respects corrosion or “any defective condition”; and that if the petcock had “moved freely” when “turned on and off three times” in the prior five years, it would seem that “there was not a condition of corrosion causing the petcock to stick.”

The witness was not at all certain of the supposed knowledge offered as well founded in special and peculiar experience. Knowledge is an essential element of testimonial qualifications, and such testimony as was tendered here has no probative force unless the witness is fitted to answer on the point. The witness, himself, said he did not *257 know.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A.2d 387, 12 N.J. 251, 1953 N.J. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guzzi-v-jersey-central-power-light-co-nj-1953.